6th SS Mountain Division Nord
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The SS Division "Nord" was a German army unit of the Waffen-SS. It was formed as SS-Kampfgruppe "Nord" in February 1941 in Norway but it was turned into a division in September 1941.
The division was composed of SS men used for garrison duties in Norway. It was transferred to Finnish Lapland prior to Operation Barbarossa as part of the German XXXVI Corps under AOK Norwegen. In July 1941 the division took part in Operation Silberfuchs with the German 169th Division and the Finnish 6th Division. Due to lack of training the soldiers were routed in the first attack against the Soviet forces at Salla.
The division was later attached to the Finnish III Corps operating in the Kiestinki area.
In September 1942 the division was renamed as the SS Gebirgs Division "Nord" (SS Mountain Division "the North") and in October 1943 finally as the 6th SS Gebirgs Division "Nord".
In 1944 the division took part in the Lapland War against Finland. After pulling out of Finland the division was transferred to Denmark and later to Germany. The division surrendered in May 1945 to US forces in Bavaria.
History
In the early spring of 1941 several Totenkopfstandarten, comprised of military age members of the Allgemeine-SS were transferred to Norway for garrison duty. SS-Kampfgruppe Nord (mot.) was formed from Totenkopfstandarten 6 and 7 (and, temporairily Totenkopfstandarten 9 in the late summer of 1941) as well as other units. The kampfgruppe participated in Operation "Silberfuchs" (Silver Fox), the liberation of part of Soviet-occupied Finland and the invasion of the Soviet Karelia. Inadequately trained, the unit suffered an inauspicious beginning with its defeat and rout at Salla in summer 1941. However, after being retrained under the tutelage of Finnish infantry, and repopulated with younger, more fit soldiers in the Waffen-SS replacement system, the unit performed well from 1942 on, often working in close conjunction with the Germany Army's 7th Mountain Division.
Later upgraded to a mountain division, Nord fought 1,214 consecutive days in the subarctic taiga against the Soviets from July 1 1941 - 1944. One of the division elite components was the SS-Freiwilligen-Schikompanie Norwegen - a volunteer unit of Norwegians, Swedes and Danish expert skiers under Gust Jonassen used for ambushes and patrols. The division only departed when the German 20th Mountain Army was forced to withdraw from Karelia upon the conclusion of a separate armistice between the Finns and the Soviets in September 1944. The 6th SS Gebirgs Division then formed the rear guard for the three German corps withdrawing from Finland in "Operation Birke" (Birch) and from September to November 1944, marched 1,600 kilometers to Mo-I-Rana, Norway, where it entrained for the southern end of the country.
After crossing the Skaggerak in a naval convoy, the division briefly refitted in Denmark before entraining again for commitment on its next mission in Operation Nordwind in the Low Vosges mountains of southeastern France. It then fought primarily in the Vosges and in the Saar-Moselle triangle during the remaining months of the war.
Chronological history of SS Division Nord
- February 1941: Feb 24 (28?): SS-Kampfgruppe Nord formed in Norway from German Totenkopfstandarten 6 & 7. Some recruits possibly from Konzentrationslager guards as well.
- June 10: Units begin to arrive at Rovaniemi
- June 17: Unit upgraded to a motorized division; begin advancing towards Soviet border
- June 22: Operation Barbarossa - Germany invades the Soviet Union
- August 1942: returns to Finland
- Oct 22: Redesignated 6th SS-Gebirgs-Division Nord. Collaborationist force Norwegian Police Company #2 assigned to Skijäger unit
- Feb 1945: Division engaged in patrolling and defensive operations in the Low Vosges mountains.
- March 1945: Division transferred to Saar-Moselle triangle. Defensive combat against elements of US Third Army.
- March 16: Combat Pfaffenheck and Buchholz against a company from the US 90th Division and a platoon from the US 712th Tank Battalion
- April 1945: Retreats past Worms, Boppard, across the Rhine and deep into Germany...
Commanders
- Brigadeführer Karl Herrmann 02/1941 - 05/1941
- Obergruppenführer Karl-Maria Demelhuber 05/1941 - 04/1942
- Obergruppenführer Matthias Kleinheisterkamp 04/1942; 06/1942 - 10/1943
- Oberführer Hans Scheider 04/1942 - 06/1942
- Gruppenführer Lothar Debes 10/1943?
- Obergruppenführer Friedrich-Wilhelm Krüger 10/1943 - 08/1944
- Brigadeführer Gustav Lombard 08/1944
- Gruppenführer Karl Brenner 09/1944 - 04/1945
- Standartenführer Franz Schreiber 04/1945 - 05/1945
Composition
- Stab der Division
- SS-Panzergrenadier Regiment (SS-Gebirgsjäger-Regiment) 11 Reinhard Heydrich
- SS-Panzergrenadier Regiment (SS-Gebirgsjäger-Regiment) 12 Michael Gaißmair
- SS-Gebirgs Artillerie Regiment 6
- SS-Sturmgeschultz Batterie 6
- SS-Panzer-Grenadier-Abteilung 506
- SS-Infanterie-Regiment (mot) 5
- SS-Infanterie-Regiment 9 (removed 1943)
- SS-Schutzen-Abteilung (mot) 6
- SS-(Gebirgs-) Panzerjager-Abteilung 6
- SS-Flak-Abteilung 6
- SS-(Gebirgs-) Nachrichten-Abteilung (mot) 6
- SS-Gebirgs-Aufklärungs-Abteilung (mot) 6
- SS-(Gebirgs-) Pionier-Abteilung 6
- SS-Schijüger Bataillon Norwegen (aka SS-Freiwilligen-Schikompanie Norwegen Skijegerbataljonen)
- SS-Dina 6
- SS-Bekleidungs-Instandsetzungs-Kompanie 6
- SS-Sanitats-Kompanie 6
- SS-Veterinar-Kompanie 6
- SS-Kriegsberichter-Zug 6
- SS-Feldgendarmerie-Trupp 6
- SS- og Politikompani
- Norwegian Police Company (#2 in 1943, replaced by #3 in 1944 - served with Schijüger Bataillon)
Insignia
Vehicle Insignia:
- The "Hagelrune" a stylized Life/Death rune, like a combined "x" and "i;"
Collar Patches:
- Standard Waffen-SS collar patches; possible use of "Hagelrune" collar patch.
- Reinhard Heydrich cuffband introduced 1943 for 11th Regiment
- Michael Gaißmair cuffband given to 12th Regiment, 1944
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