NAME: General der Fallschirmtruppe Richard Heidrich
(Luftwaffe)
PW
NO: B33414
RANK:
General der Fallschirmtruppe
CAPTURED: St.
Christofore, Italy
DATE:
3 May 1945
PERSONAL
DATE OF BIRTH: 28 July 1896
PLACE OF BIRTH: Lewalde/Saxony
DATE OF DEATH: 22
December 1947
PLACE OF DEATH: Hamburg-Bergedorf
(while in hospital care)
NATIONALITY: German
RELIGION:
Evangelical
OCCUPATION:
Regular Soldier
HEIGHT:
166cm
WEIGHT:
76kg
HAIR COLOUR: Fair
EYE COLUR:
Blue
NEXT OF KIN:
British Zone
Wife: None (Bachelor).
Promotions:
- War Volunteer: 18 August
1914
- Gefreiter: 17 November
1914
- Unteroffizier: 18 May
1915
- Fähnrich: 14 July 1915
- Leutnant: 20 August 1915
Patent 17 December 1915, later established at 1 September 1915
- Oberleutnant: 31 July
1925 RDA 1 April 1925 (171)
- Hauptmann: 1 February
1931
- Major: 18 January 1936
RDA 1 April 1935
- Oberstleutnant: 1 January
1939 RDA 1 April 1937
- Oberst: 4 July 1940
RDA 1 April 1940
- Generalmajor: 4 August
1942 RDA 1 August 1942
- Generalleutnant: 1 July
1943
- General der
Fallschirmtruppe: 31 October 1944 RDA 1 October 1944 (1)
Commands & Assignments:
- 18 August 1914-10 April
1915: Entered the Army as a War Volunteer in Reserve Infantry Regiment 101.
- 11 April 1915-30
September 1916: Transferred to the Royal Saxon 3. Infanterie-Regiment König Ludwig III
von Bayern Nr.102.
- 1 October 1916-15 May
1920: Platoon and Company Leader in the Royal Saxon 16. Infanterie-Regiment Nr.182.
- 16 May 1920-30 September
1920: Platoon Leader in Reichswehr Border Jäger Regiment 24 of Reichswehr-Brigade 12.
- 1 October 1920-26 August
1924: Platoon Leader in the 10th (Saxon) Infantry Regiment upon the formation of the new
Reichsheer from the Übergangsheer or Transitional Army.
- 27 August 1924-30
September 1925: Leader Assistant Course with the staff of Wehrkreis [Military District]
Command IV, Dresden.
- 1 October 1925-30
September 1926: On the staff of the 4th Division.
- 1 October 1926-30
September 1929: Platoon Leader in the 10th (Saxon) Infantry Regiment.
- 1 October 1929-31 October
1920: Detached to the II. Naval Artillery Battalion.
- 1 November 1930-31
January 1931: Platoon Leader in the 2nd Company of the 10th (Saxon) Infantry Regiment.
- 1 February 1931-31 August
1934: Company Chief in the 10th (Saxon) Infantry Regiment.
- 1 September 1934-14
October 1935: Tactics Instructor at the Infantry School, Dresden.
- 15 October 1935-11
October 1937: Instructor at the War Schools in Potsdam and München.
- 12 October 1937-3 June
1938: Commander of the Parachute Infantry Company.
- 4 June 1938-31 December
1938: Commander of the Parachute Infantry Battalion.
- 1 January 1939:
Transferred from the Army to the Luftwaffe. [On 1 January 1939, the Armys Parachute
Infantry Battalion was absorbed into the Luftwaffe as the II. Battalion of
Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 1. Heidrich concurrently transferred to that branch of service
with the rank of Oberstleutnant.]
- 1 January 1939-5 February
1939: Commander of the II. Battalion of Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 1 of the 7th
Flieger-Division.
- 6 February 1939-31 May
1939: Operations Officer (Ia) on the staff of the 7th Flieger-Division. [Formed on 1
September 1938 under the command of Generalmajor Kurt Student, the 7th Flieger-Division
controlled the Luftwaffe parachute units and associated transport aircraft.]
