Johannes Steinhoff Explained

Johannes Steinhoff
Birth Date:15 September 1913
Birth Place:Bottendorf, Province of Saxony, Prussia, Germany
Death Place:Wachtberg-Pech, Northrhine-Westphalia, Germany
Resting Place:Cemetery in Villip, Wachtberg
Office:Chairman of the NATO Military Committee
Term Start:1971
Term End:1974
Predecessor:Sir Nigel Henderson
Successor:Sir Peter Hill-Norton
Office2:Inspector of the Air Force
Term Start2:1966
Term End2:1970
Predecessor2:Werner Panitzki
Successor2:Günther Rall
Nickname:Macky
Allegiance: (to 1945)
Branch:
German Air Force
Serviceyears:1934–45
1955–74
Rank:Oberst (Wehrmacht)
General (Bundeswehr)
Commands:II./JG 52, JG 77 and JG 7
Unit:JG 26, JG 52, JG 77, Kommando Nowotny, JG 7 and JV 44
Awards:Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords
Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
Grand Officer of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic
American Legion of Merit
French Legion of Honour
Spouse:Ursula Steinhoff
Relations:Ludwig Hahn (brother-in-law)
Michael Bird (son-in-law)

Johannes "Macky" Steinhoff (15 September 1913 – 21 February 1994) was a Luftwaffe fighter ace during World War II, German general, and NATO official. He was one of very few Luftwaffe pilots who survived to fly operationally through the whole of the war period 1939–45 until he was severely burned during a failed take-off. Steinhoff was also one of the highest-scoring pilots with 176 victories, and one of the first to fly the Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighter in combat as a member of the Jagdverband 44 squadron led by Adolf Galland. Steinhoff was decorated with the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords, and later received the Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany and several foreign awards including the American Legion of Merit and the French Legion of Honour. He played a role in the so-called Fighter Pilots' Revolt late in the war, when several senior air force officers confronted Hermann Göring.

Steinhoff joined the West German government's Rearmament Office as a consultant on military aviation in 1952 and became one of the principal officials tasked with rebuilding the German Air Force through the Cold War. In retirement, Steinhoff became a widely read author of books on German military aviation during the Second World War and the experiences of the German people at that time.

Early years

Johannes Steinhoff was born on 15 September 1913 in Bottendorf, Thuringia, the son of an agricultural mill-worker and his traditional housewife. He had two brothers, Bernd and Wolf, and two sisters, Greta and Charlotte. His sister Charlotte married Ludwig Hahn, the chief of the Sicherheitspolizei (Security Police) and Sicherheitsdienst (Security Service) in occupied Warsaw, who participated in the evacuation and destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto.

Steinhoff graduated from the Klosterschule Roßleben convent school after having "studied the classics and languages such as French, English, Latin and Greek," and from 1932–1934 he read philology at the University of Jena, where he was a member of the Landsmannschaft Suevia academic fencing society and male fraternity. Forced to abandon his university studies for lack of funds, Steinhoff enlisted in the Kriegsmarine, where he served for one year alongside his friend Dietrich Hrabak as a naval flying cadet before transferring to the newly reformed Luftwaffe in 1936.

Steinhoff was promoted to Leutnant (second lieutenant) on 1 April 1936. He married his wife Ursula on 29 April 1939 and they had a son, Wolf and a daughter, Ursula. Ursula married economics professor and (now-retired) Colorado State Senator Michael Bird. On 1 January 1939, Steinhoff was promoted to Oberleutnant (first lieutenant).

In the early summer of 1939, the Luftwaffe began experimenting with night fighter procedures for single engine aircraft. Due to a lack of experienced flyers, operations were restricted to evening and early morning hours. On 1 August, Steinhoff was appointed Staffelkapitän (squadron leader) of 11. (Nachtjagd) Staffel (squadron) of Lehrgeschwader 2 (JG 2—2nd Demonstration Wing) which was based at Greifswald. Initially, the squadron was equipped with the Arado Ar 68 fighter before it was reequipped with the Messerschmitt Bf 109 D-1. The unit was subordinated to the Stab (headquarters unit) of Kampfgeschwader 2 (JG 2—2nd Bomber Wing).

