1st Parachute Army (Wehrmacht)
The 1st Parachute Army was a combined forces between airborne forces, armoured, and mechanized infantry unit of German Army, formed in September, 1944, comprising 30,000 men.
History
Its first commander was Colonel General Kurt Student, the Wehrmachts airborne pioneer. During the Allied Operation Market Garden, Student's men delayed the Allied advance across the south of the Netherlands. The 30,000 soldiers were likely the only combat-ready reserve forces in Germany at the time. However, only two of the Army's units were paratrooper divisions.Student was transferred to the Eastern Front, and on 18 November 1944, command of the First Parachute Army passed to General der Fallschirmtruppe Alfred Schlemm, who opposed the Canadian First Army during the Battle of the Reichswald.
The Canadian First Army and Lieutenant-General William Hood Simpson’s Ninth Army compressed Schlemm’s forces into a small bridgehead on the west bank of the Rhine opposite Wesel. On 10 March 1945, the rearguard of the 1st Parachute Army evacuated their bridgehead, destroying the bridge behind them. Schlemm was wounded in an air attack on his command post at Haltern eleven days later and on 20 March 1945, command passed to General Günther Blumentritt.
Just before Operation Varsity, First Parachute Army had three corps stationed along the river;
- II Parachute Corps to the north,
- LXXXVI Corps in the centre,
- LXIII Corps in the south.