Thought I would share some scans of my recently acquired Wehrpass which was found by a friend on a German militaria fair. Jakob Nork served throughout the war with various pioneer batallions and rose to the rank of Oberfeldwebel.
Nork was a Poland veteran but from 1940 on his actions were limited to occupation duties in Belgium and France, mostly with 348. Infanterie-Division. He did get the KVK2 and interestingly, in March 1944 he was awarded the EK2. Does anyone have suggestions about this, as he was to my knowledge not involved in any active fighting?
After the landing in Normandy he joined the pioneer batallion of 272. Infanterie-Division. This division was entirely destroyed in the Falaise pocket, but Nork was lucky (?) to get out with a shrapnell wound on the 15th of August! After his recovery in November 1944 he joined his reformed Pionier-Bataillon 272, now under the 272. VGD.
During the bitter fighting in the Hürtgenwald, Jakob Nork was killed in action on the 5th of December 1944 near Vossenack. He is not listed on the Volksbund site but is burried as an unknown at the Vossenack cemetery.
Nork was a Poland veteran but from 1940 on his actions were limited to occupation duties in Belgium and France, mostly with 348. Infanterie-Division. He did get the KVK2 and interestingly, in March 1944 he was awarded the EK2. Does anyone have suggestions about this, as he was to my knowledge not involved in any active fighting?
After the landing in Normandy he joined the pioneer batallion of 272. Infanterie-Division. This division was entirely destroyed in the Falaise pocket, but Nork was lucky (?) to get out with a shrapnell wound on the 15th of August! After his recovery in November 1944 he joined his reformed Pionier-Bataillon 272, now under the 272. VGD.
During the bitter fighting in the Hürtgenwald, Jakob Nork was killed in action on the 5th of December 1944 near Vossenack. He is not listed on the Volksbund site but is burried as an unknown at the Vossenack cemetery.
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