Page 14
Info Eduard - October 2010
Page 14
HISTORY
Info Eduard - říjen 2010
Godwin Brumowski
Godwin Brumowski, with 39 kills to his credit, was the
most successful Austro-Hungarian fighter pilot. He was
born in 1889 in Galician city of Wadowice. As a sidenote,
this was where, thirty one years later, Karol Wojtyla,
the man who eventually became Pope John Paul II was
born. After attending the Military Technical Academy
in Vienna, Brumowski was assigned to 29th Field Artillery
Regiment stationed at Jaroslav. He served there through
the beginning of World War One on the Russian Front.
In July, 1915, he was transferred as an observer to Flik 1.
Along with the unit CO, Otto Jindra, he would gain his first
two kills on April 12th, 1916 (Jindra’s sixth and seventh).
The interesting thing about these two kills is that the crew
first made a bombing run that successfully interrupted
a troop inspection conducted by Russian Czar Nicholas
II, and the the two downed Moranes that were scrambled
in the defense of this event. Brumowski would gain
another two kills flying with this unit, the last of which
was attained as a pilot. This was followed by a transfer to
Flik 12 on the Italian Front, where he would accumulate
another two victories. He was to take command of the
newly formed Flik 41/J, but not before a short stint in
Germany with Jasta 24 on the Western Front, where he
participated in combat flights. He had the opportunity to
meet Manfred von Richthofen, where he was not only
able to gain experience through purely fighter mission
participation, but also was inspired to paint his fighters
in red. He painted a minimum of three of his Albatros
Series 153 in this manner. His first kill after his return to
the Italian Front came on May 10th, 1917, flying a Hansa-
Brandenburg D.I. Although Brumowski’s Albatroses
are much better known, he was more successful in the
Hansa-Brandenburg D.I, with a total of eighteen kills.
His aircraft 28.69, christened ‘Lucky Star’, was flown
for twelve kills, and was probably the most successful
aircraft in the Austro-Hungarian air force as a whole.
His final four victories were attained by Brumowski
in June, 1918. After a long term leave, still as CO
of Flik 41/J, he was named fighter units commander
of the Isonzo Front in October, 1918.
After the war, he tried his hand at farming on his wife’s
farm in Transylvania, but there was no room in this
venture for his rapid pace of lifestyle. As the twenties
turned into the thirties, he left his family and returned
to his beloved Vienna. Here, at the Aspern air field,
he returned to aviation and opened a pilot school.
He died on June 3, 1936, during a crash landing attempt
at Schiphol airfield in Holland.
Aircraft 153.52 is one of the aforementioned red
Albatroses which Brumowski flew. In the cockpit of this
aircraft, he gained two kills, and was himself shot down
in it on February 4th, 1918.
The treated natural covering
of the aircraft was mottled
with red with a heavy
consistency that gave it
a monotone finish.
Onto this finish, small
swirrls (ringlets) were
added. The skull was later in
the war to become Brumowski’s
personal marking. Of note is the
good luck horseshoe on the left interwing
strut, not uncommon within Flik 41/J.
Strana 10
HISTORIE
Albatros D.III (Oef), 153.52,
flown by Godwin Brumowski,
Flik 41/J, Passarella,
February, 1918.
Josef Novák
Josef Novák was born in 1893 in Dobřichov in Kolín
(Bohemia). He began the war with Infanterie Regiment
36, and later was assigned to Flik 3 as a mechanic.
It’s clear that being an educated engineer helped him
to that end. In the spring of 1916, he went through pilot
training. Between June, 1916 and March 1917, he served
as a pilot with Flik 29 on the Russian and Rumanian fronts.
After a short time with Flik 8, he requested a transfer
to Flik 41/J in June, which was granted. The CO of the unit,
Godwin Brumowski, recognized great qualities in Novák,
and the two often flew as a pair, with Novák covering
Brumowski’s back. At the end of January, 1917, Novák
had five kills to his credit, four
of which were while flying
a Hansa-Brandenburg D.I.
The question has arisen
as to weather or not Novak
actually shot down
more aircraft than
that. František Šimek, who
was Brumowski’s mechanic,
wrote in his memoirs that Novák
would ‘transfer’ some of his kills to Brumowski in return
for material compensation. It is unlikely that Josef Novák
gained anymore confirmed kills by the end of hostilities.
Albatros D.III (Oef), 153.137,
flown by Josef Novak, Flik 41/J,
Torresella, January, 1918