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Battle of Tuchola Forest

Coordinates: 53°36′00″N 18°00′00″E / 53.600000°N 18.000000°E / 53.600000; 18.000000
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(Redirected from Battle of Bory Tucholskie)
Battle of Tuchola Forest
Part of the Invasion of Poland

German armored car Sd.Kfz.221 during the battle.
Date1–5 September 1939
Location
Result German victory
Belligerents
 Germany  Poland
Commanders and leaders
Günther von Kluge
Heinz Guderian
Adolf Strauss
Władysław Bortnowski
Stanisław Grzmot-Skotnicki
Józef Werobej
Juliusz Drapella
Casualties and losses
506 killed
743 wounded
1600 killed
750 wounded
Unknown number captured

The Battle of Tuchola Forest (German: Schlacht in der Tucheler Heide, Polish: Bitwa w Borach Tucholskich) was one of the first battles of World War II, during the invasion of Poland. The battle occurred from 1 September to 5 September 1939 and resulted in a major German victory. Poor Polish command and control, as well as German numerical and tactical superiority, allowed the Germans to manage to cripple Poland's Armia Pomorze (Army Pomerania) and, by breaking through the Polish Corridor, to connect mainland Germany with East Prussia.[1]

The battle was fought against the judgment of General Władysław Bortnowski, the commander of Army Pomerania, who believed the Corridor to be a very poor defensive position and had repeatedly asked for permission to withdraw his forces from it.[2]

Prelude

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Positions of Polish and German forces before the battle

Tuchola Forest (Polish: Bory Tucholskie, German: Tucheler Heide) in Westprussia,[3] since 1920 Treaty of Versailles in the Polish Corridor, is a large area of mostly forest. Its difficult terrain was thought by the Polish high command as a good defensive position. However, the Germans had held their Truppenübungsplatz Gruppe military exercises in the area until 1919, and were therefore familiar with it, and furthermore General Heinz Guderian had been born in nearby Chełmno).[4]

Polish forces in the theater comprised elements of the Pomeranian Army: 9th Infantry Division under colonel Józef Werobej, the 27th Infantry Division[5]: 53  under general Juliusz Drapella, and Czersk Operational Group under gen. Stanisław Grzmot-Skotnicki. Facing the German exclave of East Prussia was the Operational Group East under General Mikołaj Bołtuć, consisting of the 4th Infantry Division and 16th Infantry Division.

German forces in the theater were composed of elements of the 4th German Army under general Günther von Kluge, specifically 19th Panzer Corps (commanded by general Heinz Guderian), and 2nd Army Corps under general Adolf Strauß. Those units were based in Western Pomerania west of the corridor. The XXI Army Corps of the German 3rd Army would simultaneously advance from East Prussia, in a pincer movement across the Polish corridor, while the bulk of the 3rd Army would attack the Modlin Army in the direction of Warsaw.

19th Panzer Corps consisted of the 2nd Motorized Division under general Paul Bader, the 20th Motorized Division under general Mauritz von Wiktorin and the 3rd Panzer Division under general Leo Geyr von Schweppenburg. 2nd Army Corps was composed of two infantry divisions: the 3rd Infantry Division under general Walter Lichel and 32nd Infantry Division under general Franz Böhme.

Battle

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September 1

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Moving quickly after crossing the border at 0445 on September 1, the German forces made contact with the Polish defenses along the Brda River around 0915. The 5th Panzer Regiment of the 3rd Panzer division attempted to seize the railway bridge at Pruszcz, held by the 3rd Battalion of the 34th Infantry Regiment of the Polish 9th Division. The Polish defenders successfully destroyed a Panzer IV tank and held up the Germans for two hours, buying time to partially destroy the bridge at the cost of 22 killed.[6] Meanwhile, the 6th Panzer Regiment attacked Wielka Klonia, held by the 1st Battalion of the 34th Infantry Regiment, and lost two Panzer II tanks to Polish anti-tank fire. The Germans fell back and shelled the village, killing four Poles.[6] Frustrated by these delays, Guderian ordered his motorcyclists to cross the river in rubber boats at Sokole-Kuźnica, this was accomplished by 1800 hours, and after clearing the Polish defenders from the far bank German engineers were able to begin repairs of the bridges over the Brda. To the north of Pruscz near Gostycyn the 6th Panzer Regiment engaged the remainder of the 34th Infantry Regiment in inconclusive combat which lasted until midnight.[6]

