Gotthard Heinrici | |
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25 December 1886 | — 13 December 1971 (aged 84)|
Gotthard Heinrici |
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Nickname | Unser Giftzwerg, literally "our poison dwarf", meaning "our tough little bastard" |
Place of birth | Gumbinnen (Gusev), East Prussia |
Place of death | Endersbach, (Weinstadt), Germany |
Allegiance | German Empire (to 1918) Weimar Republic (to 1933) Nazi Germany |
Years of service | 1905 - 1945 |
Rank | Generaloberst |
Commands held | XXXXIII.Armeekorps 4. Armee 1. Armee Army Group Vistula |
Battles/wars |
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Awards | Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords Iron Cross First Class Iron Cross Second Class Black Wound Badge |
Gotthardt Heinrici (December 25, 1886 – December 13, 1971) was a general in the German Army during World War II.
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Heinrici was born in Gumbinnen (now Gusev), East Prussia, on Christmas Day, 1886. Few details are known about Heinrici's personal life. He was a cousin of General Gerd von Rundstedt and was married to Gertrude Heinrici, a half-Jew, and had two children - Hartmut and Gisela[1]. The family received a German Blood Certificate directly from German dictator Adolf Hitler. The Heinricis had two children: a girl and a boy.
The son of a Lutheran minister in Gumbinnen - Paul and his wife Gisela H. (née von Rauchhaupt), Heinrici was a religious man who attended church regularly. His religiosity made him unpopular among the Nazi hierarchy and he was on unfavourable terms with Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring and Hitler. This was probably due to his refusal to join the Nazi Party.
The Heinrici family had been soldiers since the 12th century. Gotthard Heinrici continued the family tradition by joining the 95th Infantry Regiment on 8 March 1905. He was 19 years old. Heinrici saw action on both the Eastern and Western fronts in the First World War and won numerous awards. His awards included the Black Wound Badge for being wounded in battle. Heinrici also received both the Second Class and First Class Iron Crosses in 1914 and 1915, respectively. He participated in the Battle of Tannenberg. Heinrici was a victim of poison gas in World War I.
Heinrici served throughout World War II. As in World War I, he served on both fronts. Heinrici built up a reputation as the best defensive tactician in the German Army (Wehrmacht Heer) and was renowned for his tenacity. For this reason, his officers and men nicknamed him Unser Giftzwerg, literally "our poison dwarf", meaning "our tough little bastard" in recognition of his character and lack of physical stature.
During the Blitzkrieg into France, Heinrici's command was part of Colonel General (Generaloberst) Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb's Army Group C. He commanded the XII Army Corps which was part of the First Army. Heinrici succeeded in breaking through the Maginot Line on 14 June 1940.
In 1941, during Operation Barbarossa, Heinrici served in the Second Panzer Army under Heinz Guderian and, as the commanding general of the XXXXIII Army Corps, received the Knight's Cross.
On 26 January 1942, Heinrici was given command of the German Fourth Army. This unit was crucial to the rapidly crumbling German line directly facing Moscow. The Fourth Army under Heinrici held out against the Soviet onslaught for ten weeks. Heinrici managed this even though his forces were sometimes out-numbered 12 to 1. During this time, Heinrici developed one of his most famous tactics: when he sensed a Soviet attack was imminent, Heinrici would pull his troops back from the line prior to the preliminary artillery barrage. Then, immediately afterwards, he would return them unharmed back to their lines to face the attacking Soviet troops.
In late 1943, Göring had Heinrici placed in a convalescent home in Karlsbad on the pretext of "ill health". This was actually punishment for refusing to set fire to Smolensk in accordance with the Nazi "scorched earth" policy. However, it should be noted that Heinrici went on a two-month leave of absence twice during World War II. He took leave from 6 June to 13 July 1942. About one year later, Heinrici took leave from 1 June to 31 July 1943. One of these leaves was believed to be due to his contracting hepatitis.
In the summer of 1944, after eight months of enforced retirement, Heinrici was sent to Hungary and placed in command of the German First Panzer Army and the Hungarian First Army which was attached to it. He was able to keep the First Panzer Army relatively intact as he retreated into Slovakia. Heinrici fought so tenaciously that he was awarded the Swords to the Oak Leaves of his Knight's Cross on 3 March 1945.
On 20 March 1945, Adolf Hitler replaced Heinrich Himmler with Heinrici as Commander-in-Chief of Army Group Vistula on the Eastern Front. Indicating that he was ill, Himmler had abandoned his post on 13 March and retired to a sanatorium at Hohenlychen. At this time, Army Group Vistula's front was less than 50 miles from Berlin.
As Commander-in-Chief of Army Group Vistula, Heinrici commanded two armies: the Third Panzer Army led by General Hasso von Manteuffel and the Ninth Army led by General Theodor Busse. Heinrici was tasked with preventing a Soviet attack across the Oder River. But he faced shortages of manpower and material and Hitler's conviction that the Red Army would not attack Berlin.
Led by Marshals Georgi Zhukov (1st Byelorussian Front) and Ivan Konev (1st Ukrainian Front), the Soviets had advanced rapidly west from the USSR and had been stalled east of the Oder for months. As Anglo-American armies approached Berlin from the West, however, Stalin became convinced that they intended to take Berlin for themselves and ordered Zhukov and Konev to seize the city without further delays.
