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    Obgfr. Hengvoß

    Sad grouping to Obergefreiter Hans Hengvoß. Born 8.12.1920 in Gudow and sadly he never saw the end of the war and got Killed in Action on the 10th of March, 1945. Place not known. Hopefully we can found this out. His final resting place:

    Hans Hengross ruht auf der Kriegsgräberstätte in Mönchengladbach-Hardt-Kriegsgräberstätte.

    Endgrablage: Block A Parzelle 12 Reihe 279
    Hopefully I will ever be able to visit this War cemetery and visit him. Does anyone live in the surrounding of this war cemetery? Must anyone be possible to make a photograph of his grave today. Much appreciated!

    One of the saddest facts is that he exchanged the temporary for the eternity but his name got misspelled on his grave: Hans Hengross instead of Hengvoss. So young to give his life, 24 years old - beautiful smile. Included with his Soldbuch, photographs and other paperdocuments also the half of his Erkennungsmarke came with it. All of this material was send to his family (Joachim Hengvoss, also seen in Hans's Soldbuch) until it came in a dealers hand and I purchased it - something soft in me told that I should acquire it.

    His Soldbuch and most of his photographs and some paperdocuments are soaked in his blood. Could be from his last wounding in 1944 or from when he gave his life on 10.3.1945 (Volksbund) while fighting in the Ruhrkessel (according to LdW, his regiment was near the Wesel in 3.1945 and his regiment was destroyed a month later).

    Hans Hengvoß bearer of the:
    - Verwundetenabzeichen in Schwarz (11.10.1941)
    - Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42 (5.8.1942)
    - Demjansk schild (31.12.1943)
    Attached Files
    Last edited by Eric-Jan Bakker; 05-04-2011, 05:40 AM. Reason: date error

    #2
    - His Kennkarte (just look at the photograph - touching)
    - Hans his DRK-Personalausweis
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      #3
      Soldbuch, seite 1 and seite 2 - 3. Erkennungsmarke matches. Blood soaked.
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        #4
        Soldbuch, seite 4 - 5 and 6 - 7. Units, promotion and clothing - equipment. His father, Joachim Hengvoss, to whom all of Hans his remaining belongings were send.
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          #5
          Soldbuch, seite 8 - 8a and 8b - 8c. He was ordened a K98. Also he was given (basic) Verbandspäkchen and Hautentgiftungsmittel)
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            #6
            Soldbuch, seite 12 -13 and 18 - 19. Hans his last wounded (31b - Shrapnell), which needed some time to heal.
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              #7
              Soldbuch, seite 22 - 23. The medals and decorations Obgfr. Hans Hengvoß earned throughout years of war. A small ID portrait of him and a grave picture from after the war.
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                #8
                Obergefreiter Hans Hengvoß (1920-1945). 24 years young. On the left.
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                  #9
                  Great grouping, very poignant.

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by Chris Pittman View Post
                    Great grouping, very poignant.
                    Thanks for the yet only answer for this interesting thought sad grouping (which was the idea to share this ... In how many threads should I reply to get one back out respect ?).
                    Last edited by HouweTrouwe; 05-04-2011, 11:59 AM.

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                      #11
                      A very nice grouping, though with a sad ending. Another young life lost in the useless final months of the war. Quite interesting that one half of the Erkennungsmarke is included.

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                        #12
                        Interesting group, Bart!

                        Originally posted by HouweTrouwe View Post
                        Thanks for the yet only answer for this interesting thought sad grouping (which was the idea to share this ... In how many threads should I reply to get one back out respect ?).
                        Well, is that the final point where it is all about? replies from other collectors?
                        I read a lot of threads but I don't answer on every thread.
                        The same goes for my threads: I can see a lot of people read them but not everybody gives a reply. The reason I post items from my collection is not to get replies, but to share some interesting history!

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                          #13
                          Originally posted by dennisb View Post
                          Interesting group, Bart!



                          Well, is that the final point where it is all about? replies from other collectors?
                          I read a lot of threads but I don't answer on every thread.
                          The same goes for my threads: I can see a lot of people read them but not everybody gives a reply. The reason I post items from my collection is not to get replies, but to share some interesting history!
                          You completely focus on the wrong side of the sentence. I like that people appreciate what you do, in this case to share it. I don't like to talk to a wall, isn't that just a little case of respect - to appreciate something? I think it is more fun that someone replies to your threads (with a positive or negative comment, remark or tips ..) to actually learn from it and keep the moral up to keep posting, no? It's true that you do not need that someone replies to your thread, but isn't it more fun to help eachother, appreciating eachother, learn from eachother .. ?

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                            #14
                            All came back in this enveloppe (sorry, kept the EKM upside down). Thanks Paulus_gun for your reply! Indeed, it's rare to have the half EKM here. Chris, poignant was the right word for this, couldn't come on that word.
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                              #15
                              Nice grouping! Such a sad story.

                              In my opinion the blood stains are from his life ending wound. I feel like they would have issued him a new book with that much staining on it. Also it appears that the promotions on pages 1 and 3 were already written before the blood stained it. And those promotions were after his 1944 wounding.

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