dante Posted March 17, 2021 Posted March 17, 2021 Nice pair of Oberst epaulettes, could these be traced to one or two, people....? many thanks, Paul
Chris Boonzaier Posted March 17, 2021 Posted March 17, 2021 Are these wartime or those really heavy, thick prewar ones? Best Chris
dante Posted March 17, 2021 Author Posted March 17, 2021 Thanks for your responses, I would say war time
Chris Boonzaier Posted March 17, 2021 Posted March 17, 2021 Damn... I thought I had the history, but do not. From Wikipedia.... 21.11.1914 - 26.12.1914: Max von Schuckmann 26.12.1914 - 04.08.1915: Willy von Livonius 04.08.1915 - 02.02.1917: Paul Grautoff 02.02.1917 - 02.11.1917: Albrecht Freiherr von Leesen 02.11.1917 - 21.12.1917: Friedbert Lademann 21.12.1917 - 05.02.1919: Leopold von Ziehlberg I think full colonel as commander was a rariry, later in the war many regt commanders or Führer were only Major...
Glenn J Posted March 17, 2021 Posted March 17, 2021 1 hour ago, Chris Boonzaier said: Are these wartime or those really heavy, thick prewar ones? Chris, up to 1915 IR 26 officers wore shoulder boards with red underlay. These must date from the 21 September 1915 introduction of white Waffenfarbe for the infantry. There are others to throw into the mix. This from the regimental history. Of course some of these will not have been colonels and there may be some additional colonels who retired from other regiments with the uniform of IR 26 and perhaps some field officers of the regiment who also reached the rank of colonel but did not command it. Regards Glenn
Chris Boonzaier Posted March 17, 2021 Posted March 17, 2021 38 minutes ago, Simius Rex said: I am referencing my posting #2 above (which hopefully was interesting enough that people actually read it.) If not, I think it might be worth perusing. The question I would have pursuant to my analysis is this: which one of the above people served as a major, a lt. colonel and a colonel in the IR 26 continuously? This is why I asked if anybody has the regiment's history because it would contain the names of all the officers in the regiment. https://www.amazon.com/Infanterie-Regiment-Leopold-Anhalt-Dessau-Magdeburg-Kriegsjahr/dp/B01DMTFS98 Agree... would be interesting to see the promotions... the problem with "normal" regiments is we dont see which officers were sent to other units at mobilization, and possibly continued to wear the 26er uniform.
dante Posted March 17, 2021 Author Posted March 17, 2021 49 minutes ago, Simius Rex said: I am referencing my posting #2 above (which hopefully was interesting enough that people actually read it.) If not, I think it might be worth perusing. The question I would have pursuant to my analysis is this: which one of the above people served as a major, a lt. colonel and a colonel in the IR 26 continuously? This is why I asked if anybody has the regiment's history because it would contain the names of all the officers in the regiment. https://www.amazon.com/Infanterie-Regiment-Leopold-Anhalt-Dessau-Magdeburg-Kriegsjahr/dp/B01DMTFS98 SR, completely agree and very forensic in your approach....lets hope someone has the book .....thanks again
Glenn J Posted March 17, 2021 Posted March 17, 2021 (edited) Gentlemen, I like a challenge as much as the next guy and I thought I had addressed the problem in my earlier reply. With the best will in the World, it will not be possible to identify the owner of these boards: 1. They could be an officer in the rank of Oberst in IR 26 who served at that rank and retired at that rank. 2. They could be be an officer in the rank of Oberst in IR 26 who served at that rank and then subsequently became a general officer. 3. they could be an officer who had previously served in IR 26 and then retired with the uniform of IR 26 after serving with another regiment. 4. They could be an officer who served in IR 26 as an Oberstleutnant and who was characterised as an Oberst on retirement. 5. Ditto for all of the above in Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 26. 6. Not to mention Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 26. And yes, I do have the regimental history of IR 26 with its included Offizier-Stammliste and that will still not positively ID the owner of these boards. Regards Glenn Edited March 17, 2021 by Glenn J Additional permutation
Chris Boonzaier Posted March 18, 2021 Posted March 18, 2021 Glenn nails it methinks... I think the most identifiable boards remain the Cypher regiments as the numbered boards are different to the active, then concentrating on the later fieldgrey boards which the retired officers probably did not wear. Then getting a regiment in which the history mentions all the officers who served in the regiment but were posted elsewhere to see who came into question that were however not on the regimental commanders list. For WW1 I have two Bavarian sets to a Colonel with "20" on the boards.... they are the only ones with a sure name... and that is simply because they came out of the group, and RickL bought them when the group was split ... I guess that is the surest way ? 1
dante Posted March 18, 2021 Author Posted March 18, 2021 19 hours ago, Glenn J said: Gentlemen, I like a challenge as much as the next guy and I thought I had addressed the problem in my earlier reply. With the best will in the World, it will not be possible to identify the owner of these boards: 1. They could be an officer in the rank of Oberst in IR 26 who served at that rank and retired at that rank. 2. They could be be an officer in the rank of Oberst in IR 26 who served at that rank and then subsequently became a general officer. 3. they could be an officer who had previously served in IR 26 and then retired with the uniform of IR 26 after serving with another regiment. 4. They could be an officer who served in IR 26 as an Oberstleutnant and who was characterised as an Oberst on retirement. 5. Ditto for all of the above in Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 26. 6. Not to mention Landwehr-Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 26. And yes, I do have the regimental history of IR 26 with its included Offizier-Stammliste and that will still not positively ID the owner of these boards. Regards Glenn Glenn, outstanding forensic research...really appreciate you doing this
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now