276th Infantry Division The 276th Infantry Division's creation was ordered on 22 May 1940 as a division of the tenth
Aufstellungswelle by
Wehrkreis XXI authorities. However, as the
Battle of France ended much sooner than anticipated, the assembly was aborted on 22 July. Instead, the 276th Infantry Division saw its actual deployment on 17 November 1943 in the south of
German-occupied France as a division of the twenty-second
Aufstellungswelle, using remnants of the
38th Infantry Division. On 16 June 1944, following the
Allied landings in Normandy, the division was activated and sent to
the front against the Western Allies. The division was assigned to
XXXXVII Panzer Corps of
Panzer Group West and inserted into the line south of
Tilly. On 7 August, several Allied breakthroughs into the positions of the 276th and 236th Infantry Divisions west of
Hamars forced a withdrawal. Subsequently, following the
Allied breakthrough at Avranches, the 276th Infantry Division was trapped in the
Falaise Pocket, where it was annihilated.
580th & 276th Volksgrenadier Division The division was formed in Poland on 4 September 1944, by redesignating the
580th Volksgrenadier Division, under the command of
Kurt Möhring. It contained the 986th, 987th and 988th Grenadier Regiments, and the 276th Artillery Regiment. The 580th Volksgrenadier Division had been created only a week earlier in West Prussia from the meagre remains of the 276th Infantry Division and new recruits. The 276th Volksgrenadier Division fought in the
Battle of the Bulge, where it took over two thousand casualties, including General Möhring who was killed on 18 December 1944. Möhring was succeeded by
Hugo Dempwolff. It then saw action in Luxembourg, and was destroyed fighting American forces in March 1945. ==Notes==