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  • WWI & WWII German Army Wehrpass - Muskiter Rücker - Infanterie Regiment Nr 68 - Battles 1914 France & Belgium - Ehrenkreuz Medal

    WWI & WWII German Army Wehrpass – Muskiter Rücker – Infanterie Regiment Nr 68 – Battles 1914 France & Belgium – Ehrenkreuz Medal

    Interesting little lot, for Jakob Rücker, who fought with Infanterie Regiment Nr 68 Fought in the battles of : Neufchateu, Mass, Marne, Champagne, wounded in December 1914 near Perhos.  Interestingly the Boutonniere for the Honor Cross is seen in the Wehrpass picture! Comes with his Certificate and Medal also.

  • WWII German Wehrmacht M44 Original Tunic - RBNR - 1945 - Recon - Aufklärung / Nachrichten (Reserved)

    WWII German Wehrmacht M44 Original Tunic – RBNR – 1945 – Recon – Aufklärung / Nachrichten (Reserved)

    Really nice original M44, nicely marked and lightly worn. In the tunic pocket I found a Ticket for entry to a dance in Eschwege. No missing buttons, seems to be a 45 stamp beside the makers RBNR. Period applied Belt hooks as found, all the insignia seems to be period applied. Price is shipped tracked World Wide!  

  • WWII German Army Wehrmacht Soldbuch Grouping - Uffz Becker - 560 Volksgrenadier Division - Ardennes 1944 / West Wall 1945 - Wounded - Award Certificates

    WWII German Army Wehrmacht Soldbuch Grouping – Uffz Becker – 560 Volksgrenadier Division – Ardennes 1944 / West Wall 1945 – Wounded – Award Certificates


  • WWII German Army Wehrmacht Soldbuch - Schutze Fritz Keppler - Panzer Division Müncheberg  - MIA Battle of Berlin 1945 - Rare

    WWII German Army Wehrmacht Soldbuch – Schutze Fritz Keppler – Panzer Division Müncheberg – MIA Battle of Berlin 1945 – Rare

    Here we have a very interesting Soldbuch for the Battle of Berlin 1945 collector.  Fredrich Keppler was born in 1927, in Steinheim an der Murr. His civilian job was a Car Mechanic. Enlisted in the German Army in November of 1944, Keppler was trained on the 5cm Anti Tank Gun. In March of 1945, he was assigned to 3 / schwere Heeres Panzerjäger-Abteilung 682 (mot). Interestingly the Third Battery, was called into action later that month: “On 31.03.1945 an order is issued for the tactical subordination of the remaining elements of schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung 682 (mot.) They are to be shipped from Bergen training ground. This Abteilung consists of the Stab, the Stabskompanie and 2. and 3.(Panzerjäger)Kompanie (1.Kompanie was already with the division as Panzerjäger-Kompanie “Müncheberg”) Both Panzerjägerkompanien were equipped with twelve 88mm schw.PaK43 (mot.)“ On 07.April 1945 schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung 682 (mot.) is officially tactically subordinated to Panzer-Division “Müncheberg”. Battle of Berlin he division was pushed back into Berlin itself by the advancing Soviet forces. The remnants of the Müncheberg were positioned in the north-eastern sector of Berlin, north of the River Spree. By this stage, the division retained roughly a dozen tanks and about thirty halftracks. On 25 April, General Helmuth Weidling, the recently appointed commander of the defence of Berlin, ordered Mummert to take command of the LVI Panzer Corps, command of the Müncheberg being handed over to Colonel Hans-Oscar Wöhlermann, the artillery commander (ArKo) for the city. On 26 April Müncheberg, along with Nordland, was ordered to attack towards Tempelhof Airport and Neukolln. With its last ten panzers, the Müncheberg initially made progress, but several local Soviet counter-attacks soon halted the advance. Around noon on 26 April Wöhlermann was released from command and Mummert was reinstated as commander of the division. The following is from the diary of an officer with the Müncheberg Division and describes the evening of 26 April. Scarlet night. Heavy artillery fire. Uncanny silence. We get shot at from many houses. Foreign workers, no doubt. From the Air Ministry comes news that General Erich Bärenfänger has been relieved of his post of commander of the Berlin garrison. One hour later we hear that General Weidling is our new commander. General Mummert takes charge of the Tank Corps… On 27 April, very early in the morning, Hitler ordered the flooding of the Berlin underground to slow the advancing Red Army. Hitler’s order resulted in the drowning of many German soldiers and civilians who had taken refuge in the tunnels. The diary of the officer with the Müncheberg Division went on to describe the flooding. New command post: Anhalter subway station. Platforms and control rooms look like an armed camp. Women and children huddle in niches and corners. Others sit about in deck chairs. They all listen for the sounds of battle… Suddenly water starts to pour into the station. Screams, sobs, curses. People fighting around the ladders that run through the air shafts up to the streets. Masses of gurgling water rush over the stairs. Children and wounded are abandoned and trampled to death. The water rises three feet or more and then slowly goes down. The panic lasts for hours. Many are drowned. Reason: On somebody’s orders, engineers have blasted the locks of the canal between Schoeneburg and Mockern Bridges to flood the tunnels against the advancing Russians. Meanwhile heavy fighting has been going on above ground level. Change of position to Potsdamer Platz subway station in the late afternoon. Command post on the first floor, as tunnels still under water. Direct hits on the roof. Heavy losses among wounded and civilians. Smoke pours in through the shell holes. Outside, stacks of Panzerfausts go up in the air. Another direct hit, one flight below street level. A horrible sight: Men, soldiers, women, and children are literally glued to the wall. As the division fought in Wilmersdorf, the encirclement of Berlin was completed and the remnants of the Müncheberg were trapped. The diary of the officer with the Müncheberg Division also described the “flying courts-martial” prevalent at this time: Flying courts-martial unusually prominent today. Most of them very young SS officers. Hardly a decoration among them. Blind and fanatical. The hope of relief and the fear of these courts bring men back to the fighting. General Mummert refuses to allow any further courts-martial in the sector under his command… He is determined to shoot down personally any courts-martial that appears… We cannot hold the Potsdamer Platz and move through the subway tunnel to Nollendorferplatz. In the tunnel next to ours, the Russians are advancing in the opposite direction. On 30 April, Hitler committed suicide. The Müncheberg, 18th Panzergrenadier Division along with a few Tiger IIs from SS Heavy Panzer Battalion 103 were engaged in heavy fighting near the Westkreuz and Halensee train stations and on the Kurfurstendamm. By 1 May the division had been pushed back to the Tiergarten and was fighting to defend the Zoo Flak Tower, the shelter of thousands of civilians. The Müncheberg’s last operating panzer, a Tiger 1, was abandoned on the Unter den Linden straße a hundred metres from the Brandenburg Gate. The division, together with the remnants of 18th Panzergrenadier, attempted to escape Berlin to the west, to surrender to the Americans. On 3 May the divisions had reached a crossing over the Havel River in Spandau, under fire by the Red Army. Those who made it across the bridge found that they were surrounded by the Soviet forces; on the same day, the division ceased to exist. Equipment : Issued with a P.38 Pistol and 16 Rounds. Iron rations. Extras: RAD Paperwork, Wehrmacht Drivers Licence, Delivery Notes with Orders for the 3rd and 1st Company. Although with the Grouping is the Letter returning the Soldbuch to father of Keppler from Berlin Dahlem. Stating clearly that they have no further information on the fate of their son. Further research shows that Keppler has not been recorded for and is likely still missing/no records on him sadly. This unique…

