Hermann Kraushaar | |
Birth Date: | 25 March 1881 |
Birth Place: | Voerde, Rhine Province, German Empire |
Death Place: | Vlieland, Friesland, Netherlands |
Branch: | Imperial German Navy
|
Serviceyears: | 1909–1917 |
Rank: | Kapitänleutnant |
Battles: | World War I |
Awards: | Iron Cross |
Laterwork: | Der Luftkrieg, Berlin 1909 |
Hermann Kraushaar (23 May 1881 – 14 June 1917)[1] was a German naval officer and airship commander. He was the bearer of the Iron Cross, first and second class.[2]
Hermann Kraushaar was born on 23 May 1881 in Voerde. He embarked on a career as an officer in the German Navy on 1909 and was given the rank of Lieutenant. He also created the book Der Luftkrieg of which the English author Richard Patrick Hearne made an authorized translation. At that time he was an adjutant at the 1st Marine Artillery Department in Kiel. On 22 March 1910 he was promoted to lieutenant captain. From 1913 he served as an audit officer on the SMS Hansa.[3]
During World War I, Lieutenant Hermann Kraushaar took command of various zeppelins.His first officer was always Lieutenant at Sea Ernst Zimmermann.[4] They operated from bases in Hamburg-Fuhlsbüttel, Hage, Tønder, Friedrichshafen, and Ahlhorn. They completed their fifty-six journeys with the following airships:[5]
On the night of 23 to 24 September 1916, Kraushaar flew an attack on the United Kingdom in the Zeppelin L 17. Between 22 and 23 o'clock he reached the coast of Lincolnshire. At about 1 a.m. he bombed Nottingham. The lighting at the Midland Railway station helped locate a suitable destination. Thirty-four incendiary bombs were dropped in the attack. Three residents died and sixteen were injured. Several houses and a Methodist church were destroyed. The Haddon factory and a warehouse were also affected.The L 17 turned over Lincoln and returned to the base. In his report, Kraushaar is said to have stated that Sheffield would have been bombed, which is however 50 km north of Nottingham. [7]
See main article: Action of 4 May 1917. On 4 May 1917, Kraushaar, in Zeppelin L 43, attacked an anti-submarine patrol off the Scottish coast which consisted of the destroyers,, and led by the light cruisers and the Australian . To avoid being hit by the anti-aircraft guns, the Zeppelin flew at a very high altitude out of range of the guns. For this reason, the bombs dropped also missed their targets. After the Zeppelin and the ships had used up their ammunition, the fight ended without a hit on either side.[8]
On the night of 13/14 June 1917, Kraushaar set off on his last voyage in the Zeppelin L 43. On 14 June at 5:36 a.m. he reported that he had reached the lightship off the island of Terschelling. A short time earlier, at 6:15 a.m., the English Lieutenant Basil Hobbs took off from Felixstowe in a Curtiss H-12 seaplane. The gunner sub-lieutenant was Robert Dickey, the radio operator H. M. Davies and the engineer A. W. Goody. When they reached Vlieland at 8:40 a.m., they were flying at . They discovered the Zeppelin L 43 flying north at, which took them under fire with tracer ammunition. As they passed the stern, Dickey fired the Lewis machine gun, loaded with Brock-and-Pomeroy ammunition, into the hull of the Zeppelin. After two hits, the Zeppelin exploded; Kraushaar and his 23-man crew were killed.