World War II

World War II in Europe began on Friday 1 September 1939, when German forces invaded Poland. That day, Steinhoff was transferred to Jagdgeschwader 26 "Schlageter" (JG 26—26th Fighter Wing), which had been named after Albert Leo Schlageter on 1 May 1939. He was appointed Staffelkapitän of a newly created night fighter unit named 10. (Nacht) Staffel of JG 26 which was based at Bonn-Hangelar, near Sankt Augustin, and equipped with the Bf 109 D. On 12 November, the unit was moved to Jever Airfield. On 18 December, Royal Air Force (RAF) Bomber Command launched an attack on German warships assumed to be at Wilhelmshaven in what became known as the Battle of the Heligoland Bight. The RAF attack force was intercepted and Steinhoff was credited with the destruction of two Vickers Wellington bombers from 57th Squadron and Number 3 Group which he claimed to have shot down 25- south-southwest of Heligoland.

On 3 February 1940, a new night fighter unit was created by consolidating three independent single engine fighter squadrons at Jever Airfield. This unit was labelled IV. (Nacht) Gruppe (4th night group) of Jagdgeschwader 2 "Richthofen" (JG 2—2nd Fighter Wing) and placed under the leadership of Hauptmann Albert Blumensaat. In consequence, 10. (Nacht) Staffel of JG 26 became the 11. (Nacht) Staffel of JG 2 which was headed by Steinhoff and was based at Hage. On 23 April, 11. (Nacht) and 12. (Nacht) Staffeln of JG 2 were ordered to Aalborg Airfield in support of Operation Weserübung, the German assault on Denmark and Norway. The two squadrons returned to Germany on 9 May in preparation for the Battle of France. At the start of the campaign on 10 May, 11. (Nacht) Staffel was based at Cologne Butzweilerhof Airfield where it supported Army Group B in the Battle of the Netherlands. That day, Steinhof claimed a Bristol Blenheim bomber near The Hague and a second near Düsseldorf.

In August 1940, he was transferred to 4. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 52 (JG 52—52nd Fighter Wing) where he replaced Oberleutnant Heinz Schumann as Staffelkapitän. The Staffel was subordinated to II. Gruppe of JG 52 which was headed by Hauptmann Wilhelm Ensslen. At the time, the Gruppe was based at Peuplingues near the English Channel and were fighting the RAF during the Battle of Britain. Steinhoff claimed his fifth aerial victory on 30 September. He was credited with the destruction of a Supermarine Spitfire fighter over Dorking. II. Gruppe was withdrawn from the Channel Front on 2 November and moved to München Gladbach, present-day Mönchengladbach, on 5 November for a period of rest and replenishment. The Gruppe had also lost its commanding officer, Ensslen, who was killed in action on 2 November. Ensslen was replaced by Hauptmann Erich Woitke. On 22 December, II. Gruppe was ordered to Leeuwarden Airfield where they were tasked with flying fighter patrols along the Dutch North Sea coast. On 15 January 1941, the Gruppe moved to Ypenburg Airfield where they stayed until 10 February. The Gruppe then moved to Berck-sur-Mer on 14 February, where Steinhoff claimed to have shot down another Spitfire in aerial combat, near Dungeness. On 17 May, II. Gruppe reached Raversijde, its last airfield near the English Channel. Two days later, Steinhoff claimed to have shot down a further two Spitfires on a mission to Canterbury. On 9 June, the air elements of II. Gruppe began relocating east.