- 1 June 1939-25 August
1939: Officer for Special Employment in the Reich Air Ministry and to the
Commander-in-Chief of the Luftwaffe.
- 26 August 1939-31 August
1939: Leader Reserve in Wehrkreis IV, Dresden.
- 1 -30 September 1939: On
the staff of the 7th Flieger-Division.
- 1 October 1939:
Transferred from the Luftwaffe back to the Army.
- 1 October 1939-30
November 1939: Transferred to Infantry Replacement Battalion 10, Dresden.
- 1 December 1939-5
February 1940: Commander of Infantry Replacement Regiment 4 of Division Nr. 154.
[Commanded by Charakter als Generalleutnant Arthur Boltze, this replacement and training
division, headquartered at Dresden in Wehrkreis IV, provided basic training for new
recruits.]
- 6 February 1940-31 May
1940: Commander of Infantry Regiment 514 of the 294th Infantry Division. [Formed in
Wehrkreis IV under the command of Charakter als Generalleutnant Otto Gabcke, the 294th
Infantry Division remained in Army High Command reserve when Germany launched the invasion
of France and the Low Countries on 10 May 1940. By early June (Oberstleutnant Heidrich had
since returned to Luftwaffe service), the division was released from reserve and assigned
to the 2nd Army at the front where it saw action during the second phase of the invasion
of France.]
- 1 June 1940: Transferred
from the Army back to the Luftwaffe.
- 1 June 1940-31 July 1942:
Commander of Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 3 of the 7th Flieger-Division. [For Operation Seelöwe (Sea Lion), the planned invasion
of Great Britain, the 7th Flieger-Division was assigned drop zones in the area of
LymingeSellingeHythe on the right wing of Generaloberst
Ernst Buschs 16th Army and tasked with the immediate capture of the high
ground north and northwest of Folkestone. After the
indefinite postponement of Operation Seelöwe and months
of routine training, the 7th Flieger-Division deployed to Greece in the spring of 1941. On
20 May 1941, General der Flieger Kurt Students XI. Flieger-Korps opened Operation
Merkur (Mercury), the invasion of Crete, with the drop of two massive waves of
paratroopers and glider-borne troops from the 7th Flieger-Division onto the island. Heidrichs
regiment dropped to the southwest of Canea where it was badly scattered upon landing.[4] By the end of
the day, the regiment had suffered heavy casualties and been surrounded in Prison Valley
by considerable New Zealand and Greek forces. Relieved by German mountain troops under
Oberst Willibald Utz on the night of 24-25 May, Heidrichs regiment continued its
advance on Canea. On 1 June 1941, the last British and Dominion troops who had not been
evacuated from Crete surrendered to the Germans north of Sphakia. In September 1941, the
7th Flieger-Division began transferring to Russia where the bulk of the division served on
the Leningrad front while geographically separated divisional elements fought before
Moscow and at Stalino. Heidrichs regiment saw heavy combat near Leningrad until
early January 1942 when it was withdrawn from Russia along with the bulk of the division
for rest and refitting in France.]
- 1 August 1942-31 October
1942: Delegated with the leadership of the 7th Flieger-Division. [Heidrich assumed
divisional leadership from Generalleutnant Erich Petersen when that officer was tapped for
promotion to General der Flieger and appointment to the post of Inspector of the Luftwaffe
Field Formations. In October 1942, the 7th Flieger-Division returned to Russia and served
in the central sector seeing action near Smolensk, Rzhev and Orel until withdrawn to
France by early 1943.]
- 1 November 1942-30 April
1943: Commander of the 7th Flieger-Division (Fallschirmjäger).
