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  • WWII German Personal Documents - Bomb Damaged - Reichsbahn Train Driver Friedrich Lämmerhirt - Killed during Raid on Köln December 1941 - SS Death Card (On Hold)

    WWII German Personal Documents – Bomb Damaged – Reichsbahn Train Driver Friedrich Lämmerhirt – Killed during Raid on Köln December 1941 – SS Death Card (On Hold)

    This grouping comes in the original envelope sent from the Police in Köln 1941.  The police found Friedrich Llämmerhirt inside the Fire Department at the Railway Station repair facility in Cologne South (Köln-Süd)  He was killed during a British Bombing raid in November 1941 Contents of Wallet: Leather Wallet  Registration documents dates November 1941.  Control Card and Marks for the buying of Tobacco.  Membership of the Reichsbahn Card – stating he is a train driver in the Reichsbahn. Reichsbahn ID Papers – stating he is a train driver, including a period applied photograph.  Motor Vehicle Licence – Issued by the Reichsbahn in 1936, he is in his Reichsbahn uniform.  Negative and photograph of workers in the Reichsbahn Train Station repair yard Cologne. A Photograph of Friedrich.  SS-Unterscharführer Friedrich Lämmerhirt  – he must have been also a member of the SS.  Comments:  A very odd item from an unfortunate member of the Reichsbahn. It comes with a print out about his grave in Germany.   

  • Sale! WWII German Fake British 10 Pound Note - Operation Bernhard - Sicherheitsdienst (SD) - Heydrich

    WWII German Fake British 10 Pound Note – Operation Bernhard – Sicherheitsdienst (SD) – Heydrich

    Original price was: $545.00.Current price is: $455.00.

    Operation Bernhard was an exercise by Nazi Germany to forge British bank notes. The initial plan was to drop the notes over Britain to bring about a collapse of the British economy during the Second World War. The first phase was run from early 1940 by the Sicherheitsdienst (SD) under the title Unternehmen Andreas (Operation Andreas). The unit successfully duplicated the rag paper used by the British, produced near-identical engraving blocks and deduced the algorithm used to create the alpha-numeric serial code on each note. The unit closed in early 1942 after its head, Alfred Naujocks, fell out of favour with his superior officer, Reinhard Heydrich. There is a lot of information on Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Bernhard  

  • Reichswehr Truppen Ausweiss - Oberwachtmeister Otto Wehring - Issued 1923 - Artillerie Regiment Nr 5 - 100,000 Man Army - Weimar Republic - Rare

    Reichswehr Truppen Ausweiss – Oberwachtmeister Otto Wehring – Issued 1923 – Artillerie Regiment Nr 5 – 100,000 Man Army – Weimar Republic – Rare

    A very rare photo identity paper known as the Troop Identity.  Issued to Oberwachtmeister Otto Wehring in the Reichswehr in 1923 with Artillerie Regiment Nr 5 –  He was one of the 100,000 standing army…  Interestingly the II Batt, that Wehring was in was in Bayern, and the Reichswehr took part in the downing of Hitlers Putsch in 9 November 1923. If Wehring was present, we will not know, but he certainly was in active service at the time in a very small army.  —–   Reichswehr (lit. ’Reich Defense’) was the official name of the German armed forces during the Weimar Republic and the first years of the Third Reich. After Germany was defeated in World War I, the Imperial German Army (Deutsches Heer) was dissolved in order to be reshaped into a peacetime army. From it a provisional Reichswehr was formed in March 1919. Under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, the rebuilt German army was subject to severe limitations in size, structure and armament. The official formation of the Reichswehr took place on 1 January 1921 after the limitations had been met. The German armed forces kept the name ‘Reichswehr’ until Adolf Hitler’s 1935 proclamation of the “restoration of military sovereignty”, at which point it became part of the new Wehrmacht. Although ostensibly apolitical, the Reichswehr acted as a state within a state, and its leadership was an important political power factor in the Weimar Republic. The Reichswehr sometimes supported the democratic government, as it did in the Ebert-Groener Pact when it pledged its loyalty to the Republic, and sometimes backed anti-democratic forces through such means as the Black Reichswehr, the illegal paramilitary groups it sponsored in contravention of the Versailles Treaty. The Reichswehr saw itself as a cadre army that would preserve the expertise of the old imperial military and form the basis for German rearmament. Structure of the Reichswehr Arms limitations under the Treaty of Versailles In Part V of the 1919 Versailles Peace Treaty, Germany had obligated itself to limit the size and armaments of its military forces so that they could be used only as border protection and for the maintenance of order within Germany. In accordance with the treaty’s provisions, personnel strength was limited to a professional army of 100,000 men plus a 15,000-man navy. The establishment of a general staff was prohibited. Heavy weapons above defined calibers, armored vehicles, submarines and large warships were prohibited, as was any type of air force. The regulations were overseen by the Military Inter-Allied Commission of Control until 1927. Conscription into the German army had traditionally been for a period of 1 to 3 years. After they had completed their terms of service, the discharged soldiers created a large pool of trained reserves. The Versailles Treaty fixed the term of service for Reichswehr officers at 25 years and for all others at 12 in order to prevent such a buildup of reservists. Artillerie Regiment Nr 5  The regiment was formed on January 1, 1921 in Ulm from the Reichswehr Artillery Regiments 11, 13 and 14 of the Transitional Army. At the beginning of the 1920s, the departments in Ulm and Fulda exchanged their numbering. In the course of the expansion of the Reichswehr in 1934, the new regiments Artillery Regiment Ulm, Artillery Regiment Fulda and Artillery Regiment Ludwigsburg , each with five departments, were set up from the three departments of the regiment. On October 15, the Artillery Regiment Ulm was renamed Artillery Regiment 5 and placed under the 5th Infantry Division.    

