The
black tank uniform, originally worn by Panzer and Panzerjäger
crews, was a coveted item, and as such its use was expanded to other
personnel during the war and in the end it also appeared in other
colors.
1.
The tunic and fatigues
We can
basically distinguish 4 types
- The
black tunic, always without breast pocket.
- The
Fieldgray (FG) version of the black tunic, for other AFV troops.
- A
reed green tunic without breast pocket.
- A
reed green tunic with breast pocket.
1.1. Black Panzer Tunic
Originally,
the black tunic was meant for tank troops and Panzerjäger only,
but was extended to other units as well:
- 1937: signals
- 1938: artillery
- March 1940: armored reconnaissance
- May 1940 until 1941: armored engineers / pioniers. In 1941 the
engineers switched to the FG version of the Panzer uniform -
vide infra.
- February 1942: Panzerjäger switched to FG.
- 1944: Panzerjäger in Panzer, Panzergrenadier units and Army
or Corps level Elefant units switched back to black again.
The
collar patches on this uniform contained aluminum skulls; patches
and collar were piped in pink, although 24PD used yellow.
Underneath the tunic a mouse gray or dark gray shirt with black
tie was worn. Often insignia and collar straps were added to this
shirt.
The late 1942 model tunic (introduced July 1942) had a somewhat
narrower collar and no longer had piping on the collar. The collar
patches were still piped.
The
shoulder straps/boards were based on black cloth instead of DBG/FG.
1.2. FG Panzer Tunic
1.2.1.
StuG crews
In May/June 1940 a FG version (including
FG beret, although rare) of the Panzer tunic appeared for the
StuG Bn without collar piping. FG collar patches with aluminum
skull and piped in red were worn. After a while the removal of
the skull was ordered. Sources disagree about the date, but it
most likely this was 1941. In January 1943 the StuG and SPG were
ordered to wear guard braids (Litzen) on the collar instead of
the Panzer skull patches (which at that time no longer had skulls).
Some StuG crews nevertheless wore the black uniform, with or without
skulls or with Litzen. StuGs used in Panzer Divisions would have
a crew that would be dressed like regular Panzer troops.
1.2.2.
Pioniere
In 1941 Pionier troops were allowed to wear the
FG panzer uniform. At that time their Waffenfarbe changed from
black/white to black.
1.2.3. Panzerjäger
Panzerjäger troops wore the black panzer uniform, until February
1942, when they were to change for the FG version, with
pink waffenfarbe and black skull patches. To distinguish them
from Panzer units they wore a P on the shoulderstraps. In May
1944 a complete revision for Panzerjäger was ordered:
-
Black uniform with pink Waffenfarbe for Panzerjäger troops
within Pz or PzGren Divisions and Army or Corps level Elefant
crews.
-
Field Gray with pink Waffenfarbe and black collar patches with
skulls for non-Elefant equipped Army or Corps level units and
Infantry, Jäger and Mountain Divisions.
-
Field Gray with pink Waffenfarbe on shoulders but Litzen with
varying (!) waffenfarbe on the collar for Infantry (White),
Jäger (Grass Green) and Mountain Regiments (Grass Green).
1.2.4.
SP Artillery
Self-propelled artillery crews gradually acquired the FG Panzer
uniform starting in late 1942, and wore them
with Litzen.
1.2.5.
Recce
Reconnaissance troops also appeared with FG uniforms
from 1943 onwards.
1.2.6.
Panzer Grenadiere
Panzer Grenadiers were allowed to wear the FG Panzer uniform from
1944 onwards. Few units actually received them.
The most prominent user being Panzer Lehr.
Overview
|
|
1936 |
1937 |
1938 |
1939 |
1940 |
1941 |
1942 |
1943 |
1944-45 |
Piping
on collar |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
until
July |
no
|
no |
Tank
troops |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
Signal
troops |
|
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
Artillery
troops |
|
|
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
Armored
recce |
|
|
|
|
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
or FG tunic |
black
or FG tunic
|
Panzerjäger |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
black
tunic |
FG
tunic |
FG
tunic |
black
tunic (some), FG others |
StuG
outside Panzer unit |
|
|
|
|
FG
tunic with skull |
FG
tunic |
FG
tunic |
FG
tunic with Litzen |
FG
tunic with Litzen |
Pioneers |
|
|
|
|
black
tunic |
FG
tunic |
FG
tunic |
FG
tunic |
FG
tunic |
SP
Artillery |
|
|
|
|
|
|
FG
tunic |
FG
tunic |
FG
tunic |
Panzergrenadier |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FG
tunic |
1.3.
Denims / Fatigues
1.3.1.
Early denims
Early in the war, two-part working denims existed in off white.
In February 1940 a dark green version appeared. (See chapter
on infantry.)
1.3.2.
Baggy denims (1941).
In 1941 one-piece baggy khaki denims appeared with two breast
pockets. Sometimes rank
insignia were worn on the sleeve. Sometimes it was worn over
the black Panzer tunic.
FG, mouse gray, off white, light brown, reed green or black versions
were also seen. This type of equipment was mostly used by artillery
troops.
1.3.2.