Operation Barbarossa

See main article: Operation Barbarossa. In preparation of Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, II. Gruppe of JG 52, without a period of replenishment in Germany, was ordered to airfields close to the German-Soviet demarcation line. While the Gruppenstab (group headquarters unit) and 4. Staffel were based at Suwałki in northeastern Poland, 5. and 6. Staffel were transferred to a forward airfield at Sobolewo. For the invasion, II. Gruppe of JG 52 was subordinated to the Geschwaderstab (headquarters unit) of Jagdgeschwader 27 (JG 27—27th Fighter Wing). The Geschwader was part of the VIII. Fliegerkorps commanded by Generaloberst Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen which supported the northern wing of Army Group Centre.

On 22 June, the German forces launched the attack on the Soviet Union which opened the Eastern Front. The Gruppe supported the advancing 9th Army and 3rd Panzer Group in their attack on the border fortifications east and southeast of Suwałki. That day, Steinhoff claimed a Soviet Polikarpov I-153 fighter shot down near Varėna in Lithuania. On 25 June, the Gruppe moved to an airfield at Varėna which had previously been occupied by the Soviet Air Forces (VVS—Voyenno-Vozdushnye Sily). The next day, Steinhoff claimed an Ilyushin DB-3 bomber shot down south of Varėna. On 28 June, the Gruppe moved to Maladzyechna, supporting the advance 3rd Panzer Group near Barysaw.

On 24 August, II. Gruppe was ordered to an airfield at Spasskaya Polist on the river Polist, south of Chudovo and north of Novgorod on Lake Ilmen, supporting the 18th Army in its advance towards the Neva and Lake Ladoga. Here, Steinhoff claimed his 35th aerial victory on 29 August, for which he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross the following day.

Eastern Front

On 24 January 1942, having been withdrawn from the Eastern Front, II. Gruppe arrived in Jesau near Königsberg, present-day Kaliningrad in Russia, for a period of recuperation and replenishment. That day, the commander of the Gruppe, Woitke, was transferred. On 1 March, Steinhoff became its new Gruppenkommandeur (group commander). In consequence, command of 4. Staffel was handed to Oberleutnant Gerhard Barkhorn. In Jesau, the Gruppe received many factory new Bf 109 F-4 aircraft. On 14 April, II. Gruppe received orders to move to Pilsen, present-day Plzeň in the Czech Republic, for relocation to the Eastern Front.

II. Gruppe was ordered to Tusov on 20 August which is located approximately 25abbr=offNaNabbr=off southwest of Kalach-na-Donu on the western bank of the Don where the Gruppe operated in the combat area of Stalingrad. Here, Steinhoff claimed his 100th aerial victory on 31 August when he shot down two LaGG-3 fighters. He was the 18th Luftwaffe pilot to achieve the century mark. On 1 September, II. Gruppe was ordered to and airfield at Kerch on the Kerch Peninsula. The objective was to capture the Taman Peninsula and Novorossiysk. Here, Steinhoff was credited with the destruction of a minesweeper and the sinking of a motorboat.

On 2 September, Steinhoff was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves (German: Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub). He was the 115th member of the German armed forces to be so honoured. On 4 November, Steinhoff, together with Alfred Druschel, Ernst-Wilhelm Reinert, Günther Rall and Max Stotz received the Oak Leaves from Adolf Hitler personally. On 11 December, during the Battle of Stalingrad, Steinhoff was hit by anti-aircraft artillery in his Bf 109 G-2 (Werknummer 13853—factory number), resulting in a forced landing near Oblivskaya.

Wing commander

Steinhoff left JG 52 on 24 March 1943 and handed over II. Gruppe to Hauptmann Helmut Kühle. On 1 April, he was given command of Jagdgeschwader 77 (JG 77—77th Fighter Wing) as Geschwaderkommodore (wing commander) after its former commander, Major Joachim Müncheberg, had been killed in action on 23 March. Steinhoff took command JG 77 on 3 April. At the time, the Geschwader was based at an airfield north of Sfax, Tunisia and was fighting in the North African campaign. The following day, Steinhoff claimed his only aerial victory in North Africa when he shot down a Spitfire fighter on a mission to El Guettar. On 5 April, he was shot down by a Spitfire fighter resulting in a forced landing at La Fauconnerie which destroyed his Bf 109 G-6 (Werknummer 16492).

