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| Battle of Würzburg | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of theWestern Allied invasion of Germany | |||||||
The destroyed Ludwigsbrücke | |||||||
| |||||||
| Combatants and Leaders | |||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Richard Wolf | Harry J. Collins | ||||||
| Units involved | |||||||
| Unknown | 42nd Infantry Division | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| est. 3,500 | est. 5,000 | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| est. 1,000 dead (including civilians) | est. 300 dead | ||||||
TheBattle of Würzburg (31 March—6 April 1945) which ended up with the captureUpper Franconia by42nd Infantry Division ("Rainbow").
The defense ofWürzburg, under the leadership ofOtto Hellmuth and military leadership of theWehrmacht colonel Richard Wolf, represented the first serious resistance to the American division after crossing theRhine due toHitler's orders to put up fierce resistance.[1] AfterHettstadt to the northwest of Würzburg had fallen to American forces, the German forces were forced to fall back to the right bank of theMain River since reinforcements did not arrive as they were expecting.
USartillery pieces took positions on the heights of Nikolausberg and Katzenberg in order to bombard the city, while German artillery took position on the right bank of the Main River in Keesberg. On Monday at around 11:30 a.m., the Ludwigsbrücke was blown up, at around 4:45 p.m. the Alte Mainbrücke was blown up, and at around 5:15 p.m. the Luitpoldbrücke (now Friedensbrücke) was also blown up. This made all three of Würzburg's Main bridges impassable for American troops.[2]
On the night of Tuesday someGIs in the Ludwigsbrücke area crossed the Main River with some light boats, without any significant resistance, and on the following day the bridgehead was erected and expanded there. Though the troop movements eventually came under the fire of snipers posted in houses by Richard Wolf. Downstream (north) of theOld Main Bridge where one of thepioneers built apontoon bridge on April 3 to transport light vehicles and infantry to the right bank of the Main River.
The heaviesturban warfare took place on Wednesday and Thursday in the city center, which was in ruins due toAllied bombing raids over Würzburg.[3] An attempted German counter-attack in the direction of the 3 main bridges failed due to the lack of armament and Würzburg fell to American forces.
On Friday, 6 April 1945, the last German units fighting in the outer districts fell and resistance ceased, marking the end of the battle.
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