  • WWI / WWII M17 Wehrmacht German Austrian Transitional Double Decal Helmet

    WWI / WWII M17 Wehrmacht German Austrian Transitional Double Decal Helmet

    Original Transitional Helmet The National Shield the red was at some point taken off, liner seen better days.

  • WWI / WWII German Luftwaffe 6 Medal Ribbon Bar  - Iron Cross - Luftwaffe Long Service

    WWI / WWII German Luftwaffe 6 Medal Ribbon Bar – Iron Cross – Luftwaffe Long Service

    A nice ribbon bar to an older Luftwaffe Soldier or Officer, Iron Cross 1914, Bavarian Military Service Cross w/ Swords, War Cross of Honor w/ Swords, Bavarian Military Service Badge, Luftwaffe Long Service Medal and the Prince Regent Luitpold Cross    

  • Original Wehrmacht Artillery Officers Logarithmic"Richtscheiber A" Marked Measuring Device  - kad 1941 WaA - Rare

    Original Wehrmacht Artillery Officers Logarithmic”Richtscheiber A” Marked Measuring Device – kad 1941 WaA – Rare

    Here we have a Wehrmacht Artillery Computing device, a logarithmic ruler. This worked out calculations needed to set firing points for artillery. These seem very uncommon, but a must have for the Artillery Officer! This was made by : kad – unknown wartime maker, 1941 with WaA Interestingly, there is some sort of joke wrote in pencil in German from an Officer Cadet. Junker hat gedöst, bist das oberfähnrich ihn erlöst  Then marked with 13.OA-Lehrg – ( 13 Officier Anwärter Lehrgang ) Which corresponds to: Schule für Fahnenjunker der Artillerie (Artillerie-Schule III).- Beurteilungen 12. und 13. Offizieranwärter-Lehrgang – Schule III für Fahnenjunker der Artillerie, Suippes-Mourmelon France Officer Cadet School for Heavy Artillery, in Mourmelon France

