At 0900 hours on 2 May, Major Boudet-Gheusi assembled the fifty men accompanying him in a village near Bad Kleinen and permitted them to either disguise themselves as civilian labourers or to surrender themselves to the British with him. The Germans, with SS-Second-Lieutenant Bender in charge, were ordered to try and rejoin a German unit that was still fighting.
At 1500 hours, Major Boudet-Gheusi, Lieutenants Bénétoux and Métais, Second-Lieutenant Radici, one NCO and three men surrendered to an English unit occupying the railway station at Bublitz. When Major Boudet-Gheusi presented himself to an English officer as ‘commander of the Legion of French Volunteers against Bolshevism’ he was immediately made to climb on a tank with Second-Lieutenant Radici to be taken to Wismar for handing over to the Russians, but the two officers managed to escape when night fell and rejoined the other prisoners of war unnoticed.
SS-Captain Kroepsch’s 58th Battalion, which had lost its 6th Company to the Berlin contingent, conducted a delaying action for two days with its remaining three companies deployed as follows:
5th Company: Holding the anti-tank barrier south of the village of Fürstensee on the Berlin road, thus facing south with the support of one of our last 150mm heavy infantry guns
7th Company: Deployed in advance positions the first day, it was deployed on the left of the 5th Company on the second day
8th Company: Deployed facing east astride the road from Fürstensee to Wokuhl. Destroyed two or three tanks during the final fighting.
A marsh and then a line of small lakes extended east–west to the west of the Neustrelitz–Fürstensee–Berlin road in line with the barriers manned by the battalion. The Berlin–Neustrelitz railway passed between the marsh and the lakes and was mined with big spherical naval mines. Further west was the line of retreat assigned to the battalion. Behind these positions, but in front of Fürstensee and alongside the road, was a very important anti-aircraft ammunition depot.
On 28 April the first Soviet elements advanced to contact. Towards 2100 hours the ammunition depot suddenly blew up without warning, wiping out a column of 2–3,000 inmates of Oranienburg Concentration Camp with their guards.
The Russians attacked on the 29th, and eventually the remains of the battalion withdrew to the northwest as pre-ordered.
Meanwhile, Captain Roy’s Construction Battalion suffered losses from air attack as it retreated. It soon found itself halfway between American and Soviet spearheads about 20km away. American tanks caused them further deaths just as the battalion was dispersing, and another group was surprised by a Russian vanguard, again sustaining unforeseen losses.
The remains of the 5th Company, about sixty men, reached the southern end of Schwerin town, which is bordered to the east by Schwerinsee Lake, from which a canal runs to the south. The town was already occupied by the Americans holding the western edge of the lake, while Soviet troops bordered the east side of the canal. With their backs to the canal, the company used up the last of its cartridges against the Soviets, while its left flank made contact with the Americans, to whom they then surrendered.
As a result of the Soviet advance in Pomerania, the
On 18 March,