257th Infantry Division explained

Unit Name:257th Infantry Division
Native Name:257. Infanterie-Division
Dates:September 1939 – August 1944
Branch:Army
Type:Infantry
Size:Division
Battles:World War II

The 257th Infantry Division (German: 257. Infanterie-Division) was an infantry division of the German Army during World War II.

The division was destroyed in combat in August 1944 and formally dissolved on 9 October 1944. The division was redeployed as the 257th Volksgrenadier Division (German: 257. Volks-Grenadier-Division|link=no) on 13 October 1944, using personnel from the 587th Volksgrenadier Division.

History

257th Infantry Division

The 257th Infantry Division was formed in Berlin-Karlshorst in Wehrkreis III as a division of the fourth Aufstellungswelle on 26 August 1939, the day of German mobilization. It initially consisted of the Infantry Regiments 457, 466, and 477, as well as the Artillery Regiment 257. The three infantry regiments of the division took their initial battalions from several reserve formations of Wehrkreis III, including Infantry Regiment 8 (Frankfurt an der Oder), Infantry Regiment 9 (Wittenberg), Infantry Regiment 39 (Grünberg in Schlesien), Infantry Regiment 67 (Berlin-Spandau), Infantry Regiment 68 (Rathenow), and Infantry Regiment 150 (Berlin-Tegel).[1] The initial commander of the 257th Infantry Division was Max von Viebahn.[2]

After the Invasion of Poland, in which the division served a reserve role under Army Group South, it was used as an occupation force in the Kraków sector.

On 29 January 1940, the 257th Infantry Division passed an infantry battalion of the 466th Regiment to the 293rd Infantry Division of the eighth Aufstellungswelle.

In June 1940, during the Battle of France, the 257th Infantry Division stood opposite the Maginot Line, under the supervision of Army Group C. After the conclusion of the western campaign, the division was transferred back to Poland.

On 4 October 1940, a third of the division was transferred to the 123rd Infantry Division of the eleventh Aufstellungswelle.

Karl Sachs took command of the division on 1 March 1941.

Between June 1941 and the summer of 1942, the 257th Infantry Division fought continuous battles in the German-Soviet war. It engaged in combat at Uman and participated in the encirclement of Kiev. On 30 June 1941, elements of the division captured Bóbrka.[3] At the end of the year 1941, the 257th Infantry Division engaged in defensive operations against the Soviet winter campaign of 1941–42.

In May 1942, the division fought in the Second Battle of Kharkov. The 257th Infantry Division was now commanded by Karl Gümbel, who had assumed his post on 1 May 1942. Gümbel would be shortly replaced by Carl Püchler on 1 June.

On 5 November 1943, Anton Reichard von Mauchenheim genannt Bechtolsheim assumed command of the division.

On 2 July 1944, Friedrich Blümke assumed command of the division.

In August 1944, the 257th Infantry Division was destroyed while under the supervision of Army Group South. It was formally dissolved on 9 October 1944. Its final commander, appointed on 1 October 1944, had been Erich Seidel.

257th Volksgrenadier Division

Unit Name:257th Volksgrenadier Division
Native Name:257. Volksgrenadier-Division
Dates:October 1944 – May 1945
Branch:Army
Type:Infantry
Size:Division
Battles:World War II

The 257th Volksgrenadier Division was activated on 13 October 1944, using survivors of the 257th Infantry Division as well as the personnel of Shadow Division Groß-Görschen, also known as the 587th Volksgrenadier Division, a division of the thirty-second Aufstellungswelle. The Grenadier Regiments of the 257th Volksgrenadier Division were still numbered 457, 466, and 477, as they had been under the 257th Infantry Division.

The 257th Volksgrenadier Division was captured by United States Army forces at Füssen in May 1945.

The 257th Volksgrenadier Division's only commander was Erich Seidel.

Superior formations

Organizational chart of the 257th Infantry Division!Year!Month!Army Corps!Army!Army Group!Area
As "257th Infantry Division", September 1939 – October 1944
1939SeptemberArmy Group reserves.Army Group SouthKraków
DecemberXXIV1st ArmyArmy Group CSaarpfalz
1940JanuaryArmy reserves.
MayXXIV
JuneXXXVIIMaginot Line
July – AugustXXXIV18th ArmyNone.Poland
September – December12th ArmyArmy Group B
1941January – April17th ArmySouth Poland
MayArmy Group A
June – JulyXXXXIXArmy Group SouthLviv, Vinnytsia
AugustLIIUman
SeptemberXIDnieper
OctoberLIIKiev
November – DecemberXXXXIVDonetsk
1942January – May
June – July1st Panzer Army
AugustArmy Group reserves.Army Group DFrance
SeptemberLXXXIIIFelberChampagne
October – DecemberXXV7th ArmyBrittany
1943January – March
AprilIn transit.1st Panzer ArmyArmy Group SouthDonetsk
May – SeptemberXXXX
October – DecemberXXXKryvyi Rih
1944January6th ArmyNikopol
FebruaryLVII
MarchArmy Group ATighina
April – JulyXXXArmy Group South UkraineKishinev
August"Status unknown", according to German records. In reality: Destroyed in combat.
As "257th Volksgrenadier Division", October 1944 – May 1945
1944October – DecemberIn deployment.
1945JanuaryLXXXX1st ArmyArmy Group GLower Alsace
February – MarchLXXXIXSaarpfalz
AprilLXIV19th ArmyOberbefehlshaber WestKarlsruhe / Danube

Noteworthy individuals

Notes and References

  1. Book: Tessin, Georg. Die Landstreitkräfte 201–280. Biblio Verlag. 1973. 3764808721. Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939-1945. 8. Osnabrück. 245–250. de. 257.
  2. Book: Mitcham, Samuel W.. German Order of Battle. Volume One. 1st-290th Infantry Divisions in World War II. Stackpole Books. 2007. 9780811734165. 306–308. 257th Infantry (later Volksgrenadier) Division. Samuel W. Mitcham.
  3. Book: Kruglov, Alexander . Ghettos In German-Occupied Eastern Europe . Ester-Basya . Vaisman . Indiana University Press . 2012 . 9780253002020 . Dean, Martin . United States Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933–1945 . 2 A . Bloomington/Indianapolis . 750–751 . en . Bóbrka . Megargee, Geoffrey P..