  • WWII German - Certifcate for War Merit Cross - Bombing of Berlin 1944  - Luftschutz Polizei

    WWII German – Certifcate for War Merit Cross – Bombing of Berlin 1944 – Luftschutz Polizei

    A very nice and unusual pre award certificate for a member of the Air Protection Police, awarded during the Bombing of Berlin in 1944 by the Police section in Schöneberg.  

  • WWII German Photograph - General Leo Geyr von Schweppenburg - Normandy 1944 - Wearing British Dust Glasses - Super Rare Photo

    WWII German Photograph – General Leo Geyr von Schweppenburg – Normandy 1944 – Wearing British Dust Glasses – Super Rare Photo

    $265.00

    An amazing photograph, displaying him with dust glasses taken from the British Army. Geyr von Schweppenburg (2 March 1886 – 27 January 1974) was a German general during World War II who is noted for his pioneering stance and expertise in the field of armoured warfare.[2][3] He commanded the 5th Panzer Army (formalised as Panzer Group West) during the Invasion of Normandy, and later served as Inspector General of Armoured Troops. After the war, he was involved in the development of the newly-built German Army (Bundeswehr). Freiherr von Geyr was born in 1886 in Potsdam into the Prussian military aristocracy and descended from a family that had produced two Prussian field marshalls.[4] He joined the German Army in 1904. In World War I, he fought on several fronts and rose to the rank of captain. After the war, he remained in the army, becoming an Oberst in 1932 and a Generalmajor in 1935. From 1933 to 1937, he was a military attaché to the United Kingdom, Belgium and the Netherlands and resided in London. Promoted to Generalleutnant upon his return from London, he took command of the 3rd Panzer (armoured) Division in 1937.[5] World War II From 1 September to 7 October 1939, Geyr commanded the 3rd Panzer Division during the invasion of Poland, where it was the most numerically powerful Panzer Division, with 391 tanks.[6] For a victory at Kulm, he was praised on the battlefield by Hitler, who had visited the division in recognition for its achievements in Poland.[7] He was promoted to General der Kavallerie of the XXIV Panzer Corps on 15 February 1940. In 1940, he commanded the XXIV Panzer Corps in the Invasion of France. In 1941, in the invasion of the Soviet Union, Geyr’s XXIV Panzer Corps was part of General Heinz Guderian’s Second Panzer Army, and consisted of all of Guderian’s major tank units.[8] On 9 July 1941, he was awarded the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross as General der Panzertruppe.[9] By early November 1941, Geyr’s Panzer Corps commanded the 3rd, 4th, and 17th Panzer Divisions, the panzer regiment from the 18th Panzer Division, as well as the Infantry Regiment Großdeutschland, and spearheaded the advance of Army Group Centre during the Battle of Moscow.[8] From 21 July 1942, taking over from the court-martialed Georg Stumme,[10] to 30 September 1942, he was commanding General of the XXXX Panzer Corps, taking part in the fighting in the Caucasus. Geyr was relieved in a command cadre shakeup at the end of September 1942.[10] In the spring of 1943, Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt ordered Geyr to prepare a force of 10 Panzer and motorised infantry divisions. On 19 November 1943, Geyr’s command was formalised as Panzer Group West, which had responsibility for the training and formation of all armoured units in the west. The group of armoured divisions near Paris constituted the Germans’ main force of tanks in France. In the event of an Allied landing on the northern French coast, Panzer Group West was expected to counterattack northward and to halt the invasion force.[11] The Allied invasion of Normandy took place on 6 June 1944. By 8 June, Geyr had moved three panzer divisions northward against British and Canadian forces advancing on the town of Caen. On, Royal Air Force aircraft attacked his newly-established headquarters at La Caine in Normandy. Geyr was wounded and many of his staff officers were killed, which forced the cancellation of the counterattack.[12] Geyr’s reinforced tank units managed to prevent the British advance for another month, but he was nevertheless relieved of his command on 2 July after seconding Rundstedt’s request for Hitler to authorize a strategic withdrawal from Caen.[13][14][15] He was succeeded by Heinrich Eberbach on 4 July and served as Inspector General of Armoured Troops until the closing phase of the war

