"Rhine Gold", the 384th Infantry Division
By Phil Gardocki
Battlelines®: Drive on Stalingrad
Organizational History 1942
In anticipation of the expected 1942 summer offensive and the need for more up-to-strength infantry divisions, the German high command ordered a call-up of the 17th and 18th wave of infantry divisions. The German method of replacements involved rebuilding the team, not just adding to the numbers, so replacing troops in the field was not done. Instead, units would be rotated out and rebuilt, but given time to become acquainted with their replacements before being sent back into combat. The stresses of the battlefield were preventing any pullouts, so the Germans created new units to go into combat instead.
German infantry divisions were called up in groups, referred to as “waves”. Each division within a wave was organized identically, but there were organizational differences between the waves themselves. Nazi Germany called up 32 such waves. The first 2 waves, consisting of 54 divisions, were essentially the first line divisions. Many other waves would follow the 1st wave model of 3 regiments, 3 battalions, with 4 artillery battalions, but others were organized with older personnel, captured or downsized equipment, and, eventually, smaller formations.
The stresses of total war were starting to show in Nazi Germany by late 1942. Equipment and manpower shortages abounded on all levels. Regimental and battalion infantry support guns were nonexistent and largely replaced by mortars in the new infantry divisions. Some of the artillery battalions were reduced to two batteries, instead of the normal three. The reconnaissance and the antitank battalion were combined into a motorized “Schnell” battalion. Some missing firepower was substituted by using Nebelwerfers, towed, 6 cylinder, 15cm, rocket launchers. The old 3.7cm, found to be too small against the larger Soviet tanks, was no longer the dominant antitank gun, although shortages of larger antitank guns meant that it was not totally out of the mix.
16,000 men
12 x 15cm FH18 towed howitzers
24 x 10.5cm leFH18 towed howitzers
2 x 7.5cm PaK 40 towed antitank guns
21 x 5cm PaK 39 towed antitank guns
17 x 3.7(t)cm PaK towed antitank guns
21 x towed Nebelwerfers
88 x 8.1 cm Mortars
138 x 5cm Mortars
515 Machineguns
742 Trucks
1,233 Wagons
1943
Badly battered in the 1942 fighting the division was rebuilt in 1943. The 384th now adopted a 6 infantry battalion model. When it was again sent to the East Front, it left behind a two battalion force referred to as a “Channel Kampfgruppe”, which later was absorbed by a reformed 349th Infantry Division. Artillery batteries were reduced to three guns. Regiments picked up 12cm mortars, while the battalions received 7.5cm light infantry guns. The Fusilier battalion was manned with veterans mounted on bicycles or horses and used as a divisional fast reaction team.
9,877 men
6 x 15cm FH18 towed howitzers
12 x 10.5cm leFH18 towed howitzers
12 x 7.5cm leIG37 towed howitzers
8 x 7.5cm PaK 40 towed antitank guns
16 x 5cm PaK 39 towed antitank guns
12 x 12cm towed mortars
70 x 8.1 cm Mortars
324 Machineguns
600 Trucks
1,244 Wagons
1944
In October, 1943, OKH (Over Command of the Armies), issued a formal reorganization of the infantry divisions, the Type 44. To boost morale, all infantry were renamed “grenadiers”. Previously, this title applied only to the more elite light divisions, and tank escorts. Organizationally, this reorganization merely formalized the realities on the ground by adopting the 3 regiment, 2 battalion model. The smaller caliber antitank guns that were part of the panzerjager (antitank) battalions, were redistributed to the grenadier regiments, not so much as antitank protection, but to replace the 15cm and the 7.5cm light infantry guns that were in short supply.
For additional tank protection,
Artillery was reduced to only three guns per battery. After being rebuilt in
France and returned east, the 384th was weakened when one artillery
battalion was left behind in
9,266 men
14 x STG IV (7.5cm L/48)
6 x 15cm FH18 towed howitzers
12 x 10.5cm leFH18 towed howitzers
16 x 7.5cm leIG37 towed howitzers
12 x 7.5cm PaK 40 towed antitank guns
36 x 5cm PaK 39 towed antitank guns
12 x 12cm towed mortars
70 x 8.1 cm Mortars
108 Panzerfausts
311 Machineguns
550 Trucks
1,466 Wagons
Operational History
The 384th was formed
during the winter of 1941/42, as part of the 18th wave. All infantry
divisions of this wave, numbers 383 to 389, were referred to as “Rhine Gold”
divisions. The 384th was sent to the 3rd Panzer Corps, 1st
Panzer Army, just in time to be attacked by Soviet offensive in the Battle of
Kharkov, early in the summer of 1942. Afterwards, the division took part in the
offensive operations that led to

