The
If they could not be evacuated, the defenders of the pocket were doomed to annihilation.
Next day the French succeeded in embarking on a steamship for Denmark, where they disembarked at Copenhagen at 1600 hours on 5 April. After two short stops at Copenhagen and Fredericia, the
Reorganisation
Various elements of the
SS-Major General Krukenberg and the 23 officers and 701 men surviving of the
Krukenberg reported to Himmler’s field headquarters near Prenzlau on the 18th, returning with a batch of promotions and decorations, including many posthumous awards. Proud of his Frenchmen, Krukenberg was now wearing the
That same day, SS-Major Katzian was despatched to Wild-flecken with orders to return with the Training and Replacement Battalion.
Then on the 21st the troops set off on a four-day march to Neustrelitz in Mecklenburg, there being no trains available. Upon arrival, the Divisional headquarters were established in the village of Carpin, 10km east of the town and the various elements distributed among the surrounding villages.
Orders were then received from SS Headquarters for the re-organisation of the Division by 15 April into a Grenadier Regiment in accordance with the 1945 establishment of two Grenadier Battalions and a Heavy Battalion.
The Divisional units were quartered successively at Bergfeld (Bn 57), Grunow (Bn 58) and Ollendorf (Training Coy) before reaching their specific areas:
Grammerthin:
Georgenhof: Divisional Combat School (SS-Lieutenant Weber)
Goldenbaum: Heavy Battalion (Captain Boudet-Gheusi)
Fürstensee: 57th Battalion (Captain Fenet)
Wokuhl: 58th Battalion (SS-Captain Jauss, later SS-Captain Kroepsch)
Drewin: Construction Battalion (Captain Roy)
Zinow: MT and Workshop Section
Thurow: Feldgendarmerie (SS-Lieutenant Görr)
Rodlin: (Lieutenant Fatin)
The Division remained part of Panzer-General Hasso von Manteuffel’s 3rd Panzer Army, which, together with the 9th Army, formed Army Group
In expectation of the Russians crossing the Oder, the Division, which was now subordinate to the Rear Area Command with its headquarters at Feldberg, began working on anti-tank defences from 31 March in the area of the lakes east and south of Neustrelitz.
With the Division down to about 700 men, SS-Major-General Krukenberg’s first task, was to gather in all his isolated detachments, of which the two most important were those at Wildflecken of regimental size now enlarged by those that had escaped from Kolberg, and the
On 27 March, Krukenberg issued the following order of the day: