QUOTE (trevorl @ Mar 23 2008, 01:40 PM)

One item of interest is that one Col Alexander ( later Field Marshal) commanded a unit of Landswehr for seven months in 1919 mainly against the Russians. " It was an honour to command a force consisting of nothing but Gentlemen"
Trevor, why not tell us a bit about that.
Landwehr men were originally reservists who left the Reserves (per se) at 27 and served in the Landwehr for seven years till they "graduated" to the Landsturm, where they were till 45. As the war went on Landwehr units were formed, and tended to fight more on the East Front, as the West Front featured a higher level of "competition". Also, younger men with some physical defect, or incompletely healed from being wounded, would be put in to Landwehr units. (The principal reason was to have men physically match so that they could keep up with each other on the march.)
So, a typical Landwehr unit on the East Front would have been mostly mature men, and despite the stress of the war German troops generally had good morale, or at least considerable discipline and cohesion. (Generalizing horribly here.) Of course in late 1918 things were breaking down, but troops stranded out in the middle of nowhere, like the East Front, generally realized that they had to hang together and cooporate if they were to get home safely. Once units made it back to their hometown they almost all dissolved in seconds. Even the most elite units dissolved, and that is why, in order to fight the Bolsheviks, entirely new units had to be formed, with the 2% of the men that really enjoyed the fighting and the war (like my father) joined the Freikorps and happily went after the Reds.
So I would imagine that a Landwehr unit stuck out in the East would have hung together and been disciplined, if for nothing than to eventually get back to the homeland in one piece.
So tell us what Alexander was doing commanding Landwehr for seven months.
Bob Lembke