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United States Holocaust Memorial Museum - Collections
  Insignia of the 11th Armored Division. "Thunderbolt" is a nickname adopted by the 11th Armored Division during its rapid march in December 1944 to reinforce U.S. troops defending against the German military offensive in the Ardennes Forest.
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THE 11TH ARMORED DIVISION
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Formed in 1942, the 11th Armored Division landed on the Normandy beaches in France in mid-December 1944. Shortly after its arrival in Europe, the "Thunderbolt" division was deployed to Belgium to attack advancing German forces during the Battle of the Bulge. In March 1945, the 11th moved into the Rhineland and advanced eastward into the heart of Germany. The following month, the unit moved southward from Thuringia into Bavaria, capturing Coburg on April 11 and Bayreuth on April 14. On May 5, the 11th took the Austrian city of Linz, and a few days later met up with advancing Soviet forces.

During the invasion of German-held Austria, the "Thunderbolt" division overran two of the largest Nazi concentration camps in the country: Mauthausen and Gusen. On May 5, 1945, the 11th arrived in Gusen, which had originally been a subcamp of Mauthausen. The division's arrival prevented the SS guards from murdering thousands of concentration camp prisoners by dynamiting the underground tunnels and factories where the inmates had been forced to work.

 

 

Defeat of Nazi Germany, 1942-1945
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The next day, the 11th Armored Division entered the Mauthausen concentration camp. In the unit's "sanitary report" of May 25, 1945, the division's Medical Inspector stated that "the situation in the camp on the arrival of the U.S. Forces was one of indescribable filth and human degradation." The report stated that 19,000 prisoners were crammed into bunks meant to accommodate around 5,000 persons and that the two- and three-level bunks held 10 to 20 prisoners each. The prisoners had been fed a mixture of sugar beets and potato peelings that "looked like worms in mud." Thousands of prisoners were naked or clothed in rags. Some 8,000 survivors in the camp, the report continued, were in need of immediate medical care and more than half of the camp's inmates "were little more than skeletons." Soon after arrival, the 11th Armored Division began implementing measures to treat the ill prisoners and improve conditions within the camp.

The 11th Armored Division was recognized as a liberating unit by the U.S. Army's Center of Military History and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1985.

 

   
Describes encountering camp survivors
Personal stories
 
 

 

Casualty figures for the 11th Armored Division, European theater of operations
Total battle casualties: 2,877
Total deaths in battle: 524

 

 

Division nickname
"Thunderbolt" is a nickname adopted by the 11th Armored Division during its rapid march in December 1944 to reinforce U.S. troops defending against the German military offensive in the Ardennes Forest.

 

 

National Archives - Film

Liberation of Mauthausen

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Related Links
Print essay and unit history (PDF)
The 11th Armored Division Association
Focus on Liberation
Days of Remembrance 2005: From Liberation to the Pursuit of Justice
Related Articles
U.S. Army units
Liberation of Nazi Camps




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Encyclopedia Last Updated: October 7, 2008

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