Prussian telegraph battalions Telegraph Battalion No. 1 Telegraph Battalion No. 1 was subordinated to the
Guards Corps. Its
peacetime location was
Berlin (
Treptower Park). A
Royal Saxon detachment formed the 3rd (Royal Saxon) company and elements of the 4th company; and a
Württemberg detachment formed elements of the 2nd and 4th companies. Its day of formation was 25 March 1899. The battalion was subordinated to the Cavalry Telegraph School.
Telegraph Battalion No. 2 Telegraph Battalion No. 2 was subordinated to the
III Corps and 1st Inspectorate of the Telegraph Corps. Peacetime locations were
Frankfurt an der Oder and
Cottbus. Day of formation was 25 March 1899.
Telegraph Battalion No. 3 Telegraph Battalion No. 3 was subordinated to the
VIII Corps and the 2nd Telegraph Corps Inspectorate. Its year of formation was 1899 and its peacetime locations were in
Coblenz the former
Boelcke Barracks and, from 1914,
Darmstadt as well.
Telegraph Battalion No. 4 The battalion was established on 1 October 1907 and was subordinated to the
XIV Corps and 2nd Inspectorate of the Telegraph Corps. Peacetime locations were
Karlsruhe and
Freiburg.
Telegraph Battalion No. 5 The battalion was established on 1 October 1912 and was subordinated to the
VII Corps and the 1st Inspectorate of the Telegraph Corps. Peacetime location was
Danzig.
Telegraph Battalion No. 6 Telegraph Battalion No. 6 was established in 1913 and was garrisoned at
Hanover.
Saxon telegraph battalions Telegraph Battalion No. 7 Telegraph Battalion No. 7 was subordinated to the 1st Telegraph Corps Inspectorate. Its peacetime location was
Zeithain. ===
Bavarian telegraph battalions ===
1st Telegraph Battalion The 1st Telegraph Battalion was established in 1901 and garrisoned in Munich.
2nd Telegraph Battalion The 2nd Telegraph Battalion was established in 1912 and garrisoned in Munich.
Deployment in the First World War At the beginning of the
First World War additional signal elements were established from the 9 telegraph battalions and 8 fortress signal companies that belonged to the transport troops. Due to the tactical changeover to trench warfare, from 1915 all telegraph units were renamed as army signal units (‚‘Armee-Fernsprechabteilungen‘‘) and were divided into elements that operated the existing communications network and elements responsible for the maintenance of communications and construction of new communication links. In trench warfare, cable communications were often cut by the continual barrage of enemy fire. As a result,
carrier pigeons and
signal dogs were often used. In addition, special
optical signal sections were established. == References ==