- 1 May 1943-16 November
1944: Commander of the 1st Fallschirmjäger-Division.[On 1 May 1943, the
7th Flieger-Division was redesignated the 1st Fallschirmjäger-Division while undergoing
refitting in southern France. In mid-July 1943, the bulk of the division was airlifted
from France and dropped on Sicily to augment the German forces there following the Allied
invasion. Following heavy combat on the island, the division was evacuated to the mainland
in September and based in the heel of Italy. Upon the British seaborne landing at Taranto
on 9 September 1943 (Operation Slapstick),
Heidrich concluded his division could not offer effective resistance and so withdrew it
northwards beyond Foggia. The
1st Fallschirmjäger-Division continued to fight along the Adriatic coast until early
February 1944 when it transferred to the critical Monte Cassino sector under General der
Panzertruppe Fridolin von Senger und Etterlins XIV Panzer Corps. Over the next few
months, the combined U.S., British Commonwealth, Polish and French forces suffered
extraordinary casualties while trying to dislodge the mountain defenses of the XIV Panzer
Corps. In May 1944, the Allies finally broke through at Cassino and, in conjunction with
the breakout from the Anzio beachhead, captured Rome on 4 June 1944. After a fighting
withdrawal to the Arno River, Heidrichs division transferred to the Gothic Line defenses along the Adriatic coast in
August 1944. When the Allies cracked this German defense line, the 1st
Fallschirmjäger-Division withdrew up the coast to Imola. On 16 November 1944, Heidrich
relinquished leadership of the division to Oberst (later Generalmajor) Karl-Lothar
Schulz.]
- 16 November 1944-3 May
1945: Commanding General of the I. Fallschirm-Korps in Italy. [Heidrich took
the reins of the corps from General der Fallschirmtruppe Alfred Schlemm when that officer
was tapped to command the 1. Fallschirm-Armee on the Western Front. After a long
winter of relative inactivity on both sides, the Allies launched their final Italian
offensive in April 1945. Initially holding the Imola salient opposite the British
Eighth Army, the I. Fallschirm-Korps withdrew to the
northeast in conjunction with the rest of General der Panzertruppe Traugott Herrs
10th Army. By the end of the month, the British had surged forward capturing
Ferrara, Rovigo, Padova and Venice before swinging eastward to the Italo-Yugoslav
frontier.]
- 3 May 1945-July 1947:
Prisoner of war in British captivity.
- 29 July 1946:
Transferred to Island Farm Special Camp 11 from the London District Cage (LDC).
- 13 August 46:
Transferred to the LDC from Island Farm Special Camp 11.
- 24 August 1946:
Transferred to Island Farm Special Camp 11 from the LDC.
- 7 January 1947:
Transferred to the LDC from Island Farm Special Camp 11.
- 16 January 1947:
Transferred to Island Farm Special Camp 11 from the LDC and then to Camp 99 Medical
Hospital for repatriation.
Decorations
& Awards:
- Knights
Cross of the Iron Cross: 14 June 1941, Oberst, Commander of Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 3.
- Oakleaves (No.
382): 5 February 1944, Generalleutnant, Commander of the 1st Fallschirmjäger-Division.
- Swords (No. 55):
25 March 1944, Generalleutnant, Commander of the 1st Fallschirmjäger-Division.
- German Cross in
Gold: 13 April 1942, Oberst, Commander of Fallschirmjäger-Regiment 3.
- Prussian Iron
Cross, 1st Class (1914)
- Prussian Iron
Cross, 2nd Class (1914)
- 1939 Clasp to
the Prussian Iron Cross, 1st Class: 25 May 1941.
- 1939 Clasp to
the Prussian Iron Cross, 2nd Class: 25 May 1941.
- Saxon Merit
Order, Knight 2nd Class with Swords
- Saxon Albert
Order, Knight 2nd Class with Swords
- Cross of Honor
for Combatants 1914-1918
- Armed Forces
Long Service Award, 1st Class (25-year Service Cross)
- Armed Forces
Long Service Award, 3rd Class (12-year Service Medal)
- Commemorative
Medal of 1 October 1938 with Prague Castle Clasp
- Wound Badge in
Black World War I award
- KRETA
Campaign Cuff-Title
- Army Parachutist
Badge [As one of the early parachute infantrymen of the Army and per regulations, Heidrich
continued to wear the parachutist badge of that branch of service even after his transfer
to the Luftwaffe. The Luftwaffe awarded its own badge to qualified parachutists that
differed in appearance from the Army version.]
- Mentioned in the
Wehrmachtbericht [Armed Forces Communiqué]: 9 June 1941; 24 December 1943; 25 March 1944;
29 June 1944.
-