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Infanterie-Regiment Bremen (1. Hanseatisches) Nr. 75

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Infantry regiment of the Prussian Army
Infanterie-Regiment „Bremen“ (1. Hanseatisches) Nr. 75
Active1866 - 1919
Country Prussia
 German Empire
 Bremen
AllegiancePrussian Army
Imperial German Army
BranchInfantry
TypeRegiment
Garrison/HQBremen (1867-1919)
Harburg (1866-1893)
Stade (1866-1919)
EngagementsFranco-Prussian War
World War I
Military unit

Infanterie-Regiment Bremen (1. Hanseatisches) Nr. 75 was an active infantry regiment in the Prussian Army (1866–1871) and the Imperial German Army (1871–1918).

Organization

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History

By an A.K.O. (Allerhöchste Kabinettsorder) dated 27 September 1866, which is considered the official foundation day of the regiment, a new Prussian regiment was formed after the Austro-Prussian War from companies of the Pomeranian Regiments No. 1, 3, 5 and 7 in Stettin on 3 November 1866. It was formed into a musketeer battalion in Harburg and a fusilier battalion in Stade and called Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 75.

As a result of the military convention between the Kingdom of Prussia and the Free and Hanseatic City of Bremen on 27 June 1867, the "Bremen" Fusilier Battalion, founded in 1813, was incorporated in the army of the North German Confederation. From this point on, this battalion formed the 1st (musketeer) battalion of the regiment. The regiment was renamed to 1. Hanseatisches Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 75. After 1893, both musketeer battalions were stationed in Bremen, while the fusilier battalion remained in Stade.

Franco-Prussian War

Regimental muster in Bremen in 1891 marking the 25th anniversary of Infanterie-Regiment Bremen.

In the Franco-Prussian War, the regiment fought as part of the 17th Infantry Division in the battles of Noisseville, Loigny-Poupry, Orléans, Beaugency and Le Mans, and in the sieges of Metz and Paris. During this war, the regiment suffered a total of 26 officer casualties, including one medical officer (5 killed in action, 2 died illness, 19 wounded), as well as 534 casualties among non-commissioned officers and men (110 killed in action, 54 died of illness, 16 missing and 354 wounded). Four officers were awarded the Iron Cross 1st Class. The Iron Cross 2nd Class was awarded 169 times.

Interwar period

The regiment remained part of the peacetime 17th Division. It was renamed from the 1. Hanseatisches Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 75 to Infanterie-Regiment Bremen (1. Hanseatisches) Nr. 75 on 5 September 1904.

First World War

Johannes Wilhelm Sievers Sievert († June 1918 Moyenneville) as a Fähnrich in the regiment.

The regiment spent the entirety of World War I, except for some temporary detachments, as part of the 17th Infantry Division on the Western Front. An estimated 19,735 men served in the active regiment over the course of the war. Approximately 3,600 members of the regiment died during the conflict.

Two officers of the regiment, Oberstleutnant Wilhelm Hagedorn and Major Walter Caspari, were decorated with the Pour le Mérite, Prussia's highest military honor for officers. Five non-commissioned officers were decorated with the Military Merit Cross, Prussia's highest military honor for non-commissioned officers and other ranks. Sixteen officers, including Hagedorn and Caspari, were decorated with the Knight's Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern with Swords. The Iron Cross 1st Class was awarded to 79 officers and 105 non-commissioned officers and other ranks.

Legacy

Several years after the war, former members of the regiment formed a veterans organization Kameradschaftsbund der Fünfundsiebziger (from 1939 to 1943: Traditionsverband des Ehem. Infant.-Reg. "Bremen" (1. Hans.) Nr. 75) which published a newsletter, Kameradschaftsbund der 75er. There was also a separate officers association. Following the war, the regiment was perpetuated in the Reichswehr by 1. Kompanie/16. Infanterie-Regiment (6. Division, based in Münster).

