Von Der Heydte, Paratrooper, Hero of Crete, Parachuted into the Bulge, Part of the Plot to Kill Hitler?
Many
are aware of the plot to kill Hitler orchestrated by Colonel Schenk
Count von Stauffenberg in July of 1944 as it was depicted by Tom Cruise
in the movie Valkyrie. But what the movie doesn’t depict beyond the
immediate round of up of German officers are those throughout the German
military who would have supported such an action but had no immediate
role in the attempt.
But
Count von Stauffenberg had a cousin who was a high ranking German
Paratrooper officer and was loosely connected to the ring of officers
who sought to bring down Hitler. An intellectual, Friedrich August
Freiherr von der Heydte served in the Germany Army before the Nazi’s
came to power, fulfilled his duty during the war, and would later go on
to serve in the West German military as an ally to the West.
An Enlightened Path to War
In
1907, von der Heydte was born to a family with noble distinction. His
father served and distinguished himself in World War 1 with the Bavarian
Army. Devout Catholics, von der Heydte attended a Catholic School in
Munich where it became clear this young man had a bright future ahead of
him were it not that the future was heading towards total war. He
joined the Weimar Republic Army in 1925 but was released in 1927 to
pursue his academic studies.
He
first earned an Economics degree from Innsbruck University before
following it up with a degree in law at Graz University. Still the
academic, he pursued additional studies in Berlin before securing a spot
at a diplomatic school in Vienna. Later, he would receive a stipend
from the Carnegie Institute for Peace before re-joining the German army
in 1935. During these years of academic study, von der Heydte would
develop some decisively liberal views. However, as many Germans did
during the pre-war years, that wouldn’t stop him from joining the
Nationalist Socialist German Worker’s Party.
He was promoted to
Lieutenant within the Wehrmacht and continued to seek opportunity for
academic advancement. He received another temporary release from the
military in order to further his education at The Hague. He would study
here for two years before attending a General Staff Officer’s course in
1938 and 1939. Then, as the war became imminent, he was called back to
his unit as the time for studying had ended.
Falling from the Sky
While
von der Heydte was initially part of an anti-tank company, he would
make a name for himself as part of the German paratrooper force. During
the Battle of France, he served as an aide-de-camp for an infantry
division and was transferred to the Luftwaffe after being promoted to
Captain.
He
received his training in jumping and was primed for what would be the
first time paratroopers were used en masse during combat. German Paratroopers Landing in Crete via commons.wikimedia.orgThe Battle of Crete began on May 20th,
1941 with a German airborne assault. The Germans would endure heavy
casualties in just the first day of battle, and it looked as if the
Allies might hold the island. However, once the Germans took a key
airfield, it meant they could be reinforced quickly and the island
eventually fell to the Germans.
For his actions and leadership
during this battle, von der Heydte was awarded the Iron Cross. He would
be promoted to Major and see action in North Africa and Italy as well.
After
recovering from a plane crash suffered in Italy, he was posted to
Northern France where he would battle the Allied invasion at Normandy.
Once it became apparent that the Beachhead would hold, von der Heydte
along with the German Army fought their way back to Germany until the
infamous Battle of the Bulge.
It was here that von der Heydte
would make his last jump of the war. By this point, his cousin Claus
von Stauffenberg had already conducted his failed attempt to assassinate
Hitler and it appeared that von der Heydte had survived the ensuing
purge or direct association with the plot.
One Last Jump
Von
der Heydte was told he would be conducting a secret jump in the coming
weeks and would be given 1,200 elite troops. It was revealed this jump
would take place as part of Germany’s last ditch offensive. However, it
was also revealed that these troops gifted to von der Heydte were
hardly elite.
Many
had never jumped before and a good number of them were the misfits from
other units throughout the Army. The mission would be to jump behind
American lines and secure a key crossroad to delay American
reinforcements. American soldiers searching for German Paratroopers dropped in the area via commons.wikimedia.orgThis
would be the only nighttime jump conducted by the Germans and it
couldn’t have gone any worse. High winds scattered the planes and men
with some landing as much as 100 miles from one another. Despite
jumping with just over 1,000 men, the Americans thought this was a
Division sized jump due to their spacing and reports of location.
Initially, only von der Heydte and a few men would make it to the
crossroads where they reportedly helplessly waived at allied convoys
going past who waved back just assuming they were Americans.
Von
der Heydte would break his arm in the jump, but was eventually able to
round up 300 or fewer men. They lacked enough ammunition for a
sustained fight, and all the radios had been destroyed in the jump. Von
der Heydte abandoned the task of holding the crossroads and instructed
his men to push east towards German lines.
Despite his wounds, von der Heydte made it to Monschau where he eventually surrendered to the Allies on December 23rd, 1944. He would spend the rest of the war in a POW camp in England. A wounded von der Heydte in captivity via http://ww2gravestone.com/people/heydte-friedrich-august-freiherr-von-der/Released
in 1947, it was time for him to pick back up with his academic
pursuits. He initially became a professor of constitutional and
international law at the University of Mainz before taking up various
academic postings throughout Germany. However, in the world quickly
divided between the West and the Soviet Union, he wouldn’t abandon his
military career.
He
would serve in the West German army and eventually rose to the rank of
Brigadier General in the Reserves. It was an odd time where former Nazi
German officers would quickly become allies in the looming Cold War
against the Soviet Union.
Perhaps it was his association with the
plot to kill Hitler, his academic prowess, or even his conservative
Catholic views, but the Allies determined Friedrich August Freiherr von
der Heydte was a man to have on their side.
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