21. Panzer-Division  
  21st Panzer Division Log  

  Gliederung Dienstgrade Offiziere Name Feldpost
  Divisionskommandeur Hauptmann Filip Opálka

Fhil

         
Panzer-Regiment 5 Regimentskommandeur      
  I. Abteilung, Pz.-Rgt. 5  Obergefreiter Mark Crawford mlcrawfo
  II. Abteilung, Pz.-Rgt. 5  General der Panzertruppen Gerald Neumann

WitBlits

         
Panzergrenadier- Regiment 104 Regimentskommandeur      
  I. Batallion, PzGr-Rgt. 104 Generalleutnant Calemanka Noftz Calemanka
  II. Batallion, PzGr-Rgt. 104      
         
Panzergrenadier- Regiment 47 Regimentskommandeur Hauptmann Simon Patrick truenzie
  I. Batallion, PzGr-Rgt. 47      
  II. Batallion, PzGr-Rgt. 47 Oberleutnant Leonard Berlin LEONARD
         
  Panzer-Artillerie-Regiment 155      
  Panzer-Pionier-Bataillon 220      
  Panzer-Aufklärungs-Abteilung 580      
  Panzerjäger-Abteilung 200 Feldwebel Fatih Bas Fatih
  Heeres-Flakartillerie-Abteilung  609      
         
 
German HQ

 

UNIT HISTORY

 

The 21.Panzer-Division was ordered formed by the Oberkommando des Heeres from the 5.Leicht-Division on August 1st, 1941. The date of formation listed by various sources is conflicting, and this seems due to the fact that although the unit was ordered formed on August 1st, it most likely did not come together until late in 1941. Many sources list the date of formation as being in October, 1941. Panzer-Regiment 5, previously a part of the 5.Leicht-Division already stationed in North Africa, continued to function as a combat unit. When the change of formation took place, the new 21.Panzer began to form while Panzer-Regiment 5 continued to operate in North Africa.

Most divisional histories list the 21.Panzer as seeing action first during the British Operation Crusader, and although this is indeed the first major action the unit saw, Panzer-Regiment 5, along with other units now a part of the division, did see limited action much earlier. On September 14th, 1941, units of the 21.Panzer-Division took part in Operation Sommernachtstraum. This operation was to be a major reconnaissance of the enemy lines across the border into Eygpt, but did not actually result in any significant engagement with the British.

When the British launched Operation Crusader, the 21.Panzer-Division fought very well until depleted armour and a resolute 8th Army forced Rommel to pull back his forces to positions around Gazala. After continued British pressure, Rommel pulled back even more to postions around El Agheila. All the while, the 21.Panzer-Division fought a number of rear-guard actions against the advancing British. Thanks in part to the actions of Panzer-Regiment 5 of the 21.Panzer-Division, the retreat back to El Agheila was succesful, although by this time the siege on Tobruk had now been lifted and the British garrison was once again reunited with the 8th Army. The relief would only be temporary.

In early January, 1942, after being resupplied and refitted, the DAK went on the offensive against the British. In two weeks time, the DAK had retaken Benghazi (January 29th) and had moved almost 350 miles. The offensive slowed as the Germans reached the British position at Gazala. All the while, the division took part in the advance. The British position stretched from Gazala to Bir Hacheim in a ring of heavily mined and fortified lines. The front settled here for the rest of Winter until May, 1942, when Rommel once again launched an offensive against the British. This offensive saw the division fighting in intense battles for the Gazala line, eventually pushing the British from their postions, finally taking Tobruk, and then moving all the way into Eygpt, stoppping finally at Alma Halfa.

The 21.Panzer-Division next saw action in the Battles for El Alamein, fighting in desperate battles againsts a vastly growing number of enemy tanks. Against heavy loses and a growing number of British AFVs, the Germans were pushed back from the El Alamein lines, and the division saw action in rear guard operations that partially allowed the Germans to retreat back across the border, across the Libyan Desert, all the way to Tunisia.

