Very interesting. My grandfather on my father's side was enlisted into the Luftwaffe as a service technican. I saw photos of him working on Ju 88s, He 111s, and near a Fi 156 recon plane. You can pick him out in the group of his comrades right away as he was always the tallest one. The photos must have been circa 1941 summer or 1942 summer as there was a Soviet SB2 medium bomber with it's engine nacelles destroyed to deny it's use to the enemy.
As far as I know, he was stationed near Leningrad for the war. His military pass did not survive as he was forced to destroy the papers in 1944 with the Soviet advance. He was captured but managed to convince his captives he was a Dutch worker forced to work for the Third Reich, having lived in Holland for some time before the war. He was sent back to Holland to face war crimes in 1945 on a series of trains and trucks but when his truck passed near to Koln, he went for a piss break and never came back. He rejoined the family in Koln. They moved to Canada in 1965 and I am one of the first generations on that side of the family in Canada.
Again, I know little to nothing about my paternal side of the family. Not much was ever written down or spoke of. Same goes for my wife's family. I got the official records out of Berlin for her Opa and that is the only reason we know so much. He only mentioned briefly that he was Kriegsmarine and that he was wounded. The only clue was his Kriegs "hero" photo taken in his navy white's post basic training. But once we got the records it opened up a lot of info:
Apr 41: Attended basic training in occupied Holland
Summer 41: Joined the 44 Minensuchflotille
Spring 42: Transferred to the 14. UJagdflotille operating off the coast of France
Fall 44: Transferred to Marine-Infantrie Abt. Haackert at Festung Saint Nazaire. Basically, after D Day, all the crews of ships that had been operating on the coast anchored at the nearest u Boat base, did a quick infantry training course and set up defensive positions to protect the bases. Hitler even issued a "to the last man" order. So there he swapped rounds with the Americans until Capitulation on 8 May 45 but since they had mined the area so heavily it took 3 days to demine an exit to formally surrender. The troops at St. Nazaire were among the very last Wehrmacht soldiers to surrender during WW2.
May 45-46: POW in French camp. He was allergic to sea food and the French would feed him it regardless and it was either eat it and be sick or starve. He said that they got tired of dealing with him vomiting so they threw him out of the camp one morning. He somehow hitch hiked back to Munchen from the coast of France but that story is lost since he died in 2005.


















