To the north of this action, at 1130 the German 2nd Motorized Infantry Division encountered the Polish 35th Infantry Regiment, also of the 9th Division, dug in near the town of Tuchola. General Bader ordered a series of frontal assaults across flat, marshy terrain which were repeatedly repulsed with considerable casualties until the Polish troops withdrew around 1800 due to the risk of encirclement from the south by Guderian's panzers.[7]

The 20th Motorized Division was tasked with capturing Chojnice, held by three Polish territorial defense (ON) battalions. An initial attempt to seize the city with an armored train and two platoons of commandos failed, and resulted in the destruction of the train by the Polish defenders. During the late morning and early afternoon the 20th Division slowly enveloped the Polish positions, and the ON battalions withdrew at 1400 to avoid encirclement.[7] Their withdrawal to the northeast was covered by a mounted attack by the 18th Pomeranian Uhlan Regiment, known to history as the charge at Krojanty, which managed to scatter the troops of the German 76th Motorized Infantry Regiment, but then encountered a squadron of armored cars, which cut down nearly a third of the Polish riders, including the unit's commander Kazimierz Mastalerz.[8]

The 2nd Army Corps on Guderian's right flank advanced largely unmolested, annihilating the isolated ON battalion defending Wiecbork.[8]

All day on September 1st the German XXI Army Corps, attacking from the exclave of East Prussia, attempted to secure a crossing over the Vistula and link up with Guderian. Their attempt to seize the bridges at Tczew at 0445 was foiled and the bridges were blown at 0600. The town was captured in the afternoon by Waffen-SS troops advancing south from Danzig. Having failed to secure the bridges, XXI Corps proceeded southwards and became locked in a positional battle with the Polish 16th Infantry Division dug in along the Osa, a minor tributary of the Vistula. It secured a bridgehead at 1600 hours near Rogozno-Zamek.[9]

September 2

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During the night, General Bortnowski repositioned the 27th Infantry Division southwards to conduct a counterattack against Guderian's bridgehead over the Brda. This attack was meant to be coordinated with the 9th Division but the two units never made contact. On September 2nd the 27th Division launched a piecemeal assault on Swiekatowo and Tuszyny which initially drove back the German reconnaissance elements but was broken up by the arrival of German armored cars, which inflicted considerable losses. The 27th Division retreated southwards in disarray.[10]

Troops of the 9th Division, meanwhile, were still engaged in the defenses of the bridges over the Brda at Piła-Młyn, north of the German bridgehead. These were destroyed at 1000. The 35th Regiment, which had repositioned south from Tuchola, launched an attack against the left flank of the 3rd Panzer Division but was repulsed with heavy casualties. The German 32nd Infantry Division, part of the 2nd Corps advancing on Guderian's right, launched its own attack on the 9th Division's 22nd Infantry Regiment, which had not yet been seriously engaged, in the vicinity of Koronowo, and shattered the Polish unit.[11]

Meanwhile, the German XXI Corps, advancing from East Prussia, now had a pontoon bridge over the Osa, and the 21st Infantry Division launched an assault across the river, driving back the Polish 16th Division. The 10th Panzer Regiment drove through the gap, seizing the town of Melno and threatening the rear of the Polish army. This threat of encirclement sparked a panic among the troops of the 16th Division, which began to scatter and retreat southwards. The 4th Infantry Division, positioned to the right of the 16th, launched a counterattack to relieve the beleaguered Polish unit and had some initial success, taking 100 German prisoners, but the attack ran out of steam, and the German XXI Corps continued to push towards the southwest.[11]

By the end of the day, a significant portion of the Polish forces were disorganized or in retreat, with the remainder facing the threat of encirclement by the German pincer movement. The remainder of the 9th Division, including the 35th and 22nd Regiments, began to disengage and join the retreat southwards towards Bydgoszcz, where the 15th Division was still dug in.