Before noon on 25 June, Luftwaffe radar on Monte Erice picked up a large formation of United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) four-engine bombers north of Sicily. The Luftwaffe initially assumed that the bombers were heading for Naples. In reality, the 124 Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress bombers attacked Messina, causing significant damage. The Luftwaffe aerial defences were coordinated by Generalmajor Adolf Galland, the General der Jagdflieger (General of the Fighter Force), and his Inspekteur der Jadgflieger Süd (Inspector of Fighter Pilots South), Oberst Günther Lützow, personally. Galland had intended to consolidate fighters from both JG 77 and Jagdgeschwader 53 (JG 53—53rd Fighter Wing) and to vector the fighters in a closed formation to a point of interception. Because the target was mistaken, the bombers could only be intercepted on their return. Galland scrambled approximately 80 fighters from Stab, I., II. Gruppe of JG 77 and Gruppe of JG 53 at 12:55. Due to hazy weather conditions, the German formation was spread out, and failed to find the bombers quickly. Fuel was already running low when the bombers were spotted approximately 150abbr=offNaNabbr=off northwest of Trapani. Only a few Luftwaffe fighters reached the bombers, including Steinhoff who shot down a B-17.

Steinhoff was promoted to Oberstleutnant (lieutenant colonel) on 1 April 1944. On 28 July 1944, Steinhoff received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords .

On 7 November, Steinhoff left JG 77 and was replaced by Major Johannes Wiese. In total, Steinhoff had flown 100 combat missions and had claimed eleven aerial victories while serving with JG 77. On 11 November, Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring, in his role as commander-in-chief of the Luftwaffe, organised a meeting of high-ranking Luftwaffe officers, including General der Jagdflieger Galland and Steinhoff. The meeting, also referred to as the "Areopag", was held at the Luftkriegsakademie (air war academy) at Berlin-Gatow. This Luftwaffe version of the Greek Areopagus—a court of justice—aimed at finding solutions to the deteriorating air war situation over Germany. At this meeting, Galland asked Steinhoff if he would be interested in commanding the first jet fighter unit.

Flying the Messerschmitt Me 262

Jagdgeschwader 7 "Nowotny" (JG 7—7th Fighter Wing) "Nowotny" was the first operational jet fighter wing in the world and was named after Walter Nowotny, who was killed in action on 8 November 1944. Nowotny had been assessing the Messerschmitt Me 262 jet aircraft under operational conditions. JG 7 was equipped with the Me 262, an aircraft which was heavily armed and faster than any Allied fighter. Galland hoped that the Me 262 would compensate for the Allies' numerical superiority. On 12 November 1944, the Oberkommando der Luftwaffe (OKL—Air Force High Command) ordered JG 7 to be equipped with the Me 262. Following the exchange with Steinhoff at the "Areopag", Galland appointed Steinhoff as its first Geschwaderkommodore.

Steinhoff was allowed to hand-pick several Staffelkapitäne, including Heinz Bär and Gerhard Barkhorn. After the heavy losses suffered during Operation Bodenplatte (Unternehmen Bodenplatte), Steinhoff and other fighter leaders fell into disfavour following the so-called 'Fighter Pilots' Revolt' against what was perceived as the incompetence of Luftwaffe high command and Göring in particular. Along with several others, Steinhoff was relieved of his command for challenging Göring's leadership. He was replaced by Major Theodor Weissenberger.

