Liberation of Strasbourg

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Date23 November 1944
Location
Strasbourg, France
48°35′00″N 7°44′45″E / 48.5833°N 7.7458°E / 48.5833; 7.7458
Result Allied victory
Liberation of Strasbourg
Part of the liberation of France

French Sherman tanks parading on Place Kléber
Date23 November 1944
Location
Strasbourg, France
48°35′00″N 7°44′45″E / 48.5833°N 7.7458°E / 48.5833; 7.7458
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
Provisional Government of the French Republic France
United States
 Germany
Commanders and leaders
Provisional Government of the French Republic Philippe Leclerc
United States Wade H. Haislip
Nazi Germany Franz Vaterrodt (POW)

The liberation of Strasbourg took place on 23 November 1944 during the Alsace campaign (November 1944 – March 1945) in the last months of World War II. After the liberation of Mulhouse on 21 November 1944 by the 1st Armored Division,[1] General Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque and the 2nd Armored Division entered the city of Strasbourg in France after having liberated Sarrebourg and La Petite-Pierre from Nazi Germany, clearing the way for the advance on Strasbourg.

Timeline

  • 6 June 1944: Allies land on Normandy coastline, beginning the liberation of mainland France.
  • 1 August: French 2nd Armoured Division (2nd DB) led by General Leclerc arrives in Normandy, joins General Patton's Third US Army.
  • 2nd DB actively takes part in liberating Normandy and then heads towards Paris.
  • Initially, the Americans saw Paris as a secondary objective, but Leclerc and de Gaulle convinced Eisenhower to change the plan.
  • Paris is liberated on 25 August with the arrival of Leclerc's tanks, celebrated by de Gaulle and Leclerc riding down Champs-Élysées.
  • Despite victories in the West, large areas of France were still under Nazi control.[2]
  • 22 November 1944: The U.S. XV Corps under General Wade H. Haislip broke through the Saverne Gap in the Vosges Mountains, opening the route for Leclerc’s 2nd Armoured Division to advance on Strasbourg.[3]


Battle

The routes taken by US and French forces involved in the liberation of Strasbourg

On 22 November 1944, the French 2nd Armored Division, along with the French First Army, was directed to capture Strasbourg by the Allied Supreme Command.[4] That same day, the 2nd DB moved up to the vital pass at Saverne, which had been seized by U.S. XV Corps under General Wade H. Haislip. This breakthrough through the Vosges Mountains, often called the “Saverne Gap,” opened a direct line of advance on Strasbourg for Leclerc’s armored columns.[5]

At 7 a.m. on 23 November 1944, the 2nd DB advanced on Strasbourg in five columns guided by Alsatian FFI fighters. They reached the faubourgs and the western belt of the city's fortifications (forts Foch, Pétain and Kléber) around 9 a.m. The forts were well defended and reinforced by anti-tank ditches and trenches that the population of Strasbourg had had to dig, and stopped the progression of the French columns. However, the column coming from the north along the Marne-Rhine Canal, guided by FFI member Robert Fleig, pierced the defensive line and entered Strasbourg. The column's commander, Lieutenant-Colonel Rouvillois, transmitted the message tissu est dans iode ("tissue is in iodine"), which informed General Leclerc that the 2nd DB was in Strasbourg and was pushing towards the Kehl Bridge over the Rhine,[6] following one of the two routes proposed by Fleig. The other columns changed their axis of progression to fall back on his route.

Nazi memorabilia looted in liberated Strasbourg: a Swastika, an Iron Cross and a bust of Adolf Hitler

The city was taken by complete surprise, with trams, packed with passengers, circulating normally. Gauleiter Robert Heinrich Wagner had just enough time to flee across the Rhine and 15,000 German civilians were arrested, although the proximity to the border allowed many others to escape. The chief of staff of General Franz Vaterrodt, the commander of Strasbourg, was captured during his daily morning walk by a platoon of five Shermans.[7] The Kommandantur and part of General Vaterrodt's staff were captured at the Palais du Rhin. The general managed to entrench himself with 600 men in Fort Ney in the Robertsau forest [fr], north of Strasbourg.The French quickly reached the Kehl Bridge, but were unable to cross it due to heavy enemy fire. The hope of a bridgehead in Germany faded despite fierce fighting, during which FFI guide Fleig was killed.

At 2:20 p.m. on 23 November, the French flag was hoisted at the top of Strasbourg Cathedral.[8] The city had been liberated but the fighting was not over. For several days, the 2nd DB and FFI fighters under Georges Kiefer [fr] (nom de guerre "Commandant François") cleaned out pockets of resistance. The Esplanade quarter, where the barracks were located, was one of the most difficult to reduce, along with the port area. FFI fighters guided the tanks, provided valuable infantry for urban combat, escorted prisoners, and served as translators for the intelligence service of the 2nd DB. Thanks to French Resistance fighter Robert Kleffer, head of the FFI in La Wantzenau, a large part of the German garrison was prevented from crossing the Rhine.[9]

On 25 November, General Vaterrodt capitulated with the garrison of Fort Ney (626 men), bringing the number of captured German military personnel to around 6,000. The city was subjected to heavy artillery fire. During the night of 27-28 November, the last German soldiers retreated to the other side of the Rhine and blew up the Kehl Bridge. On 27 November, the mayor of Strasbourg before the occupation, Charles Frey [fr], resumed his duties. General Charles de Gaulle appointed Charles Blondel [fr] as Commissioner of the Republic and Gaston Haelling [fr] as Prefect of Bas-Rhin.[8]

Aftermath

Impact

References

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