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Generalmajor der Reserve Dr.med.dent Franz
Bäke (28 February 1898 – 12 December 1978) was a German Army officer and panzer ace. Bäke fought during World War I, but rose
to fame for his command of heavy Panzer forces in World War II. A reservist, Bäke was a dentist in civilian life,
receiving his Doctorate
in Dental Medicine in 1923.
Early life - First World
War
Bäke was born in Schwarzenfels (a part of Sinntal, Main-Kinzig-Kreis, Hesse) in the kreis of Fulda in Hesse-Nassau. After attending school and
receiving excellent grades, Bäke planned on a career in medicine.
In August 1914, the outbreak of World War I changed his plans. In May 1915,
Bäke volunteered for the German Army. He was posted
to Infanterie-Regiment Nr.3, based in Köln. After basic training,
Bäke was transferred to Infanterie-Regiment Nr.11, which
was in action on the Western Front. During his
service with IR11 he was awarded the Iron Cross 2nd class for bravery in combat
in the battles near Verdun for
the towns of Fleury and
Thiaumont.
In mid-1916, Bäke accepted an offer to become an officer
candidate and was briefly transferred to Infanterie-Regiment
Nr.10. In November 1916 Bäke was transferred to the artillery arm and served
with Artillerie-Regiment zu Fuß Nr.7. In early 1918 he was
wounded twice and was only returned to the front in September.
After the armistice,
Bäke remained in the army until his demobilisation in January
1919.
Inter-War
years
After his release from military service, Bäke returned to his
studies in medicine. During his first semester in university, he was
involved with Freikorps
Epp, but soon turned his full attention to his
studies. In 1922 he passed the state examination, and in 1923
received his doctorate in Dental Medicine, receiving the
Dr.med.dent. professional prefix to his name. After receiving his
credentials, Bäke established his own dentistry practice in Hagen, which became quite
successful.
Bäke remained immersed in his dental practice during the
tumultuous events of 1933 to 1936, but in early 1937 he applied to
join the reserves, being accepted on 1 April 1937. Bäke was given
his World War I rank of officer cadet and posted to Aufklärungs-Abteilung 6, a reconnaissance unit. He took
part in large scale maneuvers in late April 1937. He was again
called to participate in large scale maneuvers which took place in
June 1937. After these two major exercises, Bäke returned to his
dentistry practice, spending the required time in reserve training
to achieve the rank of Leutnant der Reserve [2nd
Lieutenant] by December 1937. Soon after this, he was mobilized for
full time service as an officer.
On 1 January 1938, Bäke was transferred to Panzer-Abteilung 65,
where he served as platoon
leader of the Abt's light column. During the bloodless Invasion of the
Sudetenland, he acted as the deputy company commander for
3./Panzer-Abteilung 65.
Early war
campaigns
With the outbreak of war on 1 September 1939, Bäke was still
serving with Panzer-Abt 65. During the Invasion of Poland, he acted as the leader
of the light column during the initial operations, before
transferring to a platoon command in the Abt's second company.
Equipped with the Czech-made Panzerkampfwagen 35(t) tanks, the Abt was
attached to General der Panzertruppen Werner Kempf's 1. leichte-Division on 12
September, and completed the campaign serving under Kempf's
formation, known as Panzer-Division Kempf. Bäke showed
promise as a Panzer leader during the campaign and on 1 November
1939 was promoted to Oberleutnant der Reserve [1st
Lieutenant] and appointed company commander. In October 1939, the
1. Leichte-Division was redesignated 6. Panzer-Division. Panzer-Abt
65 formed an integral part of this new division. On 1 May 1940 Bäke
was promoted to Hauptmann der Reserve [Captain].
On 10 May 1940, Bäke and 6.Panzer took part in Fall
Gelb, the invasion of France. 6.Panzer formed a part of Panzergruppe Guderian, an army-sized
formation charged with attacking through the Ardennes and encircling the allied forces
involved in combat in Belgium. During the blitzkrieg campaign, Bäke, in command of
1.Kompanie, seized an undamaged bridge over the Meuse at Arques. In the following weeks in combat, he was
wounded twice (on 17 and 19 May), receiving the Wound Badge in gold.
For his actions in securing the bridge, Bäke was awarded the Iron
Cross first class.
Barbarossa
- Typhoon
Following the campaign in the West, 6.Panzer was moved to East Prussia, where
it undertook refitting in preparation for the coming offensive
against the Soviet
Union. Bäke was appointed to the staff of 6. Panzer's
Panzer-Regiment 11, being responsible for the recovery of damaged
tanks. With the launch of Operation Barbarossa on 22 June
1941, 6.Panzer took part in Army Group North's strike towards Leningrad,
being involved in heavy fighting. On 1 August 1941, Bäke was
promoted to Major der
Reserve.
