Leo Geyr von Schweppenburg (born March 2, 1886, Potsdam, Germany—died January 27, 1974, Irschenhausen, West Germany) was a German tank commander in World War II.
Geyr joined the German army in 1904. He fought on several fronts in World War I and rose to the rank of captain. He remained in the army after the war, becoming a colonel in 1932 and serving as a German military attaché in London in the mid-1930s. He became a brigadier general in 1935 and was promoted to major general upon taking command of the 3rd Panzer (armoured) Division in 1937. He was a divisional commander in the Polish campaign (1939), and he commanded the XXIV Panzer Corps in the invasion of France (1940). In the invasion of the Soviet Union (1941), Geyr’s panzer corps was part of General Heinz Guderian’s Second Panzer Army, which spearheaded the advance of Army Group Centre in the drive toward Moscow.
Geyr remained in service on the Eastern Front until October 1943, when he was transferred to northern France as the commanding general of Panzer Group West. This group of armoured divisions near Paris constituted the Germans’ main force of tanks in northern France. In the event of an Allied landing on the northern French coast, Panzer Group West was expected to counterattack northward and halt the invasion force. The commander of army forces in northern France, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, wanted to station Geyr’s tank divisions as close to the coast as possible, in order to defeat the Allies before they could move inland from the landing beaches. Geyr and Rommel’s own commander, Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, disagreed with this strategy: they wanted to station Panzer Group West well inland, where it could outmaneuver and encircle the Allied army as it advanced eastward toward Paris.
The Allied invasion of Normandy (D-Day) took place on June 6, 1944. By June 8 Geyr had been able to rush three panzer divisions northward to defend Caen against British and Canadian forces advancing on that city from their beachheads. Geyr planned to launch these divisions in a full-scale counterattack that would drive the British and Canadians back into the sea, but on June 9 Geyr’s headquarters was attacked and destroyed by Allied fighter-bombers. Geyr was wounded and many of his staff officers were killed, forcing the cancellation of the counterattack. Geyr’s reinforced tank units managed to prevent the British advance for another month, but he was nevertheless relieved of his command on July 2, after seconding Rundstedt’s request that Adolf Hitler authorize a strategic withdrawal from Caen. Geyr was succeeded by Heinrich Eberbach and then served as an inspector general of armoured troops until the closing phase of the war.
Geyr was held by the Americans as a prisoner of war from 1945 to 1947. After his release Geyr wrote a memoir of his years in London as a military attaché, Erinnerungen eines Militärattachés, London 1933–1937 (1949), which was translated and published along with additional material covering his life through World War II as The Critical Years (1952).