Monday, 28 July 2025

Junkers Ju 90 Paris-Soir newspaper February 1943

 


A recent discovery in Paris - a front page of the newspaper "France-Soir" from February 1943 featuring a PK image of a Junkers Ju 90. The headline refers to the new law creating the Service du Travail Obligatoire (the STO or 'compulsory labour service') thus dating this newspaper from either the 16th or 17th of February 1943. No date in fact appears on the front page. The STO was a continuation of the voluntary 'releve' - at least 240,000 French workers had gone to Germany voluntarily, including 70,000 women. But Fritz Saukel needed at least another 350,000 French workers to make up for labour shortages in German military production. Henceforth this new Vichy law would ensure that French workers were conscripted and deported in huge numbers to go and work in German factories. The imposition of the STO was one of the factors behind the 'rise' of the French resistance with large groups of young men taking to the 'maquis' to avoid being sent to Germany. Note the headline in the middle top refers to " the continued vain attempts by the Russians to force a break-through  " (..on the southern sector of the Eastern Front...)  - this is a couple of weeks after the destruction of VI Armee at Stalingrad! The article is illustrated with a picture of a Ju 90, which, the caption states, is being used to transport German reinforcements to the front. Interestingly enough I recently came across the PK film series from which this image was extracted in the ECPA-D.  According to their caption this machine was possibly coded 'BG+ ??'. (DAA 2658)




Walter Waiss seven-volume history of KG 27 Boelcke (Helios)

 

German publisher Helios are another niche publisher that have recently become defunct which may explain why Rich Carrick at Chandos was asking for 'opinions' on their Walter Waiss KG 27 book series (seven volumes!)  with a view to possibly doing some or all in English. The views of all respondents were pretty mixed  - some thought them 'exceptional', others were less keen. My own view - " I have some of the KG 27 books. They comprise a 50-60 page text section with lots of 'unknown' personal accounts, I keep meaning to post a few on my blog and a couple of hundred pages of unfortunately largely uninteresting photos showing wrecks, training group photos, well-known landmarks from the French campaign etc At best you'll get a couple of worthwhile volumes out of them I'd imagine..."

Note the random page views that follow are taken from Volume VI covering 1944 and illustrate these points - pics from Barbarossa, buildings, populace and wrecks..

Losses are laid out in large clunky tables but the text pages do feature interesting accounts..



Saturday, 26 July 2025

Uffz. Hans-Ludwig Schwing, 6./JG 77

 




The son of a teacher, Hans Schwing was born on 5 Sep 1921 in Friedewald, a municipality in the Hersfeld-Rotenburg district near Bad Hersfeld. He had a younger brother and sister. He learnt to fly gliders in the HJ. He enlisted in the Luftwaffe in 1940. In April 41 he started his ab initio training at Klagenfurt and by November 1942 he was training with JFS 7 in Nancy, France. His unit became 2./JG 107 in January 1943. He went to 1./EJG Süd (in Orange, France) in mid-1943 before being posted to 6./JG 77 in July 1943, to undergo training on the Macchi 205 Veltro fighter - Uffz. Schwing was apparently an Italian speaker. However he was injured in a take-off accident attempting to get airborne with other machines on 20 December 1943 - damages were assessed at 90%. This would be one of the last reported losses of a Macchi 205 in II./JG 77 as 5. and 6. Staffel finally received their Bf 109s barely one week later. Schwing recovered from his injuries and returned to his Staffel but was (most likely) shot down and killed in combat with Spitfires on 18 March 1944 in the vicinity of Cassino. (reported missing when he failed to return from an afternoon sortie over the Nettuno bridgehead/Cassino area) His crashed Bf 109 'yellow 7' was only discovered several days later. He was buried at Fiuggi close to the site of his crash.  His logbook returned to the family lists 739 flights including over 500 at Klagenfurt. Also returned with his effects was a 'blood-encrusted' wallet which he was carrying when he was shot down. This detail was noted in correspondence in 1989 received from his sister, Maria. Schwing's younger brother was also KIA with his Heer unit -  killed in the West in January 1945 (Alsace) when his vehicle hit a mine..





