The Himmler's SS (45 page)

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Authors: Robert Ferguson

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Although given suitably heroic names from an early date, Waffen-SS divisions were not numbered until 15 November 1943. Unit titles and designations were frequently altered, either to acknowledge a change in status or, particularly late in the war, to camouflage a formation's true identity and confuse enemy intelligence. The ‘Das Reich' Division was a typical example, and had its nomenclature altered no less than eleven times:

September 1939

Panzerverband Ostpreussen

September 1939

Panzer Division ‘Kempf'

10.10.39

SS-Verfügungstruppe-Division (Motorised)

4.4.40

SS-Verfügungsdivision

1.12.40

SS-Division ‘Deutschland'

28.1.41

SS-Division (Motorised) ‘Reich'

May 1942

SS-Division (Motorised) ‘Das Reich'

May 1942

Kampfgruppe ‘Ostendorff'

14.11.42

SS-Panzergrenadier Division ‘Das Reich'

15.11.43

2nd SS-Panzer Division ‘Das Reich'

24.2.45

Ausbildungsgruppe ‘Nord'

Divisions staffed by Germans were known as ‘SS-Division', while those comprising mainly Volksdeutsche or Germanic personnel, whether volunteers or conscripts, were called ‘SS-Freiwilligen Division'. Units composed primarily of east Europeans or Russians came into the category of ‘Waffen Division der SS', a term of inferiority which denoted attachment to, rather than actual membership of, the Waffen-SS.

All the Waffen-SS divisions which had been mustered, at least on paper, by 1945 are listed in the table below. Many divisions numbered above 20 were merely upgraded regiments, flung together in a hurry using any ‘spare' personnel available and given grandiose titles. The number of Knight's Crosses awarded is a good indication of the effectiveness and battle experience of each division.

W
AFFEN
-SS D
IVISIONS
, 1939–45

Title
(and Divisional Strength
at Beginning of 1945)

Granted
Divisional
Status

Primary
Composition

Knight's
Crosses
Awarded

1st SS-Panzer Division ‘Leibstandarte-SS Adolf Hitler' (22,000)

1942

German volunteers with Hitler's SS bodyguard regiment as the nucleus

58

2nd SS-Panzer Division ‘Das Reich' (18,000)

1939

German volunteers with the SS-Verfügungstruppe as the nucleus

69

3rd SS-Panzer Division ‘Totenkopf' (15,400)

1939

German volunteers with the SS-Totenkopfverbände as the nucleus

47

4th SS-Polizei Panzergrenadier Division (9,000)

1939

German police transferees

25

5th SS-Panzer Division ‘Wiking' (14,800)

1940

German/west European volunteers

55

6th SS-Gebirgs Division ‘Nord' (15,000)

1941

German volunteers with Totenkopf regiments as the nucleus

4

7th SS-Freiwilligen Gebirgs Division ‘Prinz Eugen' (20,000)

1942

Yugoslavian Volksdeutsche volunteers

6

8th SS-Kavallerie Division ‘Florian Geyer' (13,000)

1942

German volunteers with SS-Kavallerie regiments as the nucleus

22

9th SS-Panzer Division ‘Hohenstaufen' (19,000)

1943

German volunteers and conscripts

12

10th SS-Panzer Division ‘Frundsberg' (15,500)

1943

German volunteers and conscripts

13

11th SS-Freiwilligen Panzergrenadier Division ‘Nordland' (9,000)

1943

West European volunteers, many from the disbanded SS foreign legions ‘Niederlande', ‘Norwegen' and ‘Freikorps Danmark'

25

12th SS-Panzer Division ‘Hitlerjugend' (19,500)

1943

German Hitler Youth volunteers

14

13th Waffen Gebirgs Division der SS ‘Handschar' (12,700)

1943

Yugoslavian Muslim volunteers

4

14th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS (22,000)

1943

Ukrainian volunteers

1

15th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS (16,800)

1943

Latvian volunteers, many transferring from the Schutzmannschaft and Police Rifle Regiments

3

16th SS-Panzergrenadier Division ‘Reichsführer-SS' (14,000)

1943

German/Volksdeutsche volunteers and conscripts, with Himmler's escort battalion as the nucleus

1

17th SS-Panzergrenadier Division ‘Götz von Berlichingen' (3,500)

1943

German/Volksdeutsche volunteers and conscripts

4

18th SS-Freiwilligen Panzergrenadier Division ‘Horst Wessel' (11,000)

1944

Hungarian Volksdeutsche volunteers and conscripts

2

19th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS (9,000)

1944

Latvian volunteers, many transferring from the Schutzmannschaft and Police Rifle Regiments

12

20th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS (15,500)

1944

Estonian volunteers, many transferring from the Schutzmannschaft and Police Rifle Regiments

5

21st Waffen Gebirgs Division der SS ‘Skanderbeg' (5,000)

1944

Albanian Muslim volunteers

0

22nd SS-Freiwilligen Kavallerie Division ‘Maria Theresa' (8,000)

1944

German/Hungarian Volksdeutsche volunteers and conscripts

6

23rd Waffen Gebirgs Division der SS ‘Kama' (disbanded late 1944 and number ‘23' given to next division)

1944

Yugoslavian Muslim volunteers

0

23rd SS-Freiwilligen Panzergrenadier Division ‘Nederland' (6,000)

1945

Dutch volunteers, many formerly of the SS foreign legion ‘Niederlande'

