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Order of Battle: 64th Prussian Infantry

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    Order of Battle: 64th Prussian Infantry

    Hello Imperialites:
    Can anyone help me with an Order of battle/history of the 64th Prussian and the 64th Wurttemburg Infantry in the Franco-Prussian War and WW I?
    Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.
    Thanks,
    Chris Werner
    "Activity! Activity! Speed! I greet you."
    -Napoleon to Massena, advancing on Landshut, April 18, 1809

    #2
    Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 64

    Chris,

    there was no 64th Württemberg Infantry Regiment. The Prussian regiment with that number was titled at the time of the Franco-German War as the 8. Brandenburgisches Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 64 (Prinz Friedrich Karl von Preußen). The regimental commander during the war was Oberst Wilhelm Freiherr Treusch von Buttlar-Brandenfels.

    It went to war with a strength of 58 officers, 8 Vize-Feldwebel Offizier-Anwärter, 1 Fähnrich, 6 medical officers, 3 Zahlmeister & 3000 NCOs and men.

    It saw action at:

    Vionville-Mars la Tour - 16 Aug 1870
    Gravelotte-St. Privat - 18 Aug 1870
    Siege of Metz - 19 Aug - 27 Oct 1870
    Nancray - 30 Nov 1870
    Orléans - 3 & 4 Dec 1870
    Azay-Mazange - 6 Jan 1871
    Epuisay - 7 Jan 1871
    Montaillé - 8 Jan 1871 (Füsilier-Bataillon)
    Ardenay - 9 Jan 1871
    Le Mans - 10 - 12 Jan 1871

    It lost during the war 15 officers killed including Oberstleutnant von Winterfeld at Vionville plus a further 1 Fähnrich, 21 NCOs , 2 Hornist, 1 Drummer, 1 Train Soldier and 189 men killed.

    Regards
    Glenn

    Comment


      #3
      Glenn,
      Where do you find all that info? Amazing
      Best, Sal

      Comment


        #4
        Sources

        Hi Sal,

        amongst others these two:

        Historische Rang- und Stammliste des deutschen Heeres by Bredow and Wedel (3 volumes) &
        Deutschlands Heere bis 1918 by G. Voigt (11 volumes).

        Regards
        Glenn

        Comment


          #5
          Are those old books or books still in print?
          Best, Sal

          Comment


            #6
            Biblio Verlag

            Sal,

            The Bredow/Wedel is available as a reprint from Biblio Verlag. The Deutschlands Heere series is also a biblio product. Not all the volumes however are still in print although I think most of the infantry volumes are. The latter series are not pretty. They were typed on a typewriter and not professionally typeset. They are however a mine of information. Check out Biblio's site at:

            http://www.militaria-biblio.de/

            or the Preußisches Bücherkabinett at:

            http://www.buecherkabinett.com/

            Best regards
            Glenn

            Comment


              #7
              Chris,

              I do not have near the detail Glenn has. The WW1 part of this:

              <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o></o>

              Infanterie-Regiment General-Feldmarshchall Prinz Friedrich Karl von Preußen (8. Brandenburgisches) Nr.64

              Seniority 5/5/1860

              Prenzlau, III Angermünde

              Part of III Corps

              6<SUP>th</SUP> Division

              12<SUP>th</SUP> Brigade

              Fought with the 6<SUP>th</SUP> Division through the war. Western front except a short Russian Stint in 1917. 6<SUP>th</SUP> Division was considered one of the best according to Histories of 251 Divisions.

              <o></o>

              Hope this helps!

              Comment


                #8
                Joe and Glenn:
                Thank you so much for all your help. I just got a pair of the large 1910 style Major's shoulderboards with "64" cyphers. The cording looks Prussian, but you can see very faded red along with the black chevrons. The underlay is white. The seller (Rick at Great War Militaria) said they were used as Prussian, but the boards looked Wurttemburg. He says they are not a put together job, but that the cypers are original to the boards and have been on there for a long time. We couldn't figure out if they were Prussian or Wurttenburg, so this helps.
                Thanks again,
                Chris
                "Activity! Activity! Speed! I greet you."
                -Napoleon to Massena, advancing on Landshut, April 18, 1809

                Comment


                  #9
                  Underlay

                  Hi Chris,

                  I would have expected a set of pre-war boards to have red underlay for I.R. 64.

                  Regards
                  Glenn

                  Comment


                    #10
                    What would white be in the M1910 style?
                    "Activity! Activity! Speed! I greet you."
                    -Napoleon to Massena, advancing on Landshut, April 18, 1809

                    Comment


                      #11
                      This is from the Laine Book pg 52.
                      Attached Files

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Shoulder strap piping on field grey also red. Chris can you post a picture?

                        Comment


                          #13
                          I can forward to your E-Mail what Rick E-Mailed me with attachment.. I don't have a scanner.
                          "Activity! Activity! Speed! I greet you."
                          -Napoleon to Massena, advancing on Landshut, April 18, 1809

                          Comment


                            #14
                            This is Chris' picture
                            Attached Files

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Joe, thanks for posting the pics for me. Anyone want to take a stab at these? The catalogue description basically says Wurttemburg Boards being used with Prussian cyphers, and being used by Prussian 64th Regiment. Could date back to Franco-Prussian War.
                              Comments/Opinions?
                              "Activity! Activity! Speed! I greet you."
                              -Napoleon to Massena, advancing on Landshut, April 18, 1809

                              Comment

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