
An American soldier guards German prisoners captured in the Ruhr Pocket.
The 'Ruhr Pocket' was a
battle of encirclement that took place near the end of
World War II in the
Ruhr Area of
Germany. It was, for all intents and purposes, the final dagger in
Nazi Germany's war effort, as more than 300,000 troops were taken prisoner.
In March
1945,
Allied Forces crossed the
Rhine river. South of the Ruhr, General
Omar Bradley's
U.S. 12th Army Group's pursuit of the disintegrating German army resulted in the capture of the
Ludendorff Bridge across the Rhine at
Remagen by the
U.S. First Army. Bradley and his subordinates quickly exploited the crossing made on
March 7,
1945, and expanded the bridge head until the bridge collapsed 10 days later.
North of the Ruhr on
March 23,
1945,
Field Marshal Montgomery's British 21st Army Group launched
Operation Plunder and crossed the Rhine at
Rees and
Wesel.
Having crossed the Rhine, both Army Groups fanned out. In the south, the First Army headed northeast and formed the southern pincer of the Ruhr
envelopment. In the north, the
U.S. Ninth Army, which since the
Battle of the Bulge had been assigned to Montgomery's 21st Army Group, headed southeast, forming the northern pincer.
Facing the Allied armies were the remnants of a shattered
Wehrmacht, a few
SS training units, and large numbers
Volkssturm (militia units for aging men, including some World War I veterans) and
Hitlerjugend (Hitler Youth) units, composed of boys as young as 12.
Lead elements of the two Allied pincers met on
April 1,
1945, near
Lippstadt. By
April 4, the
encirclement was completed and the Ninth Army reverted to the command of Bradley's 12th Army Group. Within the ''Ruhr Pocket'' about 430,000 German soldiers of
Army Group B, which was 21 divisions of the Wehrmacht, and millions of
civilians were trapped in cities heavily damaged by
numerous bombings.
While the main operations headed further toward central and northern Germany, US forces concentrated on the pocket, taking it section by section. On
April 12,
1945, the US First and Ninth armies divided the area coming from the south; the smaller, eastern part surrendered the next day. The western part continued to resist until
April 18 and
April 21,
1945. Rather than surrender and violate his personal oath to
Adolf Hitler that he would fight to the death, the commander, Field Marshal
Walther Model, committed suicide in a forest south of the city of
Duisburg.
The surviving 325,000 German soldiers from the Ruhr Pocket, and some civilians, were imprisoned in the
Rheinwiesenlager.
External links
★
"North to the Ruhr Pocket and On East to Peace",
10th Infantry Regiment official history.
★
Ruhr Pocket End of war in Rhineland and Westphalia in April 1945.