Original award document of Leutnant Alfred Menzinger, who served with the 2. Kompanie/ Infanterie-Regiment 130 of the 45. Infanterie-Division, for the Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (Iron Cross 1st Class) for his service on July 2, 1942, which was signed by Generalmajor Fritz Kühlwein (DKIG). Condition as seen, has been folded in the past.
Award document of Grenadier Frank, who earned the Verwundetenabzeichen in Schwarz (Wound Badge in Black) for his wound sustained on February 6, 1943 while serving with the Infanterie-Regiment 130 of the 45. Infanterie-Division. Condition as seen, has been folded in the past. Nice variant of the VWA document!
Original Death Card ("Sterbebild") of Gefreiter Alfons Ederer, who served with the 7. Kompanie/ Infanterie-Regiment 135 of the 45. Infanterie-Division when he was Killed in Action on July 10, 1941 in Wujwieze by Unfall ("Accident"). Born in Ulrichsgrün.
Information:
The death card may have a different color than the scan shows. The scan seem to make the death cards more white than they are.
The "Sterbekartei" (Card from Ancestry that shows the unit, fate..) provided here is only a digital copy! Not part of the original sale.
Original Death Card ("Sterbebild") of Schütze Franz Schwendinger, who served with the 2. Kompanie/ Infanterie-Regiment 130 of the 45. Infanterie-Division when he was Killed in Action on June 22, 1941 in Brest-Litowsk by Infanteriegeschoss Kopf ("Headshot by bullet"). Born in Atzersdorf.
Information:
The death card may have a different color than the scan shows. The scan seem to make the death cards more white than they are.
The "Sterbekartei" (Card from Ancestry that shows the unit, fate..) provided here is only a digital copy! Not part of the original sale.
Original Death Card ("Sterbebild") of Schütze Gottlieb Kroißmaier, who served with the 10. Kompanie/ Infanterie-Regiment 135 of the 45. Infanterie-Division when he was Killed in Action on June 22, 1941 in Brest-Litowsk by Infanteriegeschoss Kopf ("Headshot by bullet"). Born in Eck.
Information:
The death card may have a different color than the scan shows. The scan seem to make the death cards more white than they are.
The "Sterbekartei" (Card from Ancestry that shows the unit, fate..) provided here is only a digital copy! Not part of the original sale.
Original Postwar Signature on a Postwar Photo of Max Zastrow. Gefreiter Max Zastrow (12.10.1922 † 01.11.2014) earned the Ritterkreuz on March 6, 1944 as Gefreiter und MG-Schütze in the 2. Kompanie/ Pionier-Bataillon 81 of the 45. Infanterie-Division. Good condition. Postcardsize.
The Führer has awarded the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross to Max Zastrow (a 22-year old Gefreiter from Vienna and flamethrower operator in a Linz Pionier-Bataillon) in recognition of his heroic actions at the front.At the start of February 1944 the Soviets succeeded in penetrating the lines of a weak friendly flanking screen using their own numerically superior forces in an attack from the direction of Schazilki. They also created a bridgehead on the northern bank of the Beresina river. Thus, on the 06.02.1944, a friendly assault troop operation was set into motion. The objective of this attack was to recapture the main trench position of the enemy bridgehead (located along a strongly fortified railroad embankment), which would remove the danger of this bridgehead being used as a viable base for future Soviet offensive operations.During the course of this attack the assault troop to which Gefreiter Zastrow belonged came under coordinated fire by all weapons of the foremost Bolshevik bunkers and MG nests. Then, at the decisive moment, Gefreiter Zastrow’s flamethrower malfunctioned. In this critical moment for the whole assault troop, Gefreiter Zastrow decided to toss aside his flamethrower and eliminate a commanding enemy MG position with a box of grenades that he dragged up to throwing range. A heavy firefight followed, and although he himself became wounded in the process he managed to eliminate this Bolshevik MG nest with 16 hand grenades. He then went into position once again and eliminated a neighbouring enemy strongpoint with well-directed rifle fire (despite coming under heavy fire himself once again). By doing so he facilitated the approach of his assault troop against an enemy bunker, and once it had been stormed the final attack objective was attained.The independent and fearless intervention of Gefreiter Zastrow on this day was decisive for the success that was achieved.”