September 3

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On September 3, Guderian recognized the situation of the Polish forces and began orienting most of his force towards Bydgoszcz, sending only reconnaissance elements onwards to secure Chelmno. Around noon the German Luftwaffe began to launch air attacks on the retreating Polish columns which inflicted heavy losses, including most of the 9th Division's artillery. Some troops of the 9th and 27th Divisions were caught by the advancing panzers and surrounded near the village of Bukowiec, where 846 Polish troops were captured by the 3rd Panzer Division after a three hour battle. Pressed up against the Vistula with their route to Bydgoszcz cut, 4,000 Polish troops would be captured by the end of the day, with only the 35th Infantry Regiment managing to escape.[12]

In Bydgoszcz, Gen. Bortnowski had at his disposal the 15th infantry division, about ⅓ of the 2nd infantry division, two surviving battalions of the 22nd regiment, and about a quarter of the Pomorska cavalry brigade. Nearly all were disorganized and exhausted. Bortnowski decided to abandon the city and establish a new defensive line on the south bank of the Vistula, but roughly 1,000 German Nazi sympathizers, organized by Abwehr infiltrators and armed by the SS, staged a diversionary uprising, firing from windows and killing 20 Polish troops of the 22nd Infantry Regiment. The 62nd infantry regiment of the 15th division was tasked with restoring order; Polish troops rounded up 600 local Germans and killed 100 others, some in combat and some in summary executions. The next day however, September 4, saw more sniping by local Germans, resulting in retaliation from the Polish troops which killed as many as 150 further fighters and civilians. This event was magnified by German propaganda into the “Bromberg Massacre”, falsely claiming that 5,000 Germans had been killed.[13] On September 5 German troops entered the city, followed by the SS Einzatzgruppen 4 and SS-Standarte-Totenkopf division, which rounded up and killed 192 Poles, including city officials and other political figures, in the first week of the occupation. Prison camps were established in the area which held over 7,000 prisoners by November.

Aftermath

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Polish prisoners of war escorted by German soldiers. Tuchola Forest. 1939.

By 5 September, the Germans had in large part completed their takeover of the Polish Corridor. At that point some German forces moved to erase isolated pockets of Polish resistance further north in fortified areas on the Baltic Coast, while others continued their push south-east, deeper into Polish territory.

On 6 September, Adolf Hitler visited Guderian and congratulated him on his swift progress.[14]

About two-thirds of Armia Pomorze survived the battle, regrouped, and were reconstituted under Armia Poznań (Army Poznań) in time to fight in the Polish counteroffensive at the Battle of the Bzura.

Ultimately, Polish units, when dug-in and defending their chosen strongpoints, fought well and managed to inflict casualties on the German attackers, but the Polish troops were spread too thin, and coordination between units, even regiments of the same division, was very poor. German losses were fairly modest, with only 150 dead and 700 wounded in Guderian's XIX Panzer Corps, and several dozen tanks knocked out. German air power and mobility gave them a considerable technological advantage over the Polish forces, which struggled to keep pace with their opponents in a war of movement.[15]

Order of battle

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Polish

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Polish Army
Groups Division or Brigade Regiment or Battalion
Army Pomorze
Bortnowski
Operational Group Czersk
Grzmot-Skotnicki
Pomorska Cavalry Brigade
Zakrzewski
2nd Chevau-légers Regiment
8th Mounted Rifles Regiment
16th Uhlan Regiment
18th Uhlan Regiment
Chojnice Detachment
Majewski

1st Rifles Battalion
18th Uhlan Regiment
Czersk Battalion
Tuchola Battalion
Kościerzyna Detachment
Staniszewski
Kościerzyna Battalion
Gdynia II Battalion
62nd Infantry Regiment
9th Infantry Division
Werobej
15th Infantry Regiment
22nd Infantry Regiment
34th Infantry Regiment
35th Infantry Regiment
27th Infantry Division
Drapella
23rd Infantry Division
24th Infantry Division
50th Infantry Division
15th Infantry Division
Przyjalkowski
59th Infantry Regiment
61st Infantry Regiment
62nd Infantry Regiment