  • Sale! WWII German Knights Cross Holder - Karl-Conrad Mecke - Raid on St Nazaire - 22 Marine Flak Regiment

    WWII German Knights Cross Holder – Karl-Conrad Mecke – Raid on St Nazaire – 22 Marine Flak Regiment

    Original price was: $225.00.Current price is: $165.00.

    An extremely desirable and rare postcard size photograph of Mecke with his Knights Cross, which he won during the British raid on St Nazaire, also known as the Greatest Raid of All.  Knights Cross action: Awarded for his role in combating the British raid on St. Nazaire, Operation Chariot, on 28.03.1942. Due to the unusual behaviour of the British bombers it was Mecke who recognized the potential of a landing and put his troops on alert. His guns later opened fire on the British convoy despite their disguise as German vessels and also participated in the fight against the British landing forces.  

  • Post War Signed Knighscross Holder - General der Panzertruppe Walther Wenck - Berlin 1945 (Sold)

    Post War Signed Knighscross Holder – General der Panzertruppe Walther Wenck – Berlin 1945 (Sold)

    Nice hand signed photography printed post war on Agfa paper.  Walther Wenck (German: [ˈvaltɐ ˈvɛŋk]) (18 September 1900 – 1 May 1982) was a German officer and industrialist. He was the youngest General of the branch[1] (General der Truppengattung) in the German Army and a staff officer during World War II. At the end of the war, he commanded the German Twelfth Army that took part in the Battle of Berlin.[2] Wenck left the military after surrendering to the Allies. He was asked to become Inspector General of the Bundeswehr as West Germany was re-arming in 1957, but declined to take the post when conditions he set were not met, such as the Inspector General being the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, not just an administrative leader. Historians consider Wenck a capable commander and a brilliant improviser, although incapable of the impossible task he was given of saving Berlin in 1945.

  • WWII German Photograph - Waffen SS Lichterfelde Barracks Berlin - 1942 - Wilhelm Mohnke - Wounded - With SS Officers and General - Mega Rare Photograph

    WWII German Photograph – Waffen SS Lichterfelde Barracks Berlin – 1942 – Wilhelm Mohnke – Wounded – With SS Officers and General – Mega Rare Photograph

