| Ferdinand Heim | |
|---|---|
| 27 February 1895 – 14 November 1977 (aged 82) | |
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| Place of birth | Reutlingen |
| Place of death | Ulm |
| Allegiance | |
| Service/branch | Heer |
| Years of service | 1914-1945 |
| Rank | Generalleutnant |
| Commands held | 14th Panzer
Division 48th Panzer Corps Boulogne fortress garrison |
| Battles/wars | World War
I World War II |
| Awards | Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross |
Ferdinand Heim (27 February 1895, Reutlingen, Germany – 14 November 1977, Ulm, Germany) was a World War II German general.
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On September 3, 1940, Heim was appointed Chief of Staff to General Walther von Reichenau while the Sixth Army was concentrated on the Cotentin Peninsula awaiting the Invasion of Britain. He was subsequently prominent in the planning of the German invasion of the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa). [1]
On 1 July 1942, he was Commander of the 14th Panzer Division with distinction at Kharkov and at Rostov. As a consequence, he was given, on November 1, 1942, command of 48th Panzer Corps which was then part of the German 6th Army, at Stalingrad. Heim's role was to reinforce the Romanian divisions in the area. Heim is particularly noted as being the "scapegoat of Stalingrad". Adolf Hitler, had (against the prevalent advice of Army commanders) ordered the Stalingrad campaign and subsequently refused to permit withdrawal. Consequently, the 6th Army was surrounded by Russian forces at Stalingrad. Heim's 48th Panzer Corps, at Kalach-na-Donu on the Don, with two under-strength Panzer Divisions and a poorly equipped Romanian Panzer Division and with orders countermanded by Hitler[2] , had failed to stop the formidable Russian attack against the Romanian Army which covered the Sixth Army's left flank. After this, in January 1943, Heim was, at Hitler's order, dismissed from the Army, arrested and placed in solitary confinement at Moabit, finally being released in April 1943, when he was transferred to a military hospital at Ulm[1].
In a post-war interview, Heim asserted that the only documentation for his arrest was Hitler's order - no indictment, sentence or explanation. He learned, unofficially, that Hitler had been unwilling to cast blame on the Romanians for the poor quality of their troops so a German scapegoat was needed. German army and army group commanders were too valuable, so the "... only person left was the corps commander, and that was me."[1]
Heim was informed in May 1943 that his dismissal from the German army had been revoked, and that he had been classified as retired. In August 1944, Heim returned to command German forces at the "fortress" of Boulogne, a "defend to the last" assignment. He was instructed to prepare significant defences but he arrived to find that nothing had been prepared and there were no suitable specialists to do the work. The ill-prepared and ill-suited garrison endured heavy bombardment and full-scale assaults and Heim surrendered to the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division on 23 September 1944.[3]
Heim was sent to a series of POW camps (including Island Farm) in Britain and subsequently repatriated to Germany on 12 May 1948. He died at Ulm on 14 November 1977.[4]
"We must uphold the principle of only having carried out orders [...] We must stick to that principle if we are to create a more or less effective defence" - spoken in secret while prisoner to his fellow inmates regarding German atrocities in World War II[5]
| Military offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by General der Panzertruppen Rudolf Veiel |
Commander of XLVIII Panzer
Corps November 1, 1942 - November 19, 1942 |
Succeeded by General der Panzertruppen Hans Cramer |
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