Colin's Militaria Museum

Colin's Militaria Museum Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Colin's Militaria Museum, Museum, Livermore, CA.

Colin's Militaria Museum is a strictly non-political online museum dedicated to telling the story of 20th century conflicts through the display of original artifacts.

I got another Soldbuch, this time for a very, very late war unit, one that fought in the Battle of Berlin. It belonged t...
12/21/2024

I got another Soldbuch, this time for a very, very late war unit, one that fought in the Battle of Berlin. It belonged to a guy called Werner Fiebig. This is my research write-up.

Werner Fiebig was born on March 7th, 1911 into a Protestant family in Berlin. He had blue eyes, brown-blonde hair and stood 5 feet 8 inches tall. A resident of the Berlin borough of Wilmersdorf, he attended the Friedrich Wilhelm University, and had obtained his doctorate by the the issue date of his Soldbuch. Both of his parents lived at Mainzerstraße Nr. 24, and his father, Moritz, worked as a typesetter in a print shop. The building still stands today. While attending University, it appears that Werner lived at home in Wilmersdorf. By the time his Soldbuch had been issued by early 1942, he had married. His wife, Annemarie, accompanied him for portions of his military service.

Fiebig spent the vast majority of his time in the Army in various administrative and other non-combat roles. He had entered into the Wehrmacht no later than 1942, well after the war had begun. Through 1943, he was a guard or administrator at a German P.O.W. camp, Oflag VIII F, which was opened in 1942 in Moravská Třebová in occupied Czechoslovakia. Oflag VIII was an Offizierlager which primarily held British officers that had been captured in North Africa, as well as other American and French captives. Following service at Oflag VIII, Fiebig was at other points also assigned to a “Dolmetscherkompanie” or Interpreter Company. It is likely his extensive secondary education including the acquisition of a secondary language, probably English, was the reason for this transfer. It also appears that Fiebig spent several spells with a series of reserve, replacement, and Landeschuetzen units, including Ld.Sch.Btl. 715 which was active in the Hildesheim area in Wehrkreis XI. There, he was issued the majority of his combat equipment, to include rifle, helmet, and associated items. His last active non-reserve unit was Fahnenjunkerschule der Pionier I in Roßlau, where he found himself at the beginning of 1945.

On March 23rd, 1945, Fiebig was issued a variety of combat equipment to compliment items he had been issued earlier. The same day, the Fahnenjunkerschule was officially mobilized. This was likely a consequence of the “Leuthen” call-up of the Army’s last available manpower. Equipped with bicycles for transportation, and without machine guns or any heavy weapons, the Fahnenjunkerschule’s newly minted combat teams were ordered to the Netherlands, and promptly set out on a trek across Germany.

However, the rapid Allied advance across Western Germany meant that this journey was cut short. In Humfeld, the halt order was given, and the school was ordered to turn around. Retreating across the Weser through Hameln, the school found itself near Celle by April 9th, and had crossed into the Torgau-Wittenberg area, not far from their starting position, by April 13th. By this point, the school had fallen under the command jurisdiction of the newly re-organized 12th Army, under General of Panzer troops Walther Wenck. On April 19th, as the Russians were breaking through on the Oderfront, the school was formally re-designated “Sperrverband (blocking group) Schemmel, after its commanding officer, a Major Schemmel. It had spent the previous several days blowing bridges over the Elbe in the Torgau sector. The Sperrverband was now caught up in the final battles west of Berlin, but Fiebig himself was to play a more direct role.

At an unclear point almost certainly between April 19th and 21st, Werner Fiebig was reassigned. The circumstances of this reassignment are unclear, as his next unit is not marked in his Soldbuch, something not unusual for such a late stage of the war. Fiebig was now attached to Heeres-Panzer-Jagdverbad “S” which was in turn assigned to Panzer-Jagd-Brigade “Schneider”. Perhaps this was done as an effect of the reorganization of the Sperrverband, but it is unclear. However, Fiebig would soon be sent east from the Elbe, towards Berlin, which was then threatened from the south by Marshal Koniev’s First Ukrainian Front.

By April 21st, the Red Army had breached Berlin’s city limits in both north and south. Fighting continued in the city and at its outskirts. One of the few mentions of Werner Fiebig’s assumed frontline unit, the Panzer-Jagd-Brigade Schneider, is within documents prepared by the General Inspector of Panzer Troops for Hitler’s review in the Führerbunker. These documents state that the Jagd-Briagde was surrounded in or near Luckenwalde on April 21st-22nd. It had likely been transported by truck to this area the previous day, along with other local combat groups.