German

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Wehrmacht
Corps Division or Brigade Regiments
4th Army
Kluge
XIX Corps
Guderian
3rd Panzer Division
Schweppenburg
5th Panzer Regiment
6th Panzer Regiment
3rd Motorized Infantry Regiment
2nd Motorized Division
Bader
5th Motorized Infantry Regiment
25th Motorized Infantry Regiment
92nd Motorized Infantry Regiment
20th Motorized Division
Wiktorin
69th Motorized Infantry Regiment
76th Motorized Infantry Regiment
80th Motorized Infantry Regiment
II Corps
Strauss
3rd Infantry Division
Lichel
8th Infantry Regiment
29th Infantry Regiment
50th Infantry Regiment
32nd Infantry Division
Böhme
4th Infantry Regiment
94th Infantry Regiment
96th Infantry Regiment
III Corps
Haase
50th Infantry Division
Sorsche
121st Infantry Regiment
122nd Infantry Regiment
123rd Infantry Regiment
Wehrmacht Reserves 10th Panzer Division
Schaal
8th Panzer Regiment
86th Motorized Infantry Regiment
23rd Infantry Division
Brockdorff-Ahlefeldt
9th Infantry Regiment
67th Infantry Regiment
68th Infantry Regiment
218th Infantry Division
Freiherr Grote
323rd Infantry Regiment
386th Infantry Regiment
397th Infantry Regiment

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Christer Jörgensen, Chris Mann, Strategy and Tactics: Tank Warfare, Zenith Imprint, 2001, ISBN 0-7603-1016-5, p. 35. [1]
  2. ^ (in Polish) R. Ziobroń, Historia żołnierza tułacza. Działalność emigracyjna gen. Władysława Bortnowskiego, Rzeszów, 2009.
  3. ^ 1896 Map of West-East Prussia with Tucheler Heide south of Danziger Bucht Bay
  4. ^ Heinz Guderian: Erinnerungen eines Soldaten, "Ich hatte am 3.9 ... meinen Sohn Kurt wiedergesehen und mich dabei an den Türmen von Kulm, meiner Geburtsstadt, erfreut, die vom Ostufer der Weichsel herüberwinkten. Am 4.9 ... bei ihren Waldgefechten und endete auf dem alten deutschen Truppenübungsplatz Gruppe westlich Graudenz.", 1951,[2]
  5. ^ Zaloga, S.J., 2002, Poland 1939, Oxford: Osprey Publishing Ltd., ISBN 9781841764085
  6. ^ a b c Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case white: the invasion of Poland, 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 182–183. ISBN 978-1-4728-3495-9.
  7. ^ a b Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case white: the invasion of Poland, 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 184. ISBN 978-1-4728-3495-9.
  8. ^ a b Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case white: the invasion of Poland, 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 185. ISBN 978-1-4728-3495-9.
  9. ^ Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case white: the invasion of Poland, 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 186–187. ISBN 978-1-4728-3495-9.
  10. ^ Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case white: the invasion of Poland, 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 188. ISBN 978-1-4728-3495-9.
  11. ^ a b Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case white: the invasion of Poland, 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 189. ISBN 978-1-4728-3495-9.
  12. ^ Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case white: the invasion of Poland, 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 190. ISBN 978-1-4728-3495-9.
  13. ^ Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case white: the invasion of Poland, 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 191. ISBN 978-1-4728-3495-9.
  14. ^ Martin Gilbert, The Second World War: A Complete History, Owl Books, 2004, ISBN 0-8050-7623-9 Google Print, p.6
  15. ^ Forczyk, Robert (2019). Case white: the invasion of Poland, 1939. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 187, 192. ISBN 978-1-4728-3495-9.

Further reading

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53°36′00″N 18°00′00″E / 53.600000°N 18.000000°E / 53.600000; 18.000000