Gustav Boehringer
Gustav Boehringer (b. 7 July 1892 in Straßburg, Reichsland Elsaß-Lothringen; d. 20 February 1974 in Konstanz, Baden-Württemberg) was a German officer of the Army of Württemberg, the Imperial German Army, the Reichswehr and the Wehrmacht, finally Generalleutnant as well as General der Pioniere (as a position, not a rank) and recipient of the Knight's Cross of the War Merit Cross during World War II.
Life
Career
- Entered Army Service (24 Mar 1909)
- Fähnrich in the 13th Pioneer-Battalion or Württembergisches Pionier-Bataillon Nr. 13 (24 Mar 1909-8 Aug 1914)
- Detached to War School (Kriegsschule) Engers (30 Nov 1909-10 Jul 1910)
- Detached to the Military Technical Academy (1 Oct 1913-15 Jul 1914)
- In the Field as Platoon-Leader in the 13th Pioneer-Battalion (8 Aug 1914-12 Feb 1915)
- Wounded, remained with the Troop (27 Aug 1914)
- Adjutant of the 13th Pioneer-Battalion (12 Feb 1915-13 Nov 1916)
- Detached to the Royal Bulgarian Army (13 Dec 1916-15 Dec 1916)
- Staff-Officer of Pioneers with the 2nd Bulgarian Army (15 Dec 1916-13 Oct 1917)
- Company commander in the 21st Pioneer-Battalion (13 Oct 1917-21 Dec 1918)
- Detached to the Army Gas Protection School, Berlin (11 Mar 1918-18 Mar 1918)
- Detached to the Mortar-School Üsküb (14 May 1918-18 May 1918)
- Leader of the Economics-Group Sekirane (15 Apr 1918-25 May 1918)
- Company commander in the 13th Pioneer-Battalion (21 Dec 1918-17 Mar 1919)
- Adjutant of the 13th Pioneer-Battalion (17 Mar 1919-25 Jun 1919)
- Adjutant of the 13th Reichswehr-Pioneer-Battalion (25 Jun 1919-1 Oct 1920)
- Transferred into the 5th Pioneer-Battalion (1 Oct 1920-1 Jan 1922)
- Leader of the Bridging-Column of the 5th Pioneer-Battalion (1 Jan 1922-1 Feb 1923)
- Company commander in the 5th Pioneer-Battalion (1 Feb 1923-1 Oct 1924)
- Transferred into the 2nd Battery of the 1st Artillery-Regiment (1 Oct 1924-1 Oct 1925)
- Detached to Pioneer School (1 Oct 1924-1 Oct 1925)
- Transferred into the Staff of the II. Battalion of the 1st Artillery-Regiment (1 Oct 1925-1 Feb 1926)
- Transferred into the 6th Battery of the 1st Artillery-Regiment or 1. (Preußisches) Artillerie-Regiment (1 Feb 1926-1 Oct 1926)
- Hauptmann in the Staff of the I. Battalion of the 1st Artillery-Regiment (1 Oct 1926-1 Mar 1927)
- Transferred into the Staff of the III. Battalion of the 1st Artillery-Regiment (1 Mar 1927-1 Feb 1928)
- Transferred to the 9th Battery of the 1st Artillery-Regiment (1 Feb 1928-1 Mar 1928)
- Detached to the Staff of the 5th Division (1 Mar 1928-1 Apr 1928)
- While retaining his previous position, was Transferred into the 18th Mounted-Regiment (1 Apr 1928-1 Aug 1931)
- Detached to the Reichswehrministerium/RWM (1 Aug 1931-1 Oct 1931)
- Transferred into the Reichswehrministerium/RWM (1 Oct 1931-1 Sep 1934)
- Transferred into the 5th Pioneer-Battalion (1 Sep 1934-1 Oct 1934)
- Commander of Pioneer-Battalion Ulm (1 Oct 1934-15 Oct 1935)
- Commander of the 45th Pioneer-Battalion (15 Oct 1935-21 Sep 1936)
- Detached to the RKM (21 Sep 1936-6 Oct 1936)
