Members of the medical detachment of Combat Command A, 12th Armored Division, XXI Corps, US 7th Army, view the burned corpses of ...

The 12th Armored Division during World War II

In 1985, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the US Army Center of Military History began a program to honor US Army divisions that took part in the Allied liberation of Nazi camps. The US Army Center of Military History defines a liberating division as one whose official records show its presence at a camp within 48 hours of the first soldier’s arrival. The 12th Armored Division is among the 36 US divisions that have been recognized to date.

Key Facts

  • 1

    US, British, Soviet, and Canadian troops encountered concentration camps and other sites of Nazi crimes as they advanced across Europe in 1944 and 1945.

  • 2

    The Allied soldiers liberated sick and starving camp prisoners from Nazi tyranny. They also provided them with food, clothing, and medical aid.

  • 3

    The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the US Army Center of Military History have recognized 36 US divisions for their role in the liberation of Nazi camps.

12th Armored Division Campaigns during World War II

Some five months after the D-Day invasion of western Europe by Allied forces, the 12th Armored Division entered France through the port of Le Havre and quickly made its way eastward toward Alsace by early December. In March 1945, the "Hellcats" advanced into the Rhineland and captured the city of Ludwigshafen on March 21. Deploying southward, the unit took the city of Würzburg early the next month. By the end of April, the 12th had advanced well into Bavaria and had reached the Danube River. The division ended the war in Austria.

The 12th Armored Division and the Liberation of a Dachau Subcamp

During its penetration of southern Germany, the 12th overran one of the many subcamps of Dachau in the Landsberg area on April 27, 1945.

Members of the 12th Armored Division, which included African American platoons, await their orders.

Members of the 12th Armored Division, which included African American platoons, await their orders. Germany, April 1945.

Credits:
  • National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, MD

Recognition as a Liberating Division

The 12th Armored Division was recognized as a liberating unit by the US Army's Center of Military History and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1988.

12th Armored Division Battle Casualty Figures

The following are tentative battle casualty figures for the 12th Armored Division in the European Theater of Operations:

  • Killed: 517
  • Wounded: 2,257
  • Missing: 659
  • Captured: 3
  • Total battle casualties: 3,436

12th Armored Division Nickname and Insignia

The nickname of the 12th Armored Division, “Hellcats,” was officially adopted on February 1, 1943. It was the result of a contest open to all personnel in the division during training at Camp Campbell in Kentucky. The nickname was selected to symbolize the 12th’s toughness, speed, and readiness for combat. 

The patch or insignia of the 12th Armored Division is shaped like a pyramid and represents power. In the center of the patch are three intertwined symbols in black: a tank tread, a cannon, and a lightning bolt. The tank tread symbolizes mobility. The cannon represents firepower. And the lightning bolt stands for shock action (a quick, offensive, military attack that surprises the enemy). The three symbols are placed against a tricolored background comprised of yellow, red, and blue. These colors represent key components of an armored division: cavalry (yellow), field artillery (red), and infantry (blue). The division number appears in black near the top of the pyramid (against the yellow part of the patch).

Insignia of the 12th Armored Division. "Hellcats, " the winning entry in a division contest for a nickname held in early in 1943, ...

Insignia of the 12th Armored Division. "Hellcats, " the winning entry in a division contest for a nickname held in early in 1943, symbolized the 12th's toughness and readiness for combat.

Credits:
  • US Holocaust Memorial Museum - Collections

Footnotes

  1. Footnote reference1.

    Casualty figures as of February 2024 according to the US Army Center of Military History

Critical Thinking Questions

  • What challenges did Allied forces face when they encountered the camps and sites of other atrocities?

  • What challenges faced survivors of the Holocaust upon liberation?

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