When the 21.Panzer-Division arrived in Tunisia, it was put under the control of 5.Panzerarmee, and then used as a number of Kampfgruppen in a series of sucessive engagements against the Allies. From January 30th, 1943 to February 3rd, 1943, the 21.Panzer-Division was split into two Kampfgruppen for action in the Faid-Maknassy engagements. Kampfgruppen Grun was led by Werner Grun and was formed from Panzer-Abteilung I/Panzer-Regiment 5, while Kampfgruppen Pfeiffer was led by Major Pfeiffer, being formed from the Panzergrenadier-Bataillon II/Panzergrenadier-Regiment 104, Panzergrenadier-Bataillon III/Panzer-Grenadier-Regiment 104 and Tunis-Battillon 2. Kampfgruppe Pfeiffer was then itself divided into "task forces" consisting of Nord, Mitte and Sud.

Throught-out the battles in North Africa, the 21.Panzer was used in numerous kampfgruppe formations like the one above, with Kampfgruppe Pfeiffer taking part in many different actions being used again and again.

Later in the defesive battles in Tunisia, Rommel himself took control of the 21.Panzer while it fought in the battles for Kasserine Pass. The Division was halted before being able to reach the actual pass itself.

Kampfgruppe Pfieffer surrendered on May 11th, while the rest of the 21.Panzer surrenderd on May 13th when the Tunisian Bridge-head in North Africa finally fell.

After being destroyed in North Afria, the 21.Panzer was reformed in June of 1943 in France. It remained stationed in France for the next year, being deemed unfit for service on the Eastern Front. The 21.Panzer was still in France when the Allies launched their invasion of Normandy in June of 1944, and the division was thrown into action against the Allied postions as the only Panzer unit to do so on the 1st day of the attack, June 6th. Most of its armour was lost early in the battles, but the Grenadiers of the Division fought in and around Caen for many weeks.

When the Allies began the massive breakout of the Normandy beach area, the division withdrew along with the rest of the German forces. The 21.Panzer was then used in the Southern Sector of the Western Front until it was pulled from the lines to refit and reform in Germany in August, 1944. It was then rushed back to the Western Front to fight in defensive actions during the general withdrawl through France, mainly in the Saar and Alsace regions.

In Early 1945, the 21.Panzer was used in a drive on Strasbourg, and was then shifted to the Eastern Front in February, 1945 where it fought in defensive actions until being taken by the Soviets later in April, 1945.

 

Commanders 
Generalleutnant Karl Böttcher   (1 Aug 1941 - 20 May 1941) 
Generalleutnant Johann von Ravenstein   (20 May 1941 - 29 Nov 1941) 
Oberstleutnant Gustav-Georg Knabe   (29 Nov 1941 - 1 Dec 1941) 
Generalleutnant Karl Böttcher   (1 Dec 1941 - 11 Feb 1942) 
Generalleutnant Georg von Bismarck   (11 Feb 1942 - 21 July 1942) 
Oberst Alfred Bruer   (21 July 1942 - ? Aug 1942) 
Generalleutnant Georg von Bismarck   (? Aug 1942 - 1 Sep 1942) 
Generalleutnant Carl-Hans Lungershausen   (1 Sep 1942 - 18 Sep 1942) 
Generalleutnant Heinz von Randow   (18 Sep 1942 - 21 Dec 1942) 
Generalleutnant Hans-Georg Hildebrandt   (1 Jan 1943 - 15 Mar 1943) 
Generalmajor Heinrich-Hermann von Hülsen   (15 Mar 1943 - 15 May 1943) 
Generalleutnant Edgar Feuchtinger   (15 May 1943 - 15 Jan 1944) 
Generalmajor Oswin Grolig   (15 Jan 1944 - 8 Mar 1944) 
Generalleutnant Franz Westhoven   (8 Mar 1944 - 8 May 1944) 
Generalleutnant Edgar Feuchtinger   (8 May 1944 - 25 Jan 1945) 
Oberst Helmut Zollenkopf   (25 Jan 1945 - 12 Feb 1945) 
Generalleutnant Werner Marcks   (12 Feb 1945 - ? Apr 1945) 
 

 

Area of operations 

North Africa   (Aug 1941 - May 1943) 
France   (July 1943 - Dec 1944) 
Germany   (Dec 1944 - Feb 1945) 
Poland & eastern Germany   (Feb 1945 - May 1945)