After a brief period spent in internal exile, Steinhoff transferred to the Jet Experten unit Jagdverband 44 (JV 44—44th Fighter Detachment) being formed by his close friend and confidant Adolf Galland in early 1945. Steinhoff initially acted as a de facto recruiting officer, persuading a number of veteran Luftwaffe aces to join the unit, some coming out of the Fighter Pilots' Rest Home at Bad Wiessee to do so. Steinhoff scored six confirmed kills with the unit.[1] Steinhoff survived nearly 1,000 combat missions, only to see his flying career come to an end on the ground.

As a member of JV 44, Steinhoff was permanently disfigured after receiving major burns across most of his body after crashing his Me 262 after a failed take-off. On 18 April 1945, Steinhoff's Me 262 crashed on take-off from München-Riem airfield. His flight leader's left wheel blew out and caused him to make a sharp left turn, careening into Steinhoff and causing him to run off the runway and rupturing the fuel tanks located in front, under, and behind him. Steinhoff and the men he was going up with that day were armed with an experimental under-wing rocket which, along with the cannon ammunition Steinhoff was carrying, made escape more difficult due to the amount of ordnance exploding around him. According to ace fighter pilot and member of JV 44, Franz Stigler, "In a matter of seconds, Steinhoff had turned into a human torch". His chances of survival were slim although he pulled through, but with severe burns leaving him terribly scarred. Steinhoff spent two years in hospital, and years of reconstructive surgery, with his eyelids being rebuilt by a British surgeon after the war.

His wartime record was 176 aircraft claimed destroyed, of which 152 were on the Eastern Front, 12 on the Western Front and 12 in the Mediterranean. He also flew 993 operational sorties. Steinhoff was shot down 12 times but bailed out only once. Explaining his preference to remain with his damaged aircraft, Steinhoff admitted, "I bailed out only once. I never trusted the parachutes. I always landed my damaged planes, hoping not to get bounced on the way down when I lost power".

Later life and service

With the German Air Force and NATO

Steinhoff was invited by West Germany's new interim government to rebuild the Luftwaffe within NATO, eventually rising to the rank of full general. Steinhoff became the German Military Representative to the NATO Military Committee in 1960, served as Acting Commander Allied Air Forces Central Europe in NATO 1965–1966, as Inspector of the Air Force 1966–1970 and as Chairman of the NATO Military Committee 1971–1974.

Steinhoff received numerous honours for his work on the structure of the post war German Air Force and the integration of the German Federal Armed Forces into NATO, including: The Order of Merit with Star, the American Legion of Merit and the French Légion d'honneur.

One of Steinhoff's contributions was dealing with the high accident rate the air force was having with its F-104 Starfighters. Upon researching the issue, Steinhoff, who had always been a good teacher, deduced that the problem was not the aircraft but poor training for pilots on that particular aircraft. He addressed the problem with an intensive training regime and the accident rate dropped dramatically.

After retiring from his NATO command in 1974, Steinhoff became a widely read author of books on German military aviation during the war and the experiences of the German people at that time. He wrote The Final Hours, which detailed a late-war plot against Hermann Göring, and also published a vivid account of his time in Italy: Messerschmitts over Sicily: Diary of a Luftwaffe Fighter Commander. Steinhoff also became a water-colourist, and chairman of Germany's Dornier Aviation.

Bitburg cemetery controversy

See main article: Bitburg controversy. In May 1985, Steinhoff met Ronald Reagan, then President of the United States, during a visit to the WWII Kolmeshöhe Military Cemetery near Bitburg. The event was planned to be an act of reconciliation on the 40th anniversary of V-E Day. Reagan and West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl were to pay their respects at the German military cemetery. However, the US President faced national and political pressure to cancel the visit from American Jewish groups and World War II American veterans after it was discovered that 22 Waffen-SS men were buried among the 2,000 military graves. The presence of Nazi soldiers led to the controversy because the entire SS had been adjudged to be a criminal organisation at the Nuremberg trials. Although not part of the original itinerary, as part of their own reconciliatory gesture, Reagan and Kohl made an impromptu visit to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp before visiting Bitburg, thus reducing the time Reagan had to spend at Kolmeshöhe Military Cemetery to only eight minutes. He was joined by Steinhoff, Kohl and 90-year-old US Army General Matthew Ridgway who had commanded the 82nd Airborne in World War II. After Reagan placed a wreath at the cemetery memorial, they all stood to attention while a short trumpet salute was played. At the end, Steinhoff suddenly turned and, in an unscripted act, shook hands with Ridgway. A surprised Kohl later thanked Steinhoff for his actions, who later said that it just seemed to be the right thing to do.[2] [3] [4]

