Matthäus Hetzenauer


Matthäus Hetzenauer was an Austrian sniper in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany during World War II. He served in the 3rd Mountain Division on the Eastern Front of World War II, and was credited with 345 kills. His longest confirmed kill was reported at. Hetzenauer received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 17 April 1945.

Early life

Matthäus Hetzenauer was born on 23 December 1924 in the Austrian Tyrolean village of Brixen im Thale to Simon and Magdalena Hetzenauer, descendants of a long line of Austrian peasantry in the Kitzbühel region. He was baptized as a Catholic on Christmas Eve in the medieval parish church and was raised with his two brothers and sister on his parents’ farm above the village. Hetzenauer grew up surrounded by the long Tyrolen custom of hunting and hunters, such as the tale of Georg Jennerwein, his father was a hunter, and his uncle Josef was a veteran of the Austro-Hungarian Army who displayed his medals, including an Iron Cross, in a display case. With this backdrop, Hetzenauer was drafted in September 1942 at age 17 into the 140th Mountain Rifle Reinforcement Battalion based at Kufstein.

Military career

Hetzenauer arrived at Kufstein in 1942 and trained for two years as a Gebirgsjäger in the city and in the nearby Wilder Kaiser mountains, which his upbringing in the Tyrol had conditioned for, then he received further instruction at the Gebirgsjäger school in Mittenwald, Hochgebirgsjäger school in the Stubaital, and the Army NCO Gebirgsjäger school in Wörgl. Hetzenauer then trained as a sniper during March - July 1944 at the Truppenübungsplatz Seetaler-Alpe in Steiermark, before being assigned as a Gefreiter to the 3rd Gebirgsjäger Division. He utilized both a Karabiner 98k sniper variant with 6x telescopic sight and a Gewehr 43 with ZF4 4x telescopic sight. He saw action against Soviet forces in the Carpathians, Hungary, and Slovakia.
On 6 November 1944 he suffered head trauma from artillery fire, and was awarded the Wound Badge three days later.
Gefreiter Hetzenauer received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 17 April 1945. Generalleutnant and Divisions commander Paul Klatt had recommended Hetzenauer because of his numerous sniper kills, which totalled two enemy companies, without fear for his own safety under artillery fire and enemy attacks. This recommendation was approved by General der Gebirgstruppe Karl von Le Suire and General der Panzertruppe Walter Nehring.
Hetzenauer was captured by Soviet troops the following month, and served five years in a Soviet prison camp.
He died on 3 October 2004. His wife Maria died in 2006.

Awards

English