The job of a tank recovery unit was both difficult and
dangerous. Generally under the cover of darkness, damaged or
abandoned tanks had to be reached and towed back to the division's
maintenance area where they could be repaired. Abandoned and
damaged tanks were most frequently located close to the enemy, and
so care had to be taken to make as little noise as possible. The
German panzer recovery system was very effective early in the war,
with tanks being recovered, repaired and ready for action in as
short a time as 24 hours.
In October 1941, the 6.Panzer was transferred to Army Group
Centre where it formed a part of Panzergruppe 3,
commanded by General Georg-Hans Reinhardt. The
Panzergruppe was tasked with Operation
Typhoon, an offensive aimed at the capture of Moscow. On 27 November, elements of the
Panzergruppe reached the Volga canal, only 19 miles from Moscow.
Soviet resistance hardened, and the offensive failed.
In November 1941, Bäke was appointed to the position of
Ordonnanz-Offizier for Panzer-Regiment 11. The
Ordannanz-Offizier was responsible for the completion of
special missions required by the division. This position required
Bäke to lead ad-hoc Kampfgruppen in dangerous and vital
missions. The 6.Panzer ended the campaign as a part of General Erich Höpner's Panzergruppe 4,
acting as a reserve for Army Group Centre forces attempting to hold
the line against fierce Soviet counterattacks. The division's tanks
and men suffered greatly from the cold, but despite this they
managed to continue to operate throughout the winter of
1941/42.
Refit - stabilizing the
Eastern Front
After the defensive battles near Moscow during the winter, the
severely depleted 6.Panzer was ordered back to France to be rested and rebuilt. On 1 June 1942,
Bäke was promoted to commander of II./Abteilung of Panzer-Regiment
11. Bäke spent the majority of 1942 overseeing the rebuilding of
his shattered Abt and familiarizing himself with his new
command.
After the encirclement of the German Sixth Army
at Stalingrad, the 6.Panzer, now fully
reformed, was sent to Ukraine to join Generaloberst Erich von
Manstein's Army Group Don, currently struggling to
halt the advancing Soviet forces. The division arrived at the front
in December 1942 and was immediately thrown into heavy fighting,
taking part in the abortive attempt to relieve the 6th Army, Operation Wintergewitter. Bäke, commanding
II./Panzer-Regiment 11, showed great skill as a tank commander,
inflicting heavy losses on the advancing Soviets during the
fighting withdrawal to Kharkov and preventing a large scale
breakthrough. On 11 January 1943, Bäke was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron
Cross for his efforts during these battles.
The division took part in the battle to retake Kharkov. The
performance of Bäke's Abt, fighting alongside the SS-Panzerkorps and Panzergrenadier-Division
Großdeutschland, measured up to the fighting
reputation of these elite units. After the destruction of Mobile
Group Popov and the recapture of the city, 6.Panzer was attached to
Armee-Abteilung Kempf. During May, the division was pulled
back to act as reserve when it was rested and refitted. Bäke had by
now built himself a reputation as one of the army's most capable
tank commanders.
Kursk - Panzer-Regiment
Bäke
Oak Leaves ceremony, from left to right:
Adolf Hitler, Paul Schultz (hidden),
Oberst Dr. med. dent. Walter Lange, Major
Theodor
Tolsdorff, Oberst Günther Pape, Major Dr. Franz Bäke
In June, 6.Panzer was attached to 4.Panzer-Armee under General Colonel Hermann Hoth.
4.Panzer-Armee was to form the southern pincer of the attack on the
Kursk salient, Operation
Citadel. Bäke led his Abt through fierce fighting against the
entrenched soviet forces near Belgorod. On 13 July 1943 he was wounded, but
remained with the unit. On 14 July, the commander of
Panzer-Regiment 11 was severely wounded, and command of the
regiment was temporarily delegated to Bäke. During the ferocious
armored battles, Bäke led the regiment and proved himself a capable
regimental commander. The offensive was cancelled on 13 August
1943, and Bäke's regiment saw heavy combat during the withdrawal to
the Dniepr. For his actions during Operation
Citadel, Bäke was awarded the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross.
On 1 November 1943 Bäke was promoted to Oberstleutnant
der Reserve [Lieutenant Colonel] and his command of the
regiment was made official. In December 1943, he was ordered to
begin formation of an ad-hoc reinforced tank regiment, titled Heavy
Panzer Regiment Bäke [Schweres-Panzer-Regiment Bäke]. The regiment
consisted of large numbers of Panther and Tiger 1
tanks, supported by self-propelled artillery and a mechanized
engineer battalion. The Regiment was to be used in 'fire-brigade'
duties in the southern sector of the Eastern front. In January
1944, Bäke commanded his regiment during the battles for the
Balabonowka pocket. During the five-day battle, Bäke's regiment was
credited with destroying 267 Soviet tanks for the loss of only one
Tiger and four Panthers. Bäke single-handedly destroyed three
Soviet tanks during the battle with infantry weapons at close
range, for which he received three Tank
Destruction Badges, worn on his upper right sleeve.[1]
Next, the regiment was sent to the area of Korsun-Cherkassy, where Gruppe
Stemmermann had been encircled in the Cherkassy Pocket. Together with the 1.SS-Panzer-Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler, Bäke's tanks opened a route of escape for the
trapped Germans and held it open while many escaped.
