Early Use Until the 18th century, soldiers stationed in Erlangen were quartered by private citizens. After its transition to the
Kingdom of Bavaria in 1810, Erlangen tried several times to become a garrison town. Beginning in 1868, several small
kaserne (
English: barracks) were established. In 1890, the 19th Royal Bavarian Infantry Regiment (German: ''
), part of the III Royal Bavarian Corps (German: III. Königlich Bayerisches Armee-Korps
), was permanently stationed in Erlangen. To accommodate regimental units, a drill area of 150 hectares (370 acres) was purchased and set aside as an (English: drill area), and construction began on a new infantry kaserne
along Luitpoldstraße (present day Drausnickstraße), to the north of the drill area. In 1893, a hospital was established for the garrison in the northwest corner of the drill area. In 1901, the 10th Royal Bavarian Artillery Regiment (German: ) was relocated to a new kaserne
built on the northern edge of the drill area. This new kaserne
was called simply Artillerie-Kaserne
(English: Artillery Barracks). Through 1904, additional buildings were erected on the artillery kaserne
including staff buildings, guard houses, a stockade, hay-, straw- and oats-magazines, wagon houses, a scale, stables and other workshops. In 1912 the Offizierspeiseanstalt'' (English: Officer's Mess), also called the
Kasino, was built. During
World War I, both regiments fought on the front lines. The drill area was used as a
Prisoner of War (POW) camp during the war. In 1915, the number of Russian, French and Italian prisoners interned there was approximately 3,600.
Weimar Republic With the
armistice on November 11, 1918, most soldiers were discharged and were released into private life. After the war, Erlangen retained its status as a garrison town, however due to restrictions imposed by the
Treaty of Versailles, only select smaller training units remained at the garrison. The original infantry barracks fell into disuse by the military and control of that facility reverted to the city. It was later used to house refugees. Beginning in 1923, the garrison hospital was converted to a skin clinic used by the
Friedrich-Alexander University. On 1 October 1922, a monument was erected in front of the
Kasino, named
Gefallenendenkmal für das 10. Feldartillerie-Regiment (English: Memorial to the Fallen of the 10th Field Artillery Regiment).
World War II The reintroduction of conscription in 1935 and subsequent rearmament led to a massive expansion of military facilities in Erlangen. On 16 March 1935, construction began on a second artillery
kaserne located on the northeast corner of the drill area to the east and adjacent to the original
Artilleriekaserne. On 1 October 1935, two batteries from the 17th Artillery Regiment occupied the new artillery
kaserne. In 1936, the
Wehrmacht (English: defense forces) took control of these facilities. In 1938, a new
panzer (English: tank)
kaserne complex was constructed on the drill area south of the original garrison hospital along Hartmannstraße. Originally called
Panzerkaserne, it was occupied by the 25th
Panzer Regiment, along with regimental and department staff, and included a new hospital. It was later renamed
Villers-Brettoneux-Kaserne, after the
Second Battle of Villers-Bretoneux in the first world war, which saw the first use of German tanks in battle. The two artillery
kaserne were also renamed. The original artillery
kaserne, which had been home to the 10th Field Artillery Regiment was renamed
St. Mihiel-Kaserne, after the town of
St. Mihiel, France, where the 10th Field Artillery fought for nearly two years during the first world war. The new artillery
kaserne was named
Rheinland Kaserne, in honor of the remilitarization of the
Rheinland in March 1936 by the German Army. In total, approximately 48 buildings and structures were erected on the drill square between 1935 and 1938. The outbreak of the second world war brought construction on these sites to a standstill. The
Villers-Bretonneux-Kaserne was home to the
Panther tank training center from 1943, due to its proximity to the tank's manufacturer,
Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg AG (MAN), in Nuernberg, and to the
Grafenwoehr Training Area. Most Panther officers, drivers, driving instructors and repair technicians of the
Wehrmacht and
Waffen-SS were trained in Erlangen at the
Panzer-Ersatz und Ausbildungs-Abteilung 25 (English: Tank Replacement and Training Unit 25). Buildings on the
St. Mihiel-Kaserne were used to quarter soldiers and units undergoing Panther tank training. At the close of World War II, the defense of Erlangen fell under the military authority of
Oberstleutnant (English: Lieutenant-Colonel) , a pastor's son and professional soldier. After many exchanges, the '''' (English:
Lord Mayor) of Erlangen, Dr.
Herbert Ohly, convinced Lorleberg that
Adolf Hitler's
order to fight on at all costs was pointless. On 16 April 1945, Ohly and Lorleberg offered to hand over the city of Erlangen to the 1st Battalion,
7th Infantry Regiment,
3rd Infantry Division,
7th Army without a fight. Lorleberg explained that there were approximately 120 soldiers in the Thalermühle mill complex who refused to surrender. The US colonel rejected the offer to surrender and gave Lorleberg until 2:00 PM to convince these soldiers to surrender peacefully, or he would fire on the city. Lorleberg, along with police lieutenant Andreas Fischer and their driver, Thomas Pfannenmüller, went by car under a white flag to the Thalermühle mill complex in the Regnitzwiesen. The driver remained with the vehicle while Lorleberg and Fischer went inside the Firma Mobius to order the soldiers to surrender. Lorleberg did not manage to convince the soldiers to surrender, and he was killed, whether by suicide or by a disgruntled soldier, as he walked out of the building. The police officer, who waited in front of the building, heard a single shot as Lorleberg was approaching the exit. A memorial was erected in 1955 near the place where he fell. In his honor, Kaiser Wilhelm Platz in Erlangen was renamed to Lorlebergplatz on November 1, 1945. The city of Erlangen was spared further destruction, and US forces soon occupied what then became known as Ferris Barracks; bounded on the west by Hartmannstraße, on the north by Artilleriestraße, on the east by present-day Kurt-Schumacherstraße and on the south by present-day Staudtstraße. == 2LT Geoffrey C. Ferris ==