Also on this blog

JG 77 in Italy - September, October 1943


Friday, 25 July 2025

Fieseler Storch of the (Luftwaffe) Sanitäts-Kompanie 220

 


Fieseler Storch of the (Luftwaffe) Sanitäts-Kompanie 220 operating in North Africa, here seen unloading a casualty for onward Ju 52 transport, presumably Sicily or Crete.. A "Sanitäts-Kompanie" was a German medical unit, specifically a medical company, responsible for providing medical care to soldiers in the field, including evacuation to field hospitals. Sanitäts-Kompanien worked closely with other medical units like the "Feldlazarett" (field hospital) and "Kriegslazarett" (war hospital) to ensure a continuum of care for the wounded. A Sanitäts-Kompanie would typically have a couple of Ju 52s and Fi 156s on strength..





Tuesday, 22 July 2025

Karl ‘Quax’ Schnörrer - JG 54 - archive photo scan #38

 


Click on the image to view full screen. The original scan is a 50 Mb image.

Uffz. Karl ‘Quax’ Schnörrer in front of his Bf 109 G-2 (equipped with 20mm cannon wing pods) after the award of the EK II following his second victory in 1./JG 54 on May 12, 1942.'Quax’ was an accident-prone cartoon character popular at that time – Schnörrer wrecked a number of Messerschmitts early in his career. In late 1942, Walter Nowotny chose Schnörrer to be his Kaczmarek (or ‘wingman’). Schnörrer usually flew a 'white 9'.


Keep checking in here for more images scanned exclusively for The Luftwaffe Blog...

Sunday, 20 July 2025

'Ardennes 44 - four days of Hell' AÉROJOURNAL HS N°51





new from caraktere.com " Ardennes 44 " - the air battles of 17, 18, 23 and 24 December 1944

"...In the collective imagination, the Battle of the Bulge was a gigantic land battle in which bad weather grounded German and Allied aircraft for most of the time, until a break in the weather allowed the Luftwaffe to launch its disastrous ‘Bodenplatte’ operation on 1 January 1945. This was only partly true. The 17th, 18th, 23rd and 24th December 1944 were in fact the most violent days of aerial combat of the entire war in the West, between the Normandy landings and the surrender of the Reich. While the German fighters sacrificed a large proportion of their manpower and aircraft resources in an attempt to challenge the Allies' control of the skies over the Ardennes battlefield, their American and British adversaries had to work harder than ever to retain it. A fascinating dive into the heart of this titanic air battle!.."

Piotr Forkasiewicz cover artwork depicts 391st BG B-26 Marauders en route for the viaduct at Ahrweiler being attacked by the Bf 109s of Maj. Karl-Heinz Langer's III./JG 3 on the morning of 23 December west of Liège. After the guns of his K-4 jammed, Fhr. Adolf Tham of 10. Staffel voluntarily rammed the 574th BS B-26 coded 4L-P (s/n 42-107597 flown by 1st Lt Ralph Lesmeister). Tham's wing sawed into the tail of the B-26 instantly killing the tail gunner. The rest of the American crew bailed out and were taken captive. Despite having his port wing torn off in the collision Tham himself managed to take to his chute and thus also survived the attack..he re-appeared at Lippspringe several days later with it under his arm..

Friday, 11 July 2025

Emil Omert, III./JG 77 in the Balkans

 





Born into a farming family in Ginolfs on 15 January 1918, Emil Omert was interested in gliding from an early age, given his proximity to the Rhön valley. Shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War, he joined the Luftwaffe and, after his training period, was posted to the future 'aircraft carrier' Staffel 6./Tr.Gr. 186. He took little part in the campaign in the West, was sent to occupy Norway and then returned near Berlin where the unit became III./JG 77. 

