Normandy Hohenstaufen suffered losses from Allied
fighter bombers during its move to Normandy, delaying its arrival until 26 June 1944. Approximately 50% of the division's tanks broke down during its movement to Normandy. The division's armored forces would be reinforced by the newly attached
102nd SS Heavy Panzer Battalion. On 10 July, the division was pulled back into reserve, to be replaced by the
277th Infantry Division. The division's depleted Panzergrenadier regiments were eventually merged to form Panzergrenadier Regiment Hohenstaufen. The division saw much action defending against British armour during
Operation Goodwood. During
Operation Jupiter Hohenstaufen destroyed 58 British tanks with many of them being
Churchill tanks. After the launch of the Canadian
Operation Totalize, Hohenstaufen avoided encirclement in the
Falaise pocket and kept the narrow escape route from this pocket open. By 21 August, the
Battle of Normandy was over, and the German forces were in full retreat.
Obersturmbannführer Walter Harzer was placed in command of the division. It fought several rearguard actions during the retreat through France and Belgium and in early September 1944, the exhausted formation was pulled out of the line for rest and refit near the Dutch city of
Arnhem. The division encountered stiff resistance from the British
1st Parachute Brigade. The Reconnaissance Battalion, a 40-vehicle unit commanded by Hauptsturmführer
Viktor Eberhard Gräbner, was sent south over the bridge to scout the area around
Nijmegen. The bridge had already been captured by the Germans. This action is depicted in the film
A Bridge Too Far.
Ardennes Offensive After the battle of Arnhem, Hohenstaufen moved to
Paderborn for a much-needed rest and refit. On 12 December 1944, the division moved south to the Munstereifel. It was to act as a reserve for
Sepp Dietrich's
6th SS Panzer Army, a part of the
Ardennes offensive (
Unternehmen: Wacht am Rhein). The 6th Panzer Army was to attack in the north, along the line
St. Vith–
Vielsalm. Initially, only the divisional reconnaissance and artillery units were involved in the fighting but on 21 December, the entire division was committed. When the attack in the north stalled, the division was sent south to assist in the attacks on
Bastogne, where it took heavy casualties from the American defenders and lost much of its equipment to Allied ground attack aircraft. On 7 January 1945, Hitler called off the operation and ordered all forces to concentrate around Longchamps, Belgium. ==Hungary and surrender==