  • WWII Latvian Legion Waffen-SS Commander Voldemārs Veiss Portrait Original

    WWII Latvian Legion Waffen-SS Commander Voldemārs Veiss Portrait Original

    Voldemārs Veiss (7 November 1899 – 17 April 1944) was a Latvian officer and prominent Nazi collaborator, who served in the Waffen-SS of Nazi Germany. When Riga, the capital of Latvia, fell to the Wehrmacht on 1 July 1941, the Germans began forming self-defence and police forces. Veiss was appointed the commander of such a Self Defence organization. On 20 July the Nazis disbanded this organization and ordered the formation of auxiliary police forces instead, with Lt. Col. Veiss being appointed Chief of the Latvian Auxiliary Police. At the end of 1941, he became the First Deputy Director General of the Director General of the Interior when the Latvian Self-Administration was reorganized. Veiss funeral in Riga As early as autumn 1941 Latvian auxiliary police units, temporarily attached to the Wehrmacht, were first used in front line duties. This occasional employment continued until the 2nd Latvian Brigade was formed from six Latvian battalions, four of which had combat experience. At the end of April 1943 a three battalion formation fighting under the name of the Latvian Legion was withdrawn from the front line and renamed the 1st Volunteer Regiment of the SS (Latvian), with a change of Wehrmacht ranks to those of the Waffen-SS. Voldemārs Veiss was given command of this regiment, which was a part of the 2nd Latvian Brigade, and received the rank of Legion-Obersturmbannführer. In January 1944, Veiss became the first Latvian to receive the Knight’s Cross. On 17 April 1944, Veiss died from wounds he had suffered seven days prior. Original a little bigger than A5 size, rear has a street name and number in Riga.

  • WWII German Wehrmacht Soldbuch - Stabsgefreiter Cadenbach - Panzer Artillerie Regiment 92 - "Hummel" - 20th Panzer Division - Battle of Moscow 1941

    WWII German Wehrmacht Soldbuch – Stabsgefreiter Cadenbach – Panzer Artillerie Regiment 92 – “Hummel” – 20th Panzer Division – Battle of Moscow 1941

    Soldbuch to Alios Cadenbach from Koblenz area, Germany. Cadenbach served exclusively with the same unit, seeing its development throughout the war. He was enlisted in 1939, and seen the whole war… Artillerie Regiment 92  Panzer Artillerie Regiment 92 – Stabsbatterie Its worth noting, that the unit where armed with the famous Hummel! See Below… 20th Panzer Division  The 20th Panzer Division was formed on 15 October 1940 after the decision had been made to weaken the existing German tank divisions to create new ones. The new division drew units from various active and reserve units, among them the 19th Infantry Division which had been converted to a tank division itself, having become the 19th Panzer Division. Operation Barbarossa, 3 July 1941 Attached to Army Group Center, the division participated in the opening stages of Operation Barbarossa and remained in the front echelon of attack during the series of advances on Minsk, Smolensk and took part in Operation Typhoon, the failed attack on Moscow. It remained on the central front during the winter of 1941–42, engaged in defensive operations and retreat. In March 1942 it was withdrawn to Bryansk for refitting and a rest after heavy casualties during the winter that lead to disbanding of a number of its units. The 20th Panzer Division, consisting of just one of the nominal three tank battalions, remained in the central sector of the Eastern Front, taking part in the capture of Voronezh in mid-1942 but otherwise engaged in defensive operations. It took part in the defence of Orel in the winter of 1942–43 and, in July 1943, was part of the northern spearhead during the battle of Kursk. The rest of 1943 was spent in a long retreat between Orel, Gomel, Orsha, and Vitebsk. The 20th Panzer Division spent the winter of 1944 fighting in the Polotsk, Vitebsk, Bobruisk and Cholm areas. Having suffered heavy losses during the Red Army’s Operation Bagration, the division was sent to Romania for refitting in August 1944. In October, the division was sent to East Prussia, and then sent to Hungary on 6 January 1945, to partake in the Garam (S:Hron) battles raging in northern Hungary. It then retreated through Breslau, Schweinitz and Neisse in Silesia (now part of Poland). The division was transferred to Görlitz (east of Dresden on the post-1945 German frontier with Poland). On 19 April 1945, the division was involved in a counteroffensive west of Görlitz in the direction of Niesky, but disengaged three days later and retreated west. It counterattacked again in the Bautzen area, succeeding in relieving the local garrison at heavy cost to Soviet forces. By 26 April 1945, the division was situated northwest of Dresden; by 6 May it retreated south across the Czechoslovakian border. Some divisional elements surrendered to the Red Army near Teplice-Sanov (northwest of Prague), whilst the rest, including elements of Panzer-Aufklärungs-Abteilung 20. surrendered to the U.S. Army at Rokycany, (between Prague and Plzeň); they were handed over to the Soviet forces. Wounded during battle  Wounded December 1943 – 31b – Shrapnel Wounds. Equipment / Issued  P38 Walther Pistol, Spade, Winter Clothes. Führer Packet Medals / Awards  Eastern Front Medal Drivers Badge in Bronze Wounds badge in Black War Merit Cross with Swords (20th Panzer Division) Drivers Badge in Silver He made it right to the end of the war, the last stamp inside is the 12th of May 1945, in the rear of his Soldbuch is two pictures of his children and his POW Paper for demobilisation.    

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