Battle of Tornio

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Battle of Tornio
Part of Lapland War (World War II)

Overview of the area.
Date October 1 - October 8, 1944
Location Kemi-Tornio area, Finnish Lapland
Result Finnish victory
Combatants
Germany Finland
Commanders
General Rendulic General Siilasvuo
Strength
~? ~12,500
Casualties
about 500 KIA 189 KIA
Lapland War
Suursaari IslandTornioRovaniemi

The Battle of Tornio October 1 - October 8, 1944 was the first major engagement between Nazi Germany and Finland in the Lapland War; although hostilities had already begun elsewhere (see Tanne Ost).

The Germans had until then been withdrawing steadily towards Norway, ceding their positions to Finnish troops. The German interest was in keeping hold of the Petsamo area and its nickel mines.

The Finns, however, were forced by their peace agreement with the USSR to forcibly remove German troops from their territory. Thus the invasion of Tornio was planned and executed to surprise the Germans and open a front behind their backs along the Swedish border.

Lieutenant-General Siilasvuo was the officer in charge of the operations in Lapland and planned an amphibious assault near Tornio in time with an overland attack towards Kemi; both operations had Oulu as their base.

The capture of Tornio took the Germans by surprise. The Finnish 11th infantry division landed unopposed at Röyttä harbour and took the town of Tonio the same day. The German troops in town were surrounded in a few pockets, so-called motti, until they surrendered. The 15th jääkäri brigade advanced to Kemi via Simo, but their progress was slow, because the Germans had laid copious amounts of mines and blown all bridges, with the exception of the Tornio railway bridge that was saved after intervention by the Swedes. Further landings in Tornio the next day came under attack from the Luftwaffe, but were completed successfully. German counter attacks were repulsed with the aid of a battery of field artillery that was part of the second landing and fire support from Finnish gunboats which had arrived to the port. Some of these guns now adorn war memorials all over the Tornio river valley. By October 8 the whole Kemi-Tornio area had been cleared.

The German commander in the North, General Lothar Rendulic considered the capture of Tornio a betrayal by the Finns and ordered the destruction of Lapland in retaliation.

[edit] Trivia

  • During the attack on Tornio, Finnish troops liberated a German supply depot containing a large quantity of brandy... as a result the advance was halted for day until the soldiers had sobered up.
  • Some Finnish women had left their homes to follow their German boyfriends and actually participated in the battle on their side, killing at least one Finnish soldier.

[edit] References

  • Kaila, T. (1950) Lapin sota. WSOY
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