19

24th Waffen Gebirgs Division der SS (3,000)

1944

Italian fascist volunteers

0

25th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS ‘Hunyadi' (15,000)

1944

Hungarian volunteers

0

26th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS (13,000)

1945

Hungarian volunteers

0

27th SS-Freiwilligen Grenadier Division ‘Langemarck' (7,000)

1944

Flemish volunteers, many formerly of the SS foreign legion ‘Flandern'

1

28th SS-Freiwilligen Grenadier Division ‘Wallonien' (4,000)

1944

Walloon volunteers, many formerly of the German army's Wallonische Legion

3

29th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS (disbanded late 1944 and number ‘29' given to next division)

1944

Russian convict volunteers

0

29th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS (15,000)

1945

Italian fascist volunteers

0

30th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS (4,500)

1945

Russian volunteers, many transferring from the Schutzmannschaft and Police Rifle Regiments

0

31st SS-Freiwilligen Grenadier Division (11,000)

1945

Czechoslovakian Volksdeutsche volunteers and conscripts

0

32nd SS-Freiwilligen Grenadier Division ‘30 Januar' (2,000)

1945

German conscripts and SS training school personnel/Volksdeutsche volunteers and conscripts

0

33rd Waffen Kavallerie Division der SS (destroyed soon after formation, and number ‘33' given to next division)

1945

Hungarian volunteers

0

33rd Waffen Grenadier Division der SS ‘Charlemagne' (7,000)

1945

French volunteers, many of them formerly of the German army's Französisches Legion or LVF

2

34th SS-Freiwilligen Grenadier Division ‘Landstorm Nederland' (7,000)

1945

Dutch volunteers, many formerly of the Landwacht Nederland

3

35th SS-Polizei Grenadier Division (5,000)

1945

German police transferees

0

36th Waffen Grenadier Division der SS (6,000)

1945

German/east European volunteers, including a large number of convicted criminals from the Dirlewanger Brigade, a terror unit used against civilians

1

37th SS-Freiwilligen Kavallerie Division ‘Lützow' (1,000)

1945

Hungarian Volksdeutsche conscripts and remnants of the ‘Florian Geyer' and ‘Maria Theresa' divisions

0

38th SS-Grenadier Division ‘Nibelungen' (1,000)

1945

German volunteers, conscripts and SS training school personnel

0

During the latter part of the war, it was not uncommon for ad hoc SS battle groups to be drawn together from divisional troops, or for smaller units to be absorbed by larger ones which just happened to be located nearby. There were also hundreds of replacement formations, such as the Latvian SS Ersatzbrigade which alone accounted for forty full companies of men under training, and some very obscure units such as the Indische Freiwilligen-Legion der SS, made up of anti-British Indian prisoners-of-war who had been captured in North Africa and Italy. One of the strangest of all was the Osttürkischer Waffen-Verband der SS, composed of three Muslim Waffengruppen der SS recruited from Caspian and Black Sea Tartars under the command of the Austrian SS-Standartenführer Wilhelm Hintersatz. He had been converted to Islam during service alongside the Turks in the First World War and took the name of Harun-el-Raschid Bey, under which he was listed in the
SS Dienstaltersliste
! It was all a far cry from the racial élite of the 1930s.

W
AFFEN
-SS U
NIFORMS

The perennial interest in the Waffen-SS tends to be concentrated on its uniforms and insignia, and for that reason these merit detailed coverage.

The manufacture of Waffen-SS uniform clothing was undertaken either by private firms or, increasingly after 1941, by the SS-owned economic enterprises operating under the auspices of the SS Wirtschafts- und Verwaltungshauptamt. The first SS clothing factory, or SS-Bekleidungswerke, was established in Dachau concentration camp, where the main Waffen-SS clothing depot was also located. In 1939 a training school for tailors and seamstresses opened at Ravensbrück, and after the occupation of Poland and Russia the SS Eastern Industries Ltd, or Ostindustrie GmbH (Osti), used local Jews to manufacture winter uniforms and various items of equipment from property and raw materials seized by the Germans. Civilian clothing confiscated from concentration camp inmates was commonly reprocessed and dyed for transformation into Waffen-SS uniforms. By 1944, the vast majority of SS and police clothing was being manufactured in-house at the following establishments:

Bayreuth labour camp, in Bavaria

Dachau concentration camp, in Bavaria

Oranienburg concentration camp, near Berlin

Poniatowa labour camp, near Lublin in Poland

Posen labour camp, in Poland

Radom labour camp, in Poland

Ravensbrück concentration camp, near Fürstenberg

Schröttersburg concentration camp, near Plock in Poland

Straubing prison, in Bavaria

Trawniki labour camp, near Lublin in Poland

Their products sometimes bore the stamp ‘SS-BW', followed by a code number allocated to the particular bench or workshop concerned. Many items manufactured at the SS-Bekleidungswerke were, however, completely unmarked.

During 1944–5, shortages of raw materials created such a crisis in the uniform industry that even the concentration camps could not meet the clothing needs of the Waffen-SS. The result was that newly recruited front-line SS soldiers ended up wearing captured uniforms, particularly Italian items taken after the fall of Mussolini. Older veterans tended to retain their better quality early issue tunics, caps and boots for as long as possible, often until they quite literally fell apart, and there were at least three fully motorised platoons, the so-called SS-Bekleidungs-Instandsetzungszüge 500, 501 and 502, whose sole job it was to travel from unit to unit repairing uniform clothing.

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