353rd Infantry Division explained

Unit Name:353rd Infantry Division
Dates:5 November 1943 – 21 April 1945
Branch:Heer
Type:Infantry
Battles:World War II

The 353rd Infantry Division was an infantry division of the German army during World War II.

Operational history

The 353rd Infantry Division was assembled as an infantry division of the 21st deployment wave on 5 November 1943. The division was initially deployed under supervision of the German 7th Army, which also became the division's superior formation for most of its history. The 353rd Infantry Division was assembled from elements of the 328th Infantry Division, which had previously served with the 1st Panzer Army in southern Russia on the Eastern Front.[1] There, the 328th Infantry Division had taken heavy casualties over the course of the year 1943, was subsequently downsized to the smaller "Division Group 328" before eventually being dissolved altogether.[2]

The 353rd Infantry Division consisted initially of Grenadier Regiment 941, Grenadier Regiment 942, Grenadier Regiment 943, Division Fusilier Battalion 353, Artillery Regiment 353 and Division Units 353. Each of the grenadier regiments initially consisted of two battalions, bringing the division to a total strength of six grenadier battalions. The grenadier regiments from which the initial battalions were assembled were the Grenadier Regiments 548 and 569 (previously 328th Infantry Division), 754 and 755 (previously 334th Infantry Division), 581 (previously 306th Infantry Division) and 671 (previously 371st Infantry Division). The initial divisional commander was Paul Mahlmann.[3]

After June 1944 (Operation Overlord), the 353rd Infantry Division was engaged on the newly reopened Western Front. In July, Mahlmann was replaced as divisional commander by Erich Müller. The division was trapped in the Falaise Pocket along with much of the 7th Army in August 1944. Here, it fought as part of the LXXXIV Army Corps (Dietrich von Choltitz), along with the 243rd and 275th Infantry Divisions, the 2nd SS Panzer and 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Divisions, the Panzer Lehr Division, the 5th Luftwaffe Field Division, and the 91st Air Landing Infantry Division.[4] The division was briefly commanded by a colonel named Thieme in early August, before Paul Mahlmann returned to command later the same month. The division's remnants were refreshed near Trier in November 1944 through the addition of Luftwaffe Field Battalion XX, Battalion Garten, Replacement/Training Battalion 313, Security Battalion 547 and Landesschützen Battalion II./12 as a new Division Fusilier Battalion.

Between December 1944 and January 1945, the 353rd Infantry Division operated as part of the LXXXI Army Corps at the Westfall defensive fortifications (Allied parlance: "Siegfried Line"), where it launched a major counterattack on 2 December, which was eventually beaten back by U.S. artillery.[5]

The 353rd Infantry Division was eventually trapped in the Ruhr Cauldron, where it went into American captivity around April 1945. The division's final commander was Colonel Kurt Hummel, who assumed command on 15 February 1945.

Order of battle

Superior formations of 328th Infantry Division!Year!Month!Army Corps!Army!Army Group!Operational area
1943Nov./Dec.LXXIV Army Corps7th ArmyArmy Group DBrittany
1944Jan./Feb.
Mar./Apr.XXV Army Corps
MayArmy Group B
JuneLXXIV Army Corps
JulyLXXXIV Army CorpsNormandy
AugustLXXXI Army Corps5th Panzer ArmyBelgium
Sept.LXXXVIII Army Corps1st Parachute ArmyMaastricht
Oct.LXXX Army Corps7th ArmyTrier
Nov./Dec.
1945Jan.LXXXI Army Corps15th ArmyDüren
Feb./Mar.LVIII Army Corps
April5th Panzer ArmyRhine/Ruhr

Notes and References

  1. Book: Tessin, Georg . Die Landstreitkräfte 281–370 . Biblio Verlag . 1974 . 3764808721 . Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939-1945 . 9 . Osnabrück . 265–268 . de . 353.
  2. Book: Tessin, Georg . Die Landstreitkräfte 281–370 . Biblio Verlag . 1974 . 3764808721 . Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939-1945 . 9 . Osnabrück . 167–171 . de . 328.
  3. Book: Mitcham, Samuel W. . German Order of Battle: 291st-999th Infantry Divisions, Named Infantry Divisions, and Special Divisions in World War II . Stackpole Books . 2007 . 9780811734370 . 2 . 353rd Infantry (later Volksgrenadier) Division.
  4. Book: Ford, Ken . Falaise 1944: Death of an Army . Osprey Publishing . 2005 . 9781841766263 . 21.
  5. Book: Zaloga, Steven J. . The Siegfried Line 1944–45: Battles on the German frontier . Osprey Publishing . 2007 . 9781846031212 . 70f.