
The
History of IR459 and
the 236th Infantry Division
The
457th and 458th Infantry Regiments was recruited from the 7th Corps
District, known also as Westphalia. The 459th Infantry Regiment; was
recruited from the 16th Corps District, known also as Lorraine.
1917
The
236th Division was formed at the Senne Camp at the end of December
1916, and the beginning of January 1917. Recruited from the 7th and
16th Corps Districts, its regiments were composed of men belonging
to the 1918 class (40 percent) and have returned wounded. The 459th
Regiment was formed in Saarlouis; it transferred shortly to Lippspringe,
which was near Seene. The entire division trained in the Senne Training
Area (Uebungsplatz Senne), and during that time, the 459th remained
quartered in Lippspringe in many cases, soldiers were quartered with
area families. The Regiment's first formation, with the Division Commanding
General in attendance, was in the town, on "Main Street."
The 459th did not have a Kaserne(s) in some Garnisonstadt, as did
the regiments that had existed before the war; apparently, they "adopted"
Lippspringe as their equivalent, considering it (along with Saarlouis)
their garrison.
"So
the regiment left Lippspringe and its environs with feeling of gratitude
and attachment to a beautiful piece of German soil that had become
a dear home in a short while. The name "Regiment Lippspringe" was
later carried before the enemy with pride by the 459th, from time
to time as a trench cover name."
Cambrai
The
236th Division was entrained at the Senne Camp and Paderborn Camps
on April 11, 1917, and went to Cambrai by way of Dusseldorf-Aix la
Chapelle-Liege-Mamur-Charleroi-Valenciennes. Detraining at Caudry
on April 13, it went into line southwest of Cambrai (Trestault-Gouzeaucort)
on the 18th. On April 24th it was attacked by British troops, lost
the village of Villers Plouich, and suffered heavily (340 prisoners).
On May 9th it was sent to rest in the vicinity of Cambrai.
Artois
The
division occupied the sector of Cherisy (southeast of Arras) from
June 4th to September 2nd, and did not get into any serious action
during this period.
Flanders
The
division left Artois at the beginning of September, was sent to rest
at Courtrai until the 17th, went to Iseghem by railroad, and then
marched to Roulers. Until September 20 it remained in reserve as a
counterattacking division. Between the 20th and the 26th, it was in
a violent battle east of Ypres, toward the Polygon Wood and between
this woods and Zonnebeke to oppose the British advance. Before going
into line, on September 20th, the 2nd Battalion of the 459th Infantry
Regiment had lost more than 200 men from artillery fire; on the 22nd,
the 8th Company had only 15 men left.
They were withdrawn from the Flanders front, during the night of September
28-29, the 236th Division was sent to rest in the vicinity of Douai.
On October 6th it went into line north of the Scarpe, between the
Roeux and the Gavrelle; it enlarged its sector toward the north at
the beginning of November. It was filled up by replacements taken
from the Russian Front; 400 men coming from the 32nd Landwehrregiment
(197th Division) arrived in November.
Recruiting
The
236th Division was recruited from Westphalia and the Rhine Provinces.
Value
- 1917
(Estimate according to the BEF Command)
The
236th Division had serious losses while fighting at Ypres and its
morale was weakened in consequence. It may be considered a mediocre
division (February, 1918). According to one deserter's statement (Jan.
23rd, 1918) the 236th Division was a shock division in 1917.
1918
The
division was engaged from March 21st to April 3rd. In March, they
fought in the Somme Offensive, first at Cherizy and later at Heninel.
It was relieved south of Arras on the night of April 3rd-4th and moved
to Passchendaele by way of Aubigny au Bac, Iseghem, and Meulebeke.
Ypres
It
entered line at Passchendaele on April 6th and held a sector in this
vicinity until June 22nd. Once again the division was relieved, this
time by the 31st Division. During July the division rested at Deynze.
It again it held the sector southwest of Ypres from August 10th to
September 13th.
Lorraine
The
division moved from Flanders by way of Tourcoing-Brussels-Liege-Aachen-Cologne-Bohn-Bingen-Coblenz-Kreuznach
to Strasburg. It did not detrain there, but was suddenly ordered to
Metz, where it arrived on September 24th in the afternoon. The division
marched to Loringen, stayed one night and marched to Mars la Tour
on September 26th. The next morning marched to Jarney and entrained
there, going to Dun sur Meuse (via Longuyon and Montmedy). From Dun
it marched through Doulcon to Villers, then to Cunel, and then forward
into position.
The division was heavily engaged from September 29th to its retirement
on October 17th. It distinguished itself particularly, fighting stubbornly
and successfully for many days in succession. It lost only 413 prisoners
but its casualties were very heavy, estimated at 3000. On November
4th the division was reengaged south of Beaumont and continued in
line until the armistice.
Value-1918
(Estimate according to the BEF command)
The
division was rated as third class.
Information
extracted from:
Histories
of Two Hundred and Fifty One Divisions of the German Army Which Participated
in the War (1914-1918). London Stamp Exchange LTD. 1989 Re-print in
Great Britain by Anthony Rowe Ltd. (ISBN 0 948130 87 3) pp. 727-728
Regimental
History
Das
(Rhein.Westf.) Infantrie Regt. Nr. 459, F.v. Pirscher, 1926.
|