Commanders

Rank Name Dates
Oberst Friedrich von Buddenbrock 30 October 1866 to 17 July 1870
Oberst Wilhelm von der Osten 18 July 1870 to 11 December 1872
Oberst Ludwig von Knobloch 12 December 1872 to 16 April 1879
Oberstleutnant Timon von Rauchhaupt 17 April to 10 June 1879 (tasked with the leadership)
Oberst Timon von Rauchhaupt 11 June 1879 to 10 November 1884
Oberst Gustav von der Lancken 11 November 1884 to 9 August 1888
Oberstleutnant Fedor von Brodowski 10 August to 12 November 1888 (tasked with the leadership)
Oberst Fedor von Brodowski 13 November 1888 to 15 June 1891
Oberst Franz Xaver von Garnier 16 June 1891 to 12 September 1895
Oberst Karl von Barton genannt von Stedman 13 May 1895 to 19 July 1898
Oberst Wilhelm von Bötticher 20 July 1898 to 21 July 1900
Oberst Hugo Sasse 22 July 1900 to 17 April 1903
Oberst Paul Albrecht 18 April 1903 to 26 January 1908
Oberst Richard von Webern 27 January 1908 to 20 April 1911
Oberst Max Woide 21. April 1911 to 21 March 1914
Oberst Eugen Jäger 22 March to 20 September 1914
Oberstleutnant Georg Bruhn 21 September 1914 to 31 May 1915
Oberst Otto von Trautmann 1 June to 28 October 1915
Major Wilhelm Hagedorn 29 October 1915 to 19 January 1919
Oberst Karl Brentano 20 January 1919 to dissolution

Notable members

See also

References

  1. Gottschling, G. R. L.: Geschichte des 1. Hanseatischen Infanterie-Regiments Nr. 75: von seiner Gründung im Jahre 1866 bis zum Ende des deutsch-französischen Krieges 1870/71, E.S. Mittler & Sohn, Berlin 1886.
  2. Verlustliste Infanterie-Regiment "Bremen" (1. Hanseatisches) Nr. 75
  3. Zipfel, Ernst: Geschichte des Infanterie-Regiments Bremen (1. Hanseatisches) Nr. 75, H.M. Hauschild, Bremen 1934
  4. 6. Division (feldgrau.com)
  5. Günter Wegner: Stellenbesetzung der Deutschen Heere 1815-1939. Band 2: Die Stellenbesetzung der aktiven Infanterie-Regimenter sowie Jäger- und MG-Battalione, Wehrbezirkskommandos und Ausbildungsleiter von der Stiftung bzw. Aufstellung bis 1939, Biblio-Verlag, Osnabrück 1992, ISBN 3-7648-1782-8, pp. 199-200.

Sources

  • anon. Bremer Verlustliste. Bremen: L. Mack, 1871.
  • anon. Kurze Darstellung der Geschichte des Infanterie-Regiments Bremen (1. Hanseatischen) Nr. 75 von 1866 bis 1908. Berlin: Bajanz & Studer, 1908.
  • anon. Infanterie-Regiment Bremen im Felde 1914–1918. Bremen: F. Leuwer, 1919.
  • Caspari, Walter. Infanterie-Regiment "Bremen" (1. Hanseatisches) Nr 75: Die letzten Großkampftage am 29., 30., 31. Okt. u. 1. Nov. 1918 Bremen: F. Leuwer, .
  • Caspari, Walter. Infanterie-Regiment "Bremen" (1. Hanseatisches) Nr 75: Die Kämpfe im Oktober 1918 Bremen: C. Schünemann, .
  • Gottschling, G. R. L. Geschichte des 1. hanseatischen Infanterie-Regiments Nr. 75: von seiner Gründg im J. 1866 bis zum Ende d. dt.-franz. Krieges 1870/71. Berlin: Mittler, 1886.
  • Zipfel, Ernst. Geschichte des Infanterie-Regiments Bremen (1. Hanseatisches) Nr. 75. Bremen: Hauschild, 1934.


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