Gustav Kleikamp
Gustav Kleikamp (born 8 March 1896 in Fiddichow an der Oder; died 13 September 1952 in Mülheim an der Ruhr) was a German naval officer, and a Vizeadmiral in Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine.
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On 1 April 1913, Kleikamp entered the Imperial German Navy as a Seekadett on SMS Vineta. After basic training, he transferred to Marineschule Mürwik on 3 April 1914. After the outbreak of World War I, he was posted as a communications officer to SMS Derfflinger, where he received promotion to Leutnant zur See in 1915.
From March 1918 he attended and later served as watch officer on SM U-9 until October 1918, when he became clerical officer of the until the end of the year.
Reichsmarine[]
Kleikamp remained with the navy after the collapse of the monarchy in November 1918, serving in the Marine-Brigade Ehrhardt. He received a provisional promotion to Oberleutnant zur See on 7 January 1920, which was confirmed on 14 May 1921.
On 1 October 1920, Kleikamp was posted on Hamburg as communications and watch officer. On 4 December 1921 he was transferred to the pre-dreadnought battleship Braunschweig in the same capacity, where he served until he was given command of the on 1 October 1922.
After a year as commanding officer, Kleikamp joined the faculty at the on 1 October 1923. Having received promotion to Kapitänleutnant in 1925, he joined the battleship Hannover on 24 September 1926 as . When Hannover was put out of service, he transferred to Schlesien, the new flagship of Marinestation Nordsee, in the same role.
From 28 September 1928 Kleikamp was the officer responsible for training and education on the cruiser Emden, before being appointed director of the on 11 February 1930. He served in this position until October 1932, when he was appointed naval liaison officer to the in Königsberg, having been promoted to Korvettenkapitän. Following the Nazi Party takeover in January 1933, Kleikamp became 4. Admiralstabsoffizier in the Fleet Command.
Kriegsmarine[]
On 26 September 1935 Kleikamp was made first officer on Schleswig-Holstein, the ship which he would eventually command after a stint as director of the in the Navy High Command.
On 26 April 1939, having been promoted to Kapitän zur See a year earlier, was given command of Schleswig-Holstein, which had returned from a tour to South America a few weeks earlier. Schleswig-Holstein was slated to be retired and converted into a remotely controlled target ship, but preparations for the Invasion of Poland, saw the ship assigned a war mission.
Late in August 1939, Schleswig-Holstein was sent to Danzig on a friendship visit, in place of the cruiser Königsberg. The visit was a ruse to bring a landing force to Danzig in order to neutralize Polish fortifications in the harbour. For this purpose Schleswig-Holstein had received 60 men with five 2 cm AA guns and six machine guns. While en route, Schleswig-Holstein rendezvoused with the German minesweeper M-1 and other vessels, carrying the 225-men strong Marinestosstruppkompanie from Memel.
World War II[]
On 1 September 1939 at 04:45, Kleikamp gave the order for the attack on the Westerplatte and two minutes later the first shells left the barrels of Schleswig-Holstein's 28 cm guns.
In April 1940 Schleswig-Holstein was flagship of Kriegsschiffgruppe 7, which was tasked with the occupation of the Danish ports Nyborg and Korsør.
After the Fall of France Kleikamp was appointed double-hatting as for Operation Sea Lion on 29 August 1940. After the invasion of Britain was cancelled, Kleikamp transferred to Naval High Command as in , a position he held until 21 February 1943.
From March 1943 until the end of 1944, Kleikamp, having been promoted to Konteradmiral and ultimately Vizeadmiral, served as Kommandierender Admiral in den Niederlanden. From 1 January until 14 March 1945, he was at the disposal of the Oberbefehlshaber des Marineoberkommandos Nord. On 15 March 1945 he took over as Kommandierender Admiral Deutsche Bucht.
Post-War[]
Kleikamp became a Prisoner of War on 7 May 1945 and remained in British custody until 18 April 1947. In poor health, he was unemployed until Spring 1952, when he joined Hugo Stinnes in Mülheim an der Ruhr. There he died on 13 September 1952.
Dates of rank[]
- Seekadett – 1 April 1913
- Fähnrich zur See – 3 April 1914
- Leutnant zur See – 18 September 1915
- Oberleutnant zur See – 14 May 1921 (dated 7 January 1920)
- Kapitänleutnant – 1 February 1925
- Korvettenkapitän – 1 October 1932
- Fregattenkapitän – 1 October 1936
- Kapitän zur See – 1 April 1938
- Konteradmiral – 1 April 1942
- Vizeadmiral – 1 October 1943
Military orders and decoration[]
- Clasp to the Iron Cross, 1st class
- Hanseatenkreuz (Hamburg)
- German Cross in Gold
Bibliography[]
- Hildebrand, Hans (1989). Deutschlands Admirale : 1849-1945 : die militärischen Werdegänge der See-, Ingenieur-, Sanitäts-, Waffen- und Verwaltungsoffiziere im Admiralsrang. Vol. 2. Osnabrück: Biblio. pp. 246–247. ISBN 3764814993.
External links[]
- 1896 births
- 1952 deaths
- Vice admirals of the Kriegsmarine
- Imperial German Navy personnel of World War I
- Reichsmarine personnel
- 20th-century Freikorps personnel
- German prisoners of war in World War II held by the United Kingdom
- People from Gryfino County