For his actions during these battles, Bäke received the Swords
to the Knight's Cross on 14 February 1944. In March, the regiment
was trapped in the Kamenets-Podolsky Pocket along
with the entire 1.Panzer-Armee. Bäke's regiment formed one
of the spearheads moving west to break the encirclement, and
effected a link up with II.SS-Panzerkorps, creating an
escape route for the army.
Feldherrnhalle
commands
On 1 May 1944, Bäke was promoted to Oberst der Reserve. His regiment was
involved in fierce defensive battles for the rest of the month,
when it was disbanded and the units sent back to their parent
divisions. Bäke was ordered west to take command of 106.Panzer-Brigade Feldherrnhalle,
which was undergoing formation in Baden. The
Feldherrnhalle formations were formed from a cadre of ex
SA men, and as
such Bäke was granted the honorary SA rank of
SA-Sanitäts-Standartenführer.
The Brigade was equipped with the latest Panther models as well
as a battalion of fully mechanized infantry. In battles against
General George Patton's US Third Army, Bäke's
brigade fought with spirit, halting several attacks and destroying
many American tanks. Bäke, however, made an ill-advised attack on
the U.S. 90th
Infantry Division near Aumetz on the night of September 7 - 8,
1944. Expecting the American infantry to rout once the German tanks
were among them, Bäke's command found itself poorly deployed and
under sustained counter-attack from veteran American infantry. By
the evening of September 8, Bäke had lost thirty tanks, sixty
half-tracks, and nearly a hundred other vehicles in the lopsided
battle. His infantry losses were also heavy, with the unit
reporting to OB West that it
had only nine armored vehicles and that unit strength was down to
25 per cent of the authorized establishment.[2] Despite
the brigade's efforts, the front lines were gradually pushed
back.
On 1 January 1945, Bäke transferred from reserve to active duty,
and as such was referred to as only oberst. In late
January, Bäke took a training course in divisional command, and on
9 March he was given command of the newly formed Panzer-Division Feldherrnhalle 2
and sent to Hungary. Bäke's division fought as part of the
Panzerkorps Feldherrnhalle during the retreat through
Hungary and Czechoslovakia. On 20 April, Bäke was promoted to
Generalmajor. He led the remnants of
his division in a successful breakout attempt towards the West, and
on 8 May 1945 surrendered to American forces.
Bäke spent several years as a Prisoner of War,
being released in 1950. He returned to Hagen and resumed his dental
practice. He died in a car accident in 1978. The Bundeswehr provided an
honour guard at his funeral.
Awards
References
- Citations
- ^
Nash, Hell's Gate, p. 127
- ^
Lorraine Campaign, pp. 158-159
- ^ a
b
c
Scherzer 2007, p. 199.
- Bibliography
- Berger, Florian (1999). Mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern. Die
höchstdekorierten Soldaten des Zweiten Weltkrieges.
Selbstverlag Florian Berger. ISBN 3-9501307-0-5.
- Cole, Hugh M.
(1997). The Lorraine Campaign. Washington, DC: Government
Printing Office.
- Fellgiebel, Walther-Peer (2000). Die Träger des
Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939-1945. Friedburg,
Germany: Podzun-Pallas. ISBN 3-7909-0284-5.
- Kurowski, Franz (1992). Panzer Aces. New York:
Ballantine Book. ISBN 0-345-44884-7.
- Nash, Douglas E (2002). Hell's Gate: The Battle of the
Cherkassy Pocket, January-February 1944. Stamford, CT: RZM
Publishing. ISBN 0965758435.
- Schaulen, Fritjof (2003). Eichenlaubträger 1940 - 1945
Zeitgeschichte in Farbe I Abraham - Huppertz (in German).
Selent, Germany: Pour le Mérite. ISBN 3-932381-20-3.
- Scherzer, Veit (2007). Ritterkreuzträger 1939–1945 Die
Inhaber des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939 von Heer,
Luftwaffe, Kriegsmarine, Waffen-SS, Volkssturm sowie mit
Deutschland verbündeter Streitkräfte nach den Unterlagen des
Bundesarchives (in German). Jena, Germany: Scherzers
Miltaer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-938845-17-2.
- Williamson, Gordon (2006). Knight's Cross, Oak-Leaves and
Swords Recipients 1941-45. Osprey Publishing Ltd. ISBN
1-84176-643-7.
External
links