kleiner Panzerbefehlswagen (Sd.Kfz. 265), 1. Panzer-Division, XIX. Armeekorps, Heeresgruppe A, France and the Low Countries, May 1940

Price: $262.00
Pre-order Only

GA-16

John Jenkins Designs

Not yet released - expected in mid-May.

The JJD kleiner Panzerbefehlswagen represents a command tank from the 1. Pz. Div. Formed in 1935 as one of the original three Panzer divisions, it was commanded in the summer of 1940 by Generalleutnant Friedrich Kirchner and assigned to Guderian’s XIX. Armeekorps, the 1. Pz.Div. was a critical part of Army Group A's armored thrust through the Ardennes. Rapidly moving through dense terrain, the 1. Pz.Div. covered over 200km and reached the Meuse river defenses by 12 May. On 13 May, the division executed the central crossing of the Meuse at Glaire, north of Sedan. Despite fierce resistance from French 71st Division troops entrenched on the western bank, the division secured a bridgehead by evening, with engineers rapidly constructing pontoon bridges to ferry armored units across amid ongoing counter-fire. Kirchner himself personally directed operations from forward positions, emphasizing aggressive exploitation of the breakthrough. On 14 May, the division expanded the bridgehead and fought off counterattacks from the French X Corps. Subsequently the 1. Pz. Div. pivoted westward, advancing through the Ardennes gap alongside the 2. Pz.Div. and 10. Pz.Div., shattering the French 9th Army's cohesion and advancing over 200 kilometers in five days to reach the English Channel near Abbeville by 20 May, completing the encirclement of Allied forces in Belgium. 1. Pz.Div. then thrust toward Dunkirk. Although elements of the division reached the Aa Canal just 15 miles from the port by late May, operations were halted per Führer Directive 12 on 24 May, allowing the Allied evacuation that saved the majority of British Expeditionary Forces and allowed the British to continue the war.

JJ Designs is proud to present the kleiner Panzerbefehlswagen in markings representative of the 1. Panzer-Division during the 1940 campaign in France and the Low Countries. This model captures the appearance of German armoured command vehicles at the height of Blitzkrieg’s early success. Whether displayed as a standalone piece or alongside other early-war German armour, it is ideal for collectors seeking to recreate scenes from one of the most successful campaigns of the Second World War.

As standard for all JJ Designs tank models, the kleiner Panzerbefehlswagen comes with the following features:
• Opening commander’s hatch
• Antenna can be raised or lowered
• Historically accurate paint job and markings