Stettin Lasalle marched to Stettin where he demanded its surrender in the early afternoon of 29 October.
Lieutenant General Friedrich Gisbert Wilhelm von Romberg refused at first. At 4:00 p.m., Lasalle sent another summons to Romberg, this time with a threat of harsh treatment to the city. The French general claimed the Lannes' entire corps of 30,000 men was present. In fact, the V Corps advance guard got no nearer than
Löcknitz that day. The elderly Prussian general entered negotiations and capitulated during the night of the 29/30 October. Romberg surrendered the Stettin fortress, 5,300 troops, and 281 guns. The Prussian garrison was made up of the remnants of Schimmelpfennig's and other forces, plus the 3rd battalions of the
Kuhnheim Infantry Regiment Nr. 1,
Arnim Infantry Regiment Nr. 13,
Brunswick Infantry Regiment Nr. 21,
Pirch Infantry Regiment Nr. 22,
Winning Infantry Regiment Nr. 23,
Möllendorf Infantry Regiment Nr. 25, and
Larisch Infantry Regiment Nr. 26. One hundred officers were released on their word of honor not to fight against France while the common soldiers became prisoners of war. Lasalle's entire force consisted of 800 horsemen of the 5th and 7th
Hussar Regiments plus two cannons. Neither of two subordinate officers protested the capitulation, but instead agreed to surrender. These were General-Major Kurt Gottfried von Knobelsdorff, the fortress commandant and General-Major Bonaventura von Rauch, commander of Fort Prussia. In March 1809, Romberg was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for giving up Stettin without a fight. He died on 21 May 1809, two months short of his 80th birthday, before his punishment began. Historian
Francis Loraine Petre concluded that Stettin's surrender was "shameful". Its adequate garrison and supplies would have allowed it to sustain a siege. Even if the fortress was indefensible, there was nothing preventing the troops from crossing to the east bank of the Oder, joining their Russian allies, and continuing the war. Lannes wrote to Napoleon, "The Prussian army is in such a state of panic that the mere appearance of a Frenchman is enough to make it lay down its arms." Napoleon congratulated Murat: My compliments on the capture of Stettin; if your light cavalry thus takes fortified towns, I must disband the engineers and melt down my heavy artillery.
Other surrenders On the 28th, Blücher's
artillery convoy marched through
Neustrelitz at noon and reached
Friedland five hours later. Earlier, it had been delayed by "perverse orders" from Hohenlohe's chief of staff Oberst
Christian Karl August Ludwig von Massenbach. Hearing of Hohenlohe's capitulation, Major von Höpfner altered his march to the northeast toward
Anklam the next day. At
Boldekow, south of Anklam, he encountered elements of Lannes' corps and surrendered on 30 October. Altogether, the French captured the Reserve Artillery Park and Park Column Nr. 5 with 600 soldiers, 800 horses, 25 field pieces, and 48 ammunition wagons. General-Major Karl Anton von Bila's cavalry brigade, which was acting as Hohenlohe's rear guard, became separated from the main body. Detecting Milhaud's brigade to his right, Bila veered north toward
Strasburg. Turning east, he crossed the
Uecker north of Pasewalk and reached
Falkenwalde (now Tanowo) northwest of Stettin late on the 29th. There he found out about Hohenlohe's surrender and, more importantly, that Romberg was negotiating the capitulation of Stettin. One authority states that Romberg refused to allow Bila passage through Stettin. Reversing his course, Bila headed northwest and reached Anklam on the morning of 31 October. At this town, he met his brother, who left
Hanover on 20 October with one battalion, the treasure, and the archives. The treasure was convoyed to
Wolgast where it was ferried to safety. However, the amount of shipping was inadequate to save the troops and baggage that arrived at the port. On the evening of the 31st, General of Division
Nicolas Léonard Beker's dragoons located the Bila brothers near Anklam and attacked, driving them to the north bank of the
Peene River. Beker talked the Bilas into surrendering on 1 November with 1,100 infantry, 1,073 cavalry, and six colors. The units involved were the 1st battalion of the
Grävenitz Infantry Regiment Nr. 57,
Sack Grenadier battalion,
Quitzow Cuirassier Regiment Nr. 6, one squadron of
Bailliodz Cuirassier Regiment Nr. 5, and the remnant of the
Gensdarmes Cuirassiers. Historian
Digby Smith wrote that Beker's brigade was from General of Division
Louis Michel Antoine Sahuc's 4th Dragoon Division. Like Smith, Petre noted that Beker was the French commander, but states that on 1 November Sahuc's division was with Soult at
Rathenow, far to the southwest. According to Petre, Beker temporarily took command of the 2nd Dragoon Division when Grouchy became ill earlier in the campaign. Petre's narrative strongly suggests that the 2nd Dragoon Division was involved, not the 4th.
Küstrin fortress fell on 1 November to General of Brigade
Nicolas Hyacinthe Gautier's brigade of Davout's III Corps. The brigade, which belonged to General of Division
Charles-Étienne Gudin de La Sablonnière's 3rd Division, included four battalions of the 25th and 8th Line Infantry Regiments. Oberst von Ingersleben commanded a garrison of 2,400 troops, including 75 troopers of
Usedom Hussar Regiment Nr. 10 and the 3rd battalions of the
Oranien Infantry Regiment Nr. 19,
Zenge Infantry Regiment Nr. 24, and
Prince Heinrich Infantry Regiment Nr. 35. Though he had 92 guns and ample stocks of food and ammunition, he quickly capitulated. Ingersleben was later sentenced to be executed for cowardice, but King
Frederick William III commuted the sentence to life imprisonment. On 2 and 3 November, the 22nd Dragoon Regiment from General of Brigade
André Joseph Boussart's brigade arrived before
Wolgast and secured the capitulation of
Oberstleutnant von Prittwitz. A total of 2,500 men, mostly teamsters and non-combatants, and 500 wagons of Park Column Nr. 8 fell into the hands of this unit of Grouchy's 2nd Dragoon Division. ==Result==