[Editor's note: The subsequent articles in this series will be presented on each of the following Thursdays during October 2022. MH]
By Adrian Roberts
Many of the men who survived combat in the Great War served again in the Second World War, though usually in second-line duties such as Home Defence or training roles. Most of the commanding officers of WWII had served in WWI, but their roles generally kept them out of direct combat—except possibly naval officers who have always shared the same dangers as their men. In the air, the role of a fighter pilot is particularly associated with younger men, and yet there were just a few who flew in combat in both wars.
The Germans were somewhat more lenient about age limitations than the Allies. The best-known are listed below; their Allied equivalents will be listed in another article.
Theodor Osterkamp is the only pilot who is considered by most sources to have been an ace in both wars (an ace is generally defined as having at least five aerial combat victories). He was born in 1892 and joined the marinefliegerkorps of the Imperial German Navy on the outbreak of the war, which like the Royal Naval Air Service operated squadrons on the Western Front, as well as seaplanes along the coast. He followed the usual route in the German Air Services of serving as an observer and then a two-seater pilot, before becoming a fighter* pilot. From April 1917 until the end of the war, first with Marinefeldjagdstaffel I and then MFJ II, he was credited with 32 victories, flying first the Albatros scout, then the Fokker D.VII, and finally the D.VIII monoplane.
After the Armistice, he continued
fighting against the Bolsheviks in
Harry von Bülow-Bothkamp
was born on his aristocratic family’s estate in
Karl Ritscherle, born
1898, enlisted in the infantry age 16. After joining the air service, he scored
three victories as an observer, before training as a pilot and scoring five
more victories with Jasta 60, flying Fokker D.VIIs, In WWII, he was shot down
over
Hasso von Wedel commanded
Jasta 75 from February 1918 and was credited with five victories. He was shot
down over
* Note that in WWI, single-seaters were referred to as scouts not fighters, certainly until late in the war. Originally, a fighter was a two-seater, as in the Bristol Fighter. This derives from the early days of air combat when aeroplanes such as the BE2c could not carry an observer/gunner as well as a substantial bomb-load. Therefore the bombers were flown solo, escorted by others with a crew of two, which were the fighters.
No comments:
Post a Comment