These same documents imply that the Brigade was attached, at least semi-officially, to Reich Labor Service Infantry Division Friedrich Ludwig Jahn. Other secondary sources, however, mention Panzer-Jagd-Brigade Schneider as a subordinate unit of Infantry Division Scharnhorst. The exact subordination of the Brigade is unknown. Given the chaotic state of the disintegrating Wehrmacht, it is possible that nobody knew, even contemporarily. What is probable, though, is that the Brigade was smashed by the Soviet advance and portions were widely dispersed.

Perhaps some elements ended up in the territory still controlled by Wenck’s Army, but I believe it is likely that the larger portion of the Jagd-Brigade were swept towards Potsdam along with the body of Infantry Division Jahn.

Once again, Fiebig’s specific whereabouts from April 22nd until the 29th are impossible to know for certain, but he was definitely involved in the 12th Army’s attack towards Potsdam, which intended to rescue the German soldiers and civilians there. Contact was made between the 12th Army and the Potsdam garrison on April 28th, and the commander there, General Reymann, wasted no time in escaping from the previously encircled town. The following day, Fiebigs’s unit, the Heeres-Panzer-Jagdverbad “S” was dissolved officially. The only reason we know for sure he ended up in this obscure, late-war bicycle mounted anti-tank unit are his discharge papers, where the reason given was “destruction of unit”.

I believe a likely reason for this is the dissolution of weak units that had been trapped inside Potsdam and mostly disintegrated, but it is impossible to know for certain. I also believe that, while Fiebig was discharged from the Wehrmacht officially, he likely continued to fight for several more days. Regardless, it can be said with a reasonable degree of certainty that he joined Wenck’s army for its withdrawal to the Elbe, and crossed into American captivity. Ironically, his previous unit, the Sperrverband Schemmel, was at least partially responsible for organizing the crossing, transferring some 8,000 people across the river by May 4th. Only a few days later, the war was over.

Fiebig’s story, though, is not. He was arrested in Hannover in July 1945, apparent proof that he made it across the Elbe, and following initial processing by the British military authority, he was given permission to travel on to Hamburg, where he was arrested again. This is probably due to his past employment as a prison guard. After this, the historical record loses track of him…almost. A Doctor Werner Fiebig, employed at the Free University of Berlin, published an article in 1953.

I’ve been working on my research writeup for the ID book. I don’t normally try and post too much of this stuff here, but...
10/18/2024

I’ve been working on my research writeup for the ID book. I don’t normally try and post too much of this stuff here, but have chosen to do so in reponse to comments I received in my last post. So, without delay, here is the first draft for Willi Sasse, the owner of the booklet I posted the other day.

Willi Sasse was born on January 22nd, 1915 in Sondheim bei Homberg in Hesse, part of what was then the German Empire. At that point, the village of Sondheim seems to have been only a single street, as his address is listed merely as Nr. 29. Sasse was a professional soldier who served the length of the whole war and was entitled to a variety of decorations, including the Iron Cross and Assault Badge. He fought in France and on the Eastern Front, with a lengthy service record, but it was the end of the war on which I have chosen to focus.

In late 1944, he was hospitalized with a severe illness and under normal circumstances would not have returned to frontline service. Upon recovery, he was sent to the city of Neuruppin and assigned to Artillery Training and Replacement Battalion 75. As a Hauptwachtmeister (senior sergeant) Sasse likely would have rode out the end of the war behind the lines in a semi-administrative role. However, the military situation in east and west had deteriorated. On March 24th 1945, the code word “Leuthen” was transmitted to barracks across what remained of the Reich. Army High Command had decided that every reserve, training, and convalescent unit should be mobilized immediately. There was no room left in Germany for idle reservists. As part of the “Ostgotenbewegung” ‘movement of the eastern Goths’ Sasse’s Battalion would be send to the front on the river Oder, forty miles from Berlin. It was assigned to Volks-Artillerie-Korps 404, in turn subordinated to AOK 9 and occupied a sector of the front near the town of Falkenhagen, south of the village of Seelow and the Seelow heights.

When the Russians launched their attack on Berlin on April 16th, the battalion held its position until the German frontline was shattered on April 19th, with a 35 kilometer gap opening in the sector of the LVI Korps just to the northwest. During the afternoon and evening of the same day, le.Art.Ers.Abt. 75 was encircled by the Russians near its original position within Falkenhagen town. This was short lived, as the battalion broke the encirclement and retreated southwest towards the village of Halbe with much of the remainder of AOK 9. As the Russians moved towards Berlin, the shattered units of 9th Army were increasingly confined, as escape routes were gradually closed off.