After a spell in Brittany, 8./JG 77 fought in the Balkans - Operation Marita was launched on 6 April 1941 with the first raids on the Yugoslav capital. Together with II. and III./JG 54 the Bf 109 Emils of JG 77 flew bomber escort sorties. In the Belgrade area there were a number of combats between Luftwaffe and Yugoslav Messerschmitts. The Yugoslavian pilots were largely out-matched by the battle-experienced Germans. Omert scored his 1st victory, downing a Yugoslav Me 109. After five large-scale raids on Belgrade, in which nearly 500 German bombers were involved, bad weather halted operations with little impact on events since the Yugoslavs capitulated on 17 April. From the middle of April JG 77 was deployed against British armed forces retreating from Greece. Accordingly, many Jabo missions were flown in support of German ground troops on the coast. In short order JG 77 advanced further and further towards and into Greece - III./JG 77 was stationed at Vrba, Skoplje, Prilep and Axiopolis all within less than one week, flying ground-attack Jabo sorties before reaching Molaoi, the airfield at the southern end of the Peloponnese.

Below; Omert in the cockpit of an ex-JG 2 Emil probably at Molaoi airfield and 'white 4' still with the 1./JG 2 'Bonzo' cartoon dog emblem on the cowl..

 

Above; the Emil on the left is displaying an LG 2 Schlacht marking as well as the JG 77 'Wolfskopf' cowl emblem, while 'white 4' still features the 1./JG 2 'Bonzo' cartoon dog on the cowl..

Below; 'Black 11' of 8. Staffel JG 54 with 'sparrow' cowl emblem and on the right a III./JG 77 machine with 'Wolfshead' cowl emblem..





The frequent relocations of the various parts of the Geschwader resulted in considerable technical and logistical problems but on 12 May 1941 ‘Merkur’ the invasion of Crete was launched, JG 77 being the only Luftwaffe Jagdgeschwader in this theatre. Other Gruppen were thus subordinated to the Geschwader, most notably Hptm. Herbert Ihlefeld’s I.(J)/LG 2.  

Below; III./JG 77 Emil on Crete (Maleme) with Schlacht triangle and wolf's head badge on the cowling. Note three Abschußbalken on the rudder. The name 'Seidel' below the cockpit probably recalls Ofw. Albert ' Harry' Seidel who had been KIA on 15 March near Kent/Dungeness in aerial combat with 615 Sq. Hurricanes. His machine was WNr.3725 "schwarze L" of 5.(S)/LG 2.. 



 With the launch of Barbarossa and flying from bases in Romania, Jagdgeschwader 77 was committed along the southern sector of the Eastern Front over Heeresgruppe Süd operating towards the Crimea through the Ukraine via Balta, Nikolaiev (mid-August) and Tschaplinka (mid-October) before moving onto the Crimean peninsula (Sarabus and Simferopol). Omert achieved several Luftsiege in the opening phase of the campaign, including five SB-2s shot down over the Romanian coast on 26 June 1941, Omert was promoted to Kapitän of 8./JG 77 on 10 February 1942. On 16 March, he was awarded the Ritterkreuz for his 45 victories, before leading his Staffel to Africa in November 1942. The fighting in Tunisia and Sicily followed. Physically exhausted at the end of 1943, Omert was sent on leave before re-joining III./JG 77, then in Romania (where the Gruppe relieved I./JG 4). In February, Omert was appointed interim Kommandeur of II./JG 77 in Italy before taking command of III./JG 77, still in Romania, in March 1944. With his Gruppe, Kommandeur Omert faced increasingly heavy American bombing raids on Ploesti/Bucharest. On 24 April 1944, he was shot down over Finta Mare and machine-gunned and killed in his parachute. He was buried in the Pro Patria cemetery in Bucharest, where he remains to this day.

Omert's Gustav in early 1944 with Gruppenkommandeur chevrons. Omert is on the left behind the wing with RK..



For assistance with this blog post my thanks to Philippe Saintes and author of the 'JG 77 Herz-As' Aéro-Journal 'hors-série', Pierre André Brouez...