Corps could advance effectively unhindered into the territory southeast of the German positions. Having captured Beaumont, the XV and XX U.S. Corps outflanked the LXXXI Army Corps near Javron-les-Chapelles and marched south of the 7th Army to capture Beaumont-sur-Sarthe by 10 August while the VII U.S. Now, the Allied forces began to bypass the German forces in the south to create the Falaise Pocket. īy 5 August, the LXXXIV Army Corps had been forced back to Barenton and Le Teilleul, where it now stood on the left flank of the XLVII Panzer Corps. Günther von Kluge, commander of Army Group D, blamed Choltitz for the German defeat in Normandy and thus saw him removed in favor of Elfeldt. Elfeldt later gave testimony about his time as commander of the LXXXIV Army Corps to British historian B. 351–352.Ĭholtitz was replaced as corps commander by Otto Elfeldt on 30 July. The Other Side of the Hill: Germany's Generals, their Rise and Fall, with their own Account of Military Events, 1939-1945. As a result, there were even fewer German forces on the southern flank to oppose the advancing American forces. On 28 July, the LXXXIV Army Corps was ordered by Paul Hausser, now in command of the 7th Army, to retreat southeast to strengthen the German frontline. At the beginning of the Allied operation, less than two days of fuel were available for the forces of the corps. The LXXXIV Army Corps was hindered in its operational capabilities by the Allied bombing campaign against the French railways. The Allied troops reached Countaces by 28 July, Granville and Avranches by 31 July and advanced over Pontaubault into Brittany beginning on 1 August. Army, which became the Twelfth United States Army Group beginning 1 August, broke the positions of the LXXXIV Army Corps and penetrated the German left. The Allied breakout from Normandy began on 25 July, when the 3rd U.S. The LXXXIV Army Corps stood opposite the, from left to right from the German perspective, VIII U.S.
The LXXXIV, now supported by and supervising the II Parachute Corps, stood as part of the 7th Army on the left German flank north of Coutances. īy 24 July, the Allied landing ground had expanded to include Caen, Balleroy, Saint-Lô and La Haye-du-Puits. He was succeeded by Wilhelm Fahrmbacher, who was on 15 June replaced in turn by Dietrich von Choltitz.
On 12 June, corps commander Erich Marcks was killed in action. The 21st Panzer Division, although not directly subordinate to the LXXXIV Army Corps, was stationed nearby at Saint-Pierre-sur-Dives. The situation was further complicated by the fact that the 319th Infantry Division was guarding the Channel Islands and would be unavailable for the fighting in Normandy. Only the 352nd Division did not carry the designation bodenständig, and was the only formidable fighting force under control of LXXXIV Army Corps. insufficiently equipped with motorized vehicles and intended for non-mobile operations. Of these, the 243rd, 319th, 709th and 716th were bodenständig (static), i.e. The forces available to the corps on invasion day were the 243rd Infantry Division, 319th Infantry Division, 352nd Infantry Division, 709th Infantry Division and 716th Infantry Division. The forces of the 352nd Infantry Division ( Dietrich Kraiss), headquarted at Le Molay-Littry, and of the 716th Infantry Division ( Wilhelm Richter), headquartered at Caen, were closest to the Allied landing sites. After 6 June 1944 īecause of its position within the German Atlantic Wall, the LXXXIV Army Corps was the first formation to respond to the Normandy landings by the western Allies. The LXXXIV Army Corps was subsequently put to high alert to react to the ongoing Allied invasion. Shortly after midnight on 6 June 1944, Allied airborne landings began at the Orne river and on the Cotentin peninsula. By March 1944, between 50 and 80% of the required fortifications in the area of the LXXXIV Army Corps had been operational. With the Allied invasion imminent, LXXXIV Army Corps reported in late May 1944 that only half of the winter programme had been fulfilled and that many coastal batteries were still left to be installed. Zangen was succeeded as corps commander by Erich Marcks on 1 August 1943. Behlendorff was succeeded as corps commander by Gustav-Adolf von Zangen on 1 April 1943. The corps was subordinate to the 7th Army under Army Group D, and stationed in Saint-Lô in Normandy. The initial commander of the LXXXIV was Hans Behlendorff. LX had been formed on 15 October 1940 in Prague. The LXXXIV Army Corps was formed on by renaming Höheres Kommando z.