Between 21 and 30 April, le.Art.Ers.Abt. 75 was trapped in the Halbe pocket. The nature of this battle means that obtaining specific information on the unit’s actions during this time period is impossible. The situation in the Halbe pocket were later described by a German POW to his Soviet captors:

“there was rather thick forest on both sides of the autobahn…[it was] packed with something incredible: a terrible jam of cars, trucks, tanks, armoured cars, vehicles, ambulances, all of them not only pushed closely against one another, but literally jammed over one another, overturned, standing on end, upset, breaking the surrounding trees. In this mess of metal, wood and something unidentifiable was a dreadful mash of tortured bodies…corpses, corpses, corpses, mixed with, I suddenly noted, ones who were still alive. There were wounded people lying on greatcoats and blankets, sitting leaning against trees, some in bandages, others still without” (Beevor, Fall of Berlin, 554)

In spite of this, attempts to breakout to the west, into territory held by General Wenck’s 12th Army continued, as disorganized masses of often unarmed Germans trudged west under constant artillery, aerial, and infantry attack. Of the approximately 100,000 soldiers of the 9th Army that were encircled at Halbe, apparently only 25,000 escaped, accompanied by thousands of civilians terrified of the Russians. Other estimates of escapees are lower - Soviet Marshal Konev, responsible for the Red Army units at Halbe, estimated that only 5-6,000 could have escaped.

Nevertheless, the remains of the battalion had reached the village of Bucholz, to the south of the main point of contact between AOK 9 and 12, by May 1st. Survivors marched west, and via the Belzig - Ziesar - Genthin road reached the Elbe at Ferchland by May 4th. Between May 4th and 7th, 1945, they crossed to the far bank in order surrender to the Americans. However, according to General freiherr von Edelsheim, a Corps commander with AOK 12, all of those who surrendered at Ferchland, one of three crossing points over the Elbe, were turned over to the Russians the following day. For these men, the hell endured in the Halbe cauldron was for naught. Sasse’s fate is ultimately unclear - no attempt to denazify his ID book was made, but he is not listed in the ranks of fallen soldiers maintained by the German government. It is possible his is one of the dozens of corpses uncovered among the silent, dark forests of the greater Spreewald every year.

By 1944, the appearance of the average German soldier was drastically different than that of the victorious conqueror of...
07/04/2024

By 1944, the appearance of the average German soldier was drastically different than that of the victorious conqueror of the first years of the conflict. Quality degraded, materials grew increasingly scarce, and Germany’s fighting men were increasingly replaced by the elderly, too-young, infirm, or injured.

This is representative of a soldier in this time period - the autumn of 1944, when successful Allied armies found themselves at the frontiers of the Reich. Increasingly severe military disasters, prompted by Hitler’s obsessive intervention with military matters coupled with exponentially increasing Allied strength made it clear to all, except maybe the Führer himself, that the war had entered its final phase. In the west, the Anglo-Americans struggled to crack the Siegfried Line along the German border. In the east, the Red Army entered East Prussia with a burning desire to make the Germans pay in blood for the many crimes they had committed during the invasion of the Soviet Union, which contrary to some post-war narratives, the ordinary Army was a regular and enthusiastic participant in.

His embroidered breast eagle, seen in the zig-zag fashion places him towards the end of the war, as these eagles to my knowledge only began to appear in the late spring of 1944, and his field blouse is dated “44”.

He wears the M42 steel helmet, size 64, with the single Army decal period removed. Fragments can still be seen in good lighting.

He wears the mostly complete field equipment of a rifleman armed with the Ma**er 98 standard-issue rifle: a belt, two ammunition pouches, a bayonet and frog, “breadbag” haversack with canteen, and suspenders, as well as the cylindrical container meant to store the gas mask. Clipped to his suspenders is the M44 Assault backpack, issued as a replacement for the A-frame assault system.

In the future I hope to provide this display with more field gear: a zeltbahn shelter quarter, entrenching spade with sheath, mess tin, and gas cape. I am also set on upgrading some of the existing pieces - the y-straps, which were likely modified by the Austrians post-war, and the gas can, which some knucklehead spilled paint on.

I also want to add a sweater, toque, and some form of cloth headgear. It is clear to me that I will be working on this display for a long time to come. I’m pretty alright with that, though.

Everything this mannequin wears is original to the period 1939-1945, and with the exception of the suspenders, unaltered.

05/10/2024
I swear I will update this page eventually…but for now here’s a new look, original U.S. and German on full-body mannequi...
04/11/2024

I swear I will update this page eventually…but for now here’s a new look, original U.S. and German on full-body mannequins.

Address

Livermore, CA
94550

Telephone

+19254878001

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Colin's Militaria Museum posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Museum

Send a message to Colin's Militaria Museum:

Share

Category