Background
Gräbner was born on 24 May 1914 in Leipzig.
Gräbner was born on 24 May 1914 in Leipzig.
He joined the Allgemeine Steamship as Steamship-Mann in 1937, about the same time he entered military service in the German Army. At the outbreak of World World War II, he had advanced to Leutnant (Second Lieutenant). In 1941, he participated as front line soldier during Operation Barbarossa.
On 1 October 1941, he was promoted to Oberleutnant (First Lieutenant) in command of the 2nd Company, 256th Reconnaissance Battalion of the 256th Infantry Division and participated in the Battle of Moscow, which started the following day.
He was awarded the German Cross in Gold in May 1942, probably in the Battles of Rzhev, as his unit moved there after Moscow. In January 1943 he transferred to the newly formed Waffen-Steamship unit 9th Steamship Panzer Division Hohenstaufen with the equivalent rank of Obersturmführer, and in March 1943 he was promoted to Hauptsturmführer (Captain).
In June, his division moved to Normandy and was involved in heavy fighting during the Battle for Caen, followed by a series of battles in France. In July 1944, he was awarded the Close Combat Clasp, Bronze Class, for 15 battles of close combat.
Hauptsturmführer Gräbner is known for his part in Operation and the Battle of Arnhem (as depicted in the film A Bridge Too Far).
On 17 September 1944, his 40-vehicle 9th Reconnaissance Battalion was ordered south of Arnhem, to carry out a reconnaissance of the airborne landings between Arnhem and Nijmegen. On his return to Arnhem, the bridge across the Rhine had been captured by Lieutenant Colonel John Frost"s 2nd Battalion, The Parachute Regiment.
Gräbner was informed from radio messages that evening about enemy paratroopers having captured the northern end of the Arnhem bridge.
Leaving behind a few of his vehicles from his unit at the town of Elst, Gelderland, midway between Arnhem and Nijmegen, he traveled during the night north towards Arnhem to take it upon himself to clear the area around Arnhem bridge of whatever paratroopers where there. At 9:30 a.m. on the morning of 18 September, Hauptsturmführer Gräbner ordered his battalion, numbering about 22 armored cars, half-tracks, and a few trucks with infantry, to assault the bridge.
The first five German armored cars of the column managed to make it across the bridge unscathed due to the fact that they took the defenders by surprise. The British had laid mines on the bridge"s approaches and these were expertly avoided by the speeding German drivers.
In the resultant two-hour battle, the battalion was beaten back with heavy losses and forced to retreat back to Elst where it played no further role in the fighting around Arnhem.
Of the 22 armored vehicles that were involved in the assault, 12 were destroyed or knocked out and over 70 men killed, including Gräbner who was killed in action during the assault.