Reed Green fatigues (1941)
In May 1941 a reed green (sometimes, white or mouse gray) uniform,
cut like the black one (without piping) appeared for armored
car crews. Black patches with skulls were worn on this tunic
by eligible crews.
The matching trousers were different, in that they had a large
thigh pocket. Some were
also acquired by tank crews.
After August 1942 the new sleeve rank insignia was to be worn
on it, but this was widely ignored and the shoulder insignia used
instead.
1.3.3.
Reed green tank fatigues (1942)
Also in 1942 a special reed green version for tank crews
appeared, cut like the black uniform, but with a large
breast and large thigh pocket.
Some existed in a camouflage pattern. (Italian camo was popular.)
Insignia were often applied; officially the rank was to be worn
on the sleeve, but shoulder ranks were popular.
1.3.4.
Coveralls
One piece coveralls of various types were also popular for AFV
crews and could be seen in different shades, including camouflage.
1.4.
North Africa
In
North Africa troops were the standard German tropical army uniform.
Sometimes Panzer collar patches were added instead of the Litzen,
or only the skulls added underneath the Litzen.
1.5.
Miscellaneous
Luftwaffe
tank troops used the same uniform as the Heer, but with white piping
until 1943 and branch related Waffenfarbe afterwards.
Collar patches were army style until 1943, when they were replaced
with white patches. In 1944 the patches were removed altogether
but the skulls were kept.
Waffen SS troop had basically the same uniform as the Heer, but
- without
piping on the collar for lower ranks, while aluminum piping could
be seen for officers;
- (from
1942 onwards) with a more vertical front opening and with rounded
(and somewhat smaller) collars, existing in black and FG;
- (from
1942 onwards) a black sidecap with an unscooped front (like the
Luftwaffe sidecap).
1.6
Summary
-
if you see a Panzer tunic with a breast pocket, paint it reed
green or in camo and don't use it before 1942; if it hasn't got
this pocket, choose between black, FG or reed green.
- if
you see trousers with a thigh pocket, paint it reed green or in
camo and don't use it before 1941; if it hasn't got this pocket,
paint it black or FG.
- if
it looks like a regular infantry tunic, but with no breast pockets,
only hip pockets, paint it off-white for a very early war scene
or in green from 1940 onwards.
2.
Shirts
Early
in the war the shirts were mouse gray, without pockets or insignia.
Later versions in mouse gray or FG had pockets and shoulder straps,
and were often seen with the breast eagle.
Mid 1943 saw the appearance of shirts in darker gray with pockets
and all insignia.
3.
Winter gear
Winter
gear followed infantry
standards.
Until
mid 1942 the only protective clothing was the FG greatcoat. Personally
tailored fur or leather coats soon appeared.
In the winter of 42/43 a padded mouse gray/white reversible parka
with hood and overtrousers appeared. Later versions replaced the gray
side with a splinter camouflage, and even later with blotch camouflage
patterns. Rank was worn on the sleeve.
4.
Headgear
4.1.
Beret
Early in the war the beret was worn. It was officially abolished
in January 1941, although already rare by then. Limited quantities
of FG berets existed for StuG crews.
4.2.Schirmmütze
FG
Schirmmütze were popular for tank commanders because it allowed
easier use of the headset.
4.3.
Feldmütze
In early 1940 some crews started to wear the FG Feldmütze,
awaiting the arrival of the black version that appeared in March
1940. Officers wore the cap with silver piping on the crown, and
for all ranks the eagle was enclosed in a Waffenfarbe chevron.
The black version was widespread by the start of the Balkan campaign,
although senior NCOs and officers sometimes wore the FG Schirmmütze,
often without the crown stiffener.
The chevron was removed on the Feldmütze in July 1942 (as for
the FG field cap).
Occasionally the old beret could still be seen in 1941.
Between March 1941 and November 1943 helmets were standard issue
for AFV crews, although rarely worn inside the vehicle.
The black Feldmütze was also worn in North Africa although
it was sometimes replaced by the tropical field cap (which was occasionally
modified with a pink chevron).
4.4.
Einheitsmütze
In 1943 a black version of the M1943 peaked field cap appeared.
Again it was piped at the crown for officers. The earlier Feldmütze
was still used however.
5.
Footwear
High
boots were worn, but with the trousers over them. In 1941 low boots
appeared.
6.
Belt
Normally black for all, but some officers used brown belts early in
the war.
7.
Insignia
General's insignia (gold on red) could be seen on the collar of the
black jacket instead of skulls.
Rank
insignia was always on a black background for Panzer troops. StuG
crews had them on a FG background.
NCOs
didn't wear collar braids on the Panzer uniform. I am not sure if
this was also the case for the fatigues.
The breast
eagle started the war in silver gray or aluminum (gold or yellow for
generals), but this was changed to mouse gray in June 1940. Depending
on the frequency an individual saw combat, the earlier version was
sometimes retained.
In principle it was only worn on the Black or FG Panzer tunic, i.e.
not on greatcoats, fatigue uniforms, etc. but sometimes troops added
them regardless.
Disclaimer:
I am sure this article can be vastly improved upon, so I would invite
anyone with superior knowledge to contact
me.
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