- Chief of the Department for Pioneers and Fortresses in the Reichskriegsministerium/RKM (6 Oct 1936-4 Feb 1938)
- Chief of the Department for Pioneers and Fortresses, Oberkommando des Heeres/OKH (4 Feb 1938-12 Nov 1940)
- Commander of Special-Purpose-Pioneer-Regiment-Staff 700 (12 Nov 1940-28 Jul 1941)
- Pioneer Leader of 11th Army (28 Jul 1941-20 Aug 1942)
- General of Pioneers of Army-Group A (20 Aug 1942-22 May 1943)
- General of Pioneers of Army-Group South, later North Ukraine (22 May 1943-8 May 1945)
- In captivity (8 May 1945)[1]
Family
Gustav was the son of Oberst Theodor von Boehringer (1855–1937) and his wife Luise Eleonore Helene von Boehringer, née Freiin von Mühlen (1868–1942). Oberleutnant Boehringer married 1921/22 his fiancée Ilse Winke (1899–1982), their son Wilfried Boehringer (b. 15 February 1923 in Ulm) became a fighter pilot of the Luftwaffe and fell on 11 February 1944 als Leutnant, when his Arado Ar 96 B-1 crashed near Saint Sulpice in France. He was buried at Mont-de-Huisnes German war cemetery (Deutsche Kriegsgräberstätte Mont d’Huisnes); final resting place: Gruft 63, Grabkammer 136. His name is also on the gravestone of the family on the Pragfriedhof in Stuttgart.
Promotions (day, month, year)
- Charakter als Fähnrich (24 March 1909)
- Fähnrich (19 November 1909)
- Leutnant (26 August 1910)
- Oberleutnant (27 January 1916)
- Hauptmann (1 April 1922)
- Major (1 December 1932)
- Oberstleutnant (1 July 1935)
- Oberst (1 January 1938)
- Generalmajor (1 February 1942)
- Generalleutnant (1 January 1944)
Awards and decorations
- Iron Cross, 2nd and 1st Class
- 2nd Class on 6 October 1914
- 1st Class on 30 September 1916
- Friedrich Order, Knight 1st Class with Swords (WF3a⚔) on 30 November 1914
- as a lower order of merit, it was to be given back when receiving the Military Merit Order
- Military Merit Order (Württemberg), Knight's Cross (Ritterkreuz) on 17 August 1916 (WMV3/WM3)
- Order of Military Merit (Bulgaria), Knight's Cross with the crown (BO5mKr)
- Wound Badge (1918) in Black
- Honour Cross of the World War 1914/1918 with Swords
- Bulgarian Commemorative Medal for the War of 1915-1918 (Kriegserinnerungsmedaille 1915/1918)
- Wehrmacht Long Service Award (Wehrmacht-Dienstauszeichnung), 4th to 1st Class, 1936
- Sudetenland Medal with the Prague Castle Bar (Medaille zur Erinnerung an den 1. Oktober 1938 mit Spange „Prager Burg“)
- Clasp to the Iron Cross (1939), 2nd and 1st Class
- War Merit Cross, 2nd and 1st Class
- Bulgarian Order of Bravery, III Grade, 1st Class (Militärorden für Tapferkeit, III. Klasse, I. Stufe)
- Crimea Shield (Krimschild)
- Eastern Medal (Ostmedaille)
- Order of the Star of Romania, Commander with swords
- Order of the Crown (Romania), Grand Officer with swords
- German Cross in Silver (Deutsches Kreuz in Silber) on 30. September 1942 as Generalmajor and Pionierführer of the 11th Army (11. Armee)
- Knight's Cross of the War Merit Cross with swords on 10 September 1944 as Generalleutnant and General der Pioniere of the Heeresgruppe Nordukraine[2]
References
- ↑ Generalleutnant Gustav Boehringer
- ↑ Boehringer, Gustav, TracesOfWar.com