    Wilhelm Mohnke (15 March 1911 – 6 August 2001) was a German military officer who was one of the original members of the Schutzstaffel SS-Stabswache Berlin (Staff Guard Berlin) formed in March 1933. Mohnke, who had joined the Nazi Party in September 1931, rose through the ranks to become one of Adolf Hitler’s last remaining general officers at the end of World War II in Europe. With the SS Division Leibstandarte, Mohnke participated in the fighting in France, Poland and the Balkans. He was appointed to command a regiment in the SS Division Hitlerjugend in 1943. He led the unit in the Battle for Caen, receiving the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross on 11 July 1944. Mohnke was given command of his original division, the Leibstandarte, during the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944. During the Battle of Berlin, Mohnke commanded the Kampfgruppe Mohnke and was charged with defending the Berlin government district, including the Reich Chancellery and the Reichstag.[1] He was investigated after the war for war crimes, including allegations that he was responsible for the murder of prisoners in France in 1940, Normandy in June 1944 and Belgium in December 1944. Although Mohnke served 10 years in Soviet custody, he was never charged with any crimes, and died in 2001, aged 90. Comments:  Mohnke can be seen with a crutch and many of the LSSAH men are watching the group standing in the road, including the LSSAH Music band can be seen. An extremely rare photograph of Mohnke and other personalities standing outside the home of the LSSAH Berlin Lichterfelde. 

  • WWII German Postcard Size Photograph - RK/EL - Generallt Hellmuth Reymann - Berlin 1945 -  Mega Rare Photo

    WWII German Postcard Size Photograph – RK/EL – Generallt Hellmuth Reymann – Berlin 1945 – Mega Rare Photo

    Hellmuth Reymann (24 November 1892 – 8 December 1988) was an officer in the German Army (Heer) during World War II. He was one of the last commanders of the Berlin Defence Area during the final assault by Soviet forces on Berlin. World War II From 1 October 1942 to 1 October 1943, Reymann commanded the 212th Infantry Division as part of Army Group North. From 1 October 1943 to 1 April 1944, he commanded the 13th Air Force Field Division. Reymann’s division suffered heavy losses in the retreat from Leningrad and was disbanded in April 1944. From 1 April 1944 to 18 November 1944, Reymann commanded the 11th Infantry Division. In October 1944, Reymann’s division was encircled in the Courland Pocket and he was replaced by General Gerhard Feyerabend. Berlin, 1945 In March 1945, Reymann was appointed commander of the Berlin Defence Area and replaced General Bruno Ritter von Hauenschild. When he entered Berlin, Reymann found that he had inherited almost nothing from von Hauenschild. Reymann realised that Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels had ruled that any defeatist talk would lead to immediate execution. No plans were drawn up to evacuate the civilian population, which remained in the city.[1] By 21 April, Goebbels, as Reich Commissioner for Berlin, ordered that “no man capable of bearing arms may leave Berlin”. Only Reymann, as commander of the Berlin Defence Area, could issue an exemption. Senior Nazi Party officials, who readily condemned members of the army for retreating, rushed to Reymann’s headquarters for the necessary authorisations to leave. Reymann was happy to sign over 2,000 passes to get rid of the “armchair warriors”. Reymann’s chief-of-staff, Hans Refior, commented, “The rats are leaving the sinking ship”.[2] Both Wilhelm Burgdorf and Goebbels convinced Hitler that Reymann should be relieved of command. When Reymann chose not to locate his office next to Goebbels’s office in the Zoo Tower, Goebbels held that act against him.[3] On 22 April, Hitler relieved Reymann of his command for his defeatism and replaced him with the newly-promoted Generalleutnant Ernst Kaether, who was the former Chief-of-Staff to the chief political commissar of the German Army (Heer). However, Kaether never took command and his orders were cancelled the next day. The result was that when the first Soviet Army units entered the suburbs of Berlin, there was no German commander to coordinate the city’s defences.[3] One day later, Hitler changed his mind again and made Artillery General (General der Artillerie) Helmuth Weidling the new commander of the Berlin Defence Area.[4] Weidling remained in command of Berlin’s defenses to the end and ultimately surrendered the city on 2 May to Soviet General Vasily Chuikov.[5] Army Group Spree After his dismissal as the commander of the Berlin Defence Area, Reymann was given a weak division near Potsdam. The division received a dubious designation “Army Group Spree”.[3] Reymann’s unit could not then link up with General Walther Wenck’s unit, just south of Potsdam, because of the strong Soviet Red Army forces.[6] On 28/29 April, Wenck’s 12th Army held the area around Beelitz long enough for about 20,000 of Reymann’s men to escape through the narrow route to the Elbe. Comments  This is an extremely rare photo and will be featured in a book on Berlin 1945. Please note that this photograph shows Reymann likely in 1945, and could even have been taken just before or during the battle of Berlin. 

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