Chris Boonzaier Posted January 12, 2006 Posted January 12, 2006 I have been to meaning to fill for some time... this was in a group I bought this week....Any idea why it is so sexy?
dond Posted January 12, 2006 Posted January 12, 2006 Because it depicts the first use of sticky notes.Don
Les Posted January 12, 2006 Posted January 12, 2006 (edited) .................. Edited January 13, 2006 by Les
Chris Boonzaier Posted January 13, 2006 Author Posted January 13, 2006 I.R. 146 was XX A.K. (Hannouver) , 37th Division, and I know where the unit was in line in May 1918. LesAhhh... Buuuuuuuuut, was the I.R. 146 still part of the 37. I.D. in May 1918... or had they left the division some time before?
Les Posted January 13, 2006 Posted January 13, 2006 Ahhh... Buuuuuuuuut, was the I.R. 146 still part of the 37. I.D. in May 1918... or had they left the division some time before?Chris, I deleted the previous post and am correcting the information since I was looking at a different regiment when I posted that.The 146th was part of the 20th AK, and in the 101st Division, neither US, nor Airborne... ;-) . I'lll quote from the "Histories of the 251 Divisions of the German Army":1918 "The Division is considered as consisting of a divisional staff only, administering Bulgarian units. The division is therefore, no longer counted as a German infantry division. ..." While the 101st was with the Bulgars in Macedonia, the 146th was transfered to the "Asienkorps" for other duties.Les
Chris Boonzaier Posted January 13, 2006 Author Posted January 13, 2006 Thats the facts Jack! It was part of the Pascha II reinforcements :-)))
Guest Rick Research Posted January 14, 2006 Posted January 14, 2006 Oooooooo. Ahhhhhhh.My late guru George Seymour had the medal bar of the regimental commander, Frithjof Freiherr von Hammerstein-Gesmold, who got the Pour le Merite per 1 November 1918. One of the few times I was able to ID something that had stumped George! That bar has presumably passed through the (shudder) hands of Thies-- the bar had a HHOX, peacetime BZ3bmE, Hamburg and L?beck Hanseatics, and ended with the Bulgarian Bravery IVB and a Siamese White Elephant-Knight if it (too) lost all research attribution in the selling. Sigh.There is CONSIDERABLE information on this regiment's service in Palestine during 1918 in my Bund der Asienk?mpfer magazines 1919-38.I'll go see what turns up on Lt dR Michael-- unless there is MORE you have?They were in Jordan along the Dead Sea until the September collapse, making forced march to Deraa on 26th of that month. Interned at Moda November-December 1918.68 officers, 3 Beamten, and 1,024 men of the regiment were transported home aboard the "Etha Rickmers."I couldn't find Michael named. He was not a BdAK member in 1931.Major Fuchs had previously been in Inf Rgt 87, but served (unusually) in Inf Rgt 146 from before to obviously throughout the war--SekLt 27.1.95 S2sOberlt 15.9.04 U2uHauptmann 13.9.11 P5pMajor 18.12.17 Cand aD in that rank
Chris Boonzaier Posted May 27, 2007 Author Posted May 27, 2007 Hi Rick,It seems he commanded the 1st company at the beginning of the campaign, the award was made just after their (1st batln) big action.... but he just dissapears from the regt history, not mentioned why or when.If there is any info i would be very greatfull.thanksChris
Chris Boonzaier Posted October 25, 2007 Author Posted October 25, 2007 I couldn't find Michael named. He was not a BdAK member in 1931.Any chance he was KIA?I dont see that in the regt history.Or badly wounded?In anycase, at some stgae he was replaced as Company commander. It cannot have been a disciplinery thing as he was awarded the EK1 at about the same time.BestChris
Guest Rick Research Posted October 25, 2007 Posted October 25, 2007 I'll look in Glenn's "Dead Prussians" when I go offline.
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