On 15 April, Heinrici met with architect Albert Speer and Lieutenant General (Generalleutnant) Helmuth Reymann to discuss Hitler's Nero Decree. This decree instituted a scorched earth policy. While outwardly responsible for carrying out the decree, Speer was clandestinely campaigning against it. Heinrici was against the scorched earth policy too. At that time, Reymann was the commander of the Berlin Defense Area. Although Reymann refused to side with Speer, he did promise to confer with Heinrici before destroying vital city infrastructure.
On 16 April, the first stage of the Battle of Berlin, the Battle of the Oder-Neisse, began. Combined, the Soviets attacked with over 1,500,000 men for what they called the "Berlin Offensive Operation". In the early morning of 18 April, Zhukov's front crossed the Oder and assaulted Heinrici's positions on the western bank. Simultaneously, Konev's front attacked Field Marshal Ferdinand Schörner's Army Group Center further south. By 19 April, the Soviets had broken through and the Battle of the Oder-Neisse was over. Now began the second stage of the Battle of Berlin, the battle for the city itself.
About 21 April, Hitler learned of a proposed retreat of Army Group Vistula only after a puzzling request by General Heinrici. Heinrici requested permission from Hitler to transfer the headquarters of his army group to a new site. Hitler was only able to find Heinrici's proposed headquarters after much searching on the map. Hitler then saw to his dismay that the site was to the west of Berlin and, thus, further from the Soviets than Hitler's own headquarters in the Führerbunker. Hitler was furious.
By late April, Heinrici realized that Army Group Vistula could not halt the advance of the Soviets. After days of intense fighting, he ordered the retreat of his army group from Wollin. He ordered his men to fall back across the Oder River. Heinrici ordered this despite Hitler's orders that no retreat could be authorized without his personal approval.
On 28 April, German Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel was riding along the roads north of Berlin when he noticed to his amazement that troops of the 7th Panzer Division and of the 25th Panzergrenadier Division were marching north away from Berlin. These troops were part of General Hasso von Manteuffel's 3rd Panzer Army. The 3rd Panzer Army was one of two armies which made up Heinrici's Army Group Vistula and were supposed to be on their way to Berlin. Instead, they were being moved northward in an attempt to halt the Soviet break-through at Neubrandenburg.[2]
Heinrici had defied the strictest orders of Keitel and his deputy, General Alfred Jodl. Furious, Keitel went in search of Heinrici and found him on a road near Neubrandenburg. Heinrici was close to the front and accompanied by von Manteuffel. Processions of wounded and disarmed soldiers and endless treks of refugees were moving past.[2] Keitel, his face purple, called Heinrici to account and spoke of insubordination, treason, cowardice, and sabotage. Keitel accused Heinrici of weakness and shouted that if Heinrici had only taken General Lothar Rendulic in Austria as an example and shot a few thousand deserters or strung them up on the nearest tree, his armies would not now be on the retreat.[2]
Heinrici's movements were intended to bring his army group, and as many civilians as possible, to the west. Heinrici intended to get them into the area between the northern reaches of the Elbe River and the Baltic Sea.[2] Heinrici told his superior officer, "Marshal Keitel, if you want these men to be shot, will you please begin!"[2]
Keitel relieved Heinrici of his command on 29 April. Heinrici's command was offered to von Manteuffel, but von Manteuffel not only declined the promotion, he protested the treatment of Heinrici. Kurt von Tippelskirch was named as Heinrici's interim replacement until General Kurt Student (who was in Holland) could arrive and assume control of Army Group Vistula. But Student was captured by the British before he could take command.
After losing his command, Heinrici retired to Plön, where he surrendered to British forces on 28 May 1945.
After his capture, Heinrici was held at Island Farm where he remained, except for a three-week transfer to a camp in the United States in October 1947, until his eventual release on 19 May 1948. He lived in Endersbach in Weinstadt and was buried at the cemetery in Freiburg, with full military honors.
Throughout the war, Heinrici was opposed to Hitler's scorched earth policy, whereby everything of use had been ordered destroyed so as not to fall into the hands of the advancing enemy. He refused to lay waste to Smolensk as Göring had ordered, and late in the war he supported Minister of Armaments Albert Speer who worked to save Berlin from total destruction. When he was briefly put in charge of the defense of Berlin itself, Heinrici's first command was that nothing be purposely destroyed.
After the war, Heinrici's diary entries and letters were collected into a book entitled Morals and behaviour here are like those in the Thirty Years’ War. The First Year of the German-Soviet War as Shown in the Papers of Gnl. Gotthard Heinrici. He was also featured prominently in Cornelius Ryan's book, "The Last Battle."
Military offices | ||
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Preceded by Generalleutnant Gerhard Glokke |
Commander of 16. Infanterie-Division 12 October 1937 – 31 January1940 |
Succeeded by Generalleutnant Heinrich Krampf |
Preceded by General of Mountain Troops Ludwig Kübler |
Commander of 4. Armee 20 January 1942 – 6 June 1942 |
Succeeded by Generaloberst Hans von Salmuth |
Preceded by Generaloberst Hans von Salmuth |
Commander of 4. Armee 15 July 1942 – June 1943 |
Succeeded by Generaloberst Hans von Salmuth |
Preceded by Generaloberst Hans von Salmuth |
Commander of 4. Armee 31 July 1943 – 4 June 1944 |
Succeeded by General der Infantrie Kurt von Tippelskirch |
Preceded by Generaloberst Erhard Raus |
Commander of 1. Panzerarmee 15 August 1944 – 19 March 1945 |
Succeeded by Generaloberst Walther Nehring |
Preceded by Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler |
Commander of Army Group Vistula 20 March 1945 – 28 April 1945 |
Succeeded by General der Infantrie Kurt von Tippelskirch |
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