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Markings for Fokker Dr.I 1/72

450/17, Lt. Josef Jacobs, CO of Jasta 7, Rumbeke, Belgium, March 1918

Josef Carl Peter Jacobs was born on May 15, 1984 in Kreuzkapelle, Rhineland. From his school days he had been fascinated with flying and started to learn how to control aircraft even before the war.  Immediately after the outbreak of the Great War, he joined the ranks of the Luftstreitkräfte (German air force) and after training was assigned to the observation unit FA 11 on July 3, 1915. In March 1916 he was transferred to Fokkerstaffel West (from October 6, 1916 it transformed to Jasta 12) where he remained until the end of January 1917 when he was transferred to Jasta 22. From August 2, 1917, he took command of Jasta 7 and stayed with the unit until the Armistice. At that time, his score counted 48 victories. After the war, Jacobs found himself fighting in the Baltic against the Russian Bolsheviks as a part of Kommando Sachsenberg. Subsequently he trained Turkish military pilots. After Hitler came to power, Jacobs refused to join the NSDAP and emigrated to the Netherlands. After the end of World War II, he returned to Bavaria, where he died in Munich on July 29, 1978. He had his two personal Dreideckers at Jasta 7, both painted black. Jacobs later had an engine and propeller from a Sopwith Camel fitted to one of them, the No. 450/17. The sides of the fuselage sported drawing of a devil spitting fire. Existing photography evidence shows the shape of the drawing on the starboard side, while a contemporary illustration of his aircraft shows the left side. Jacobs himself confirmed this one as correct after the war. This evidence leads to the conclusion the paintings differed.

 

425/17 Rtm. Manfred A. Freiherr von Richthofen, CO of JG 1, Lechelle, France, March 1918

Manfred Albrecht von Richthofen is rightfully considered the greatest fighter pilot of the First World War as he knocked eighty enemies down prior to his death on April 21, 1918. On contrary to the general perception, the Fokker Dr.I was not his typical mount, as he shot down only 17 out of his 80 victims while flying the Dreidecker for the short period of March and April 1918. Manfred von Richthofen was assigned to the Luftstreitkräfte on his own request in 1915 after his service with a cavalry unit. He became an observer but when he met Oswald Boelcke, the charisma of this fighter ace made him to request pilot training. On completion of that, he became pilot of observer aircraft, but after another meeting with Boelcke he joined the newly formed Jasta 2 fighter unit. In January 1917, von Richthofen was awarded the highly coveted Pour le Mérite and was subsequently made CO of Jasta 11. In June 1917, he received orders to form Jagdgeschwader 1 from Jasta 4, 6, 10 and 11 units and led this “wing” until his death on April 21, 1918. Von Richthofen had his aircraft painted red from January 1917 when he led Jasta 11 and flew the Albatros D.III. He carried this practice over to the Fokker Dr.I which he flew as JG 1 Commanding Officer. According to some sources the aircraft obtained its red color in factory and so the finish was therefore of good quality.  

 

454/17, Lt. Lothar Freiherr von Richthofen, Jasta 11, Avesnes-le-Sec, France, March 1918

Lothar von Richthofen was to a certain degree the opposite of his older brother Manfred. While Manfred carefully calculated risks and attacked from a favorable position as much as possible, Lothar got into fights at every opportunity. This helped him to achieve seventeen aerial victories during first two months of his fighter service. On the other hand, his combat style was very risky and on several occasions interrupted his career for a long-term due to various injuries. One of these came on March 13, 1918, when in combat with Bristols F.2B belonging to the No. 62 Squadron caused a collapse of the leading edge of the top wing of his Fokker Dr.I 454/17. Lothar managed to crash-land crippled aircraft, but it took him till the middle of July to recover from the resulting injuries. His total score of forty kills came over the course of a mere 77 days of actual combat flying! The aircraft with which Lothar von Richthofen crashed on March 13, 1917, carried a standard Fokker factory “streaked” finish but the rear fuselage and the upper surface of the top wing was oversprayed yellow, the color of the Dragoner Regiment “von Bredow” Nr. 4, a unit with which Lothar von Richthofen served earlier. The engine cowl, wheel hubs and wing struts were painted red, which was the color of Jasta 11.

 

545/17, Lt. Hans Weiss, Jasta 11, Cappy, France, April 1918

Hans Weiss, a native of Hof, began his flying career in June 1916 as an observer and gunner with FFA 282, FFA 28 and FFA 68 units. After training at Jastaschule Valenciennes, he joined Jasta 41, where he scored his first ten kills. Next he was transferred to Jasta 10 on March 17, 1918, where he added another victory. Afterwards he was assigned to Jasta 11. He scored his first victory there on April 2, 1918 and on April 8 was named as temporary commander of the unit but eventually he led it until his death on May 2, 1918, when he was shot down by fire from No. 209 Squadron RAF Sopwith Camel flown by M. S. Taylor. The Dreidecker flown by Hans Weiss had the upper surface of the top wing and the rear section of the fuselage painted white. The wing struts, wheel hubs and engine cowl were red, which was the color of Jasta 11.

 

404/17, Hptm. Adolf Ritter von Tutschek, JG 2, Toulis, France, February 1918

Adolf Ritter von Tutschek was born on May 16, 1891, in the Bavarian town of Ingolstadt. He joined the army even before the war, and its outbreak found him serving with the 3rd Infanterie-Regiment “Prinz Karl von Bayern” as a lieutenant. He would see combat on both the western and eastern fronts. For his service against the Russians, he was awarded the Rittenkreuz des Militar-Max-Joseph-Ordens (the Knight’s Cross of the Order of Max-Joseph) which bestowed upon him the title of Ritter. As an infantryman, he was seriously wounded several times (grenade, gas). Afterwards, he requested a transfer to the Luftstreitkräfte and after training, he served as artillery spotter from October 1916 till January 1917 with FA 6b. Subsequently, he was transferred to Jasta Boelcke, where he gained three kills, and on April 28, 1917, he was named CO of Jasta 12. On August 11 he was seriously wounded in combat with C. D. Booker of No. 8 Squadron RNAS. After being released, he was named the first CO of Jagdgeschwader 2 and on March 10, 1918, he reached his 27th victory. Five days later he was shot down and killed by H. B. Redle from No. 24 Squadron RFC. The aircraft in which Hptm. von Tutschek died carried a standard Fokker Dr.I “streaked” camouflage and a turquoise color on the lower ones. The rear part of the fuselage was overpainted with black and the engine cowl was white, which was typical for Jasta 12, one of the JG 2 units.

11/2023
Info EDUARD 11/2023

Good Day, Dear Friends We find ourselves in the same situation with November’s new releases as we did with the October ones, in that they also have been available for purchase a couple of weeks ahead of the newsletter announcement, meaning that they will already be known to a large percentage of readers and perhaps even in their possession.

11/1/2023

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Market Garden was the largest Allied airborne operation of World War II, launched on 17 September 1944 in the Netherlands. Its objective was to use paratroopers (the "Market" component) and the rapid advance of ground forces (the "Garden" component) to seize key bridges over rivers and canals, thereby creating a corridor for an attack into Germany. However, the operation ultimately failed due to strong German resistance, poor coordination, and delays in the Allied advance, particularly at Arnhem, where British paratroopers were unable to hold a crucial bridge.

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