Death

On 21 February 1994, Steinhoff died in a Bonn hospital from complications arising from a heart attack he suffered the previous December. He was 80, and had lived in nearby Bad Godesberg.

Summary of career

Aerial victory claims

According to US historian David T. Zabecki, Steinhoff was credited with 176 aerial victories. Mathews and Foreman, authors of Luftwaffe Aces — Biographies and Victory Claims, researched the German Federal Archives and found records for 168 aerial victory claims, plus nine further unconfirmed claims. This figure of confirmed claims includes 149 aerial victories on the Eastern Front and 19 on the Western Front, including three four-engine bombers and six victories with the Me 262 jet fighter.

Victory claims were logged to a map-reference (PQ = Planquadrat), for example "PQ 95371". The Luftwaffe grid map (German: Jägermeldenetz) covered all of Europe, western Russia and North Africa and was composed of rectangles measuring 15 minutes of latitude by 30 minutes of longitude, an area of about 360sqmi. These sectors were then subdivided into 36 smaller units to give a location area 3x in size.

Chronicle of aerial victories
ClaimDateTimeTypeLocationClaimDateTimeTypeLocation
– 10(Nacht). Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 26 "Schlageter" –
"Phoney War" — 1 September 1939 – 9 May 1940
118 December 193914:30Wellington30km (20miles) southwest of Heligoland218 December 193914:35Wellington30km (20miles) southwest of Heligoland
– 11(Nacht). Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 2 "Richthofen" –
Battle of France — 10 May – 25 June 1940
310 May 1940BlenheimThe Hague410 May 1940BlenheimDüsseldorf
– 4. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Action at the Channel and over England — 26 June 1940 – 9 June 1941
530 September 194013:45SpitfireDorking719 May 194112:40Spitfirenorth of Dover
Canterbury
614 February 194113:00Spitfire30km (20miles) north of Dungeness819 May 194112:45Spitfirenorth of Dover
– 4. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Operation Barbarossa — 22 June – 5 December 1941
922 June 194110:00I-15?Varėna3126 August 194108:55I-17 (MiG-1)Mal. Bronitza
1026 June 194109:32DB-3south of Varėna3226 August 194108:58I-17 (MiG-1)15km (09miles) southeast of Lyuban
111 July 194118:26I-16north of Barysaw3327 August 194115:38R-56km (04miles) northeast of Ljesja
122 July 194117:22DB-3Barysaw3427 August 194115:39R-53km (02miles) northeast of Ljesja
13?2 July 1941DB-3south of Barysaw3529 August 194115:10I-15southeast of Kolpino
142 July 194117:34DB-3south of Smalyavichy361 September 194115:15DB-330km (20miles) northeast of Lyuban
153 July 194118:19DB-3northeast of Barysaw376 September 194111:55I-18 (MiG-1)1km (01miles) northwest of Mga railroad
163 July 194118:30DB-3northeast of Barysaw386 September 194116:47I-18 (MiG-1)Makovo railway station
174 July 194112:02DB-3west of Vitebsk3926 September 194107:55I-18 (MiG-1)10km (10miles) west of Wolchowstroj
185 July 194106:28DB-3north of Ulla403 October 194114:17I-15310km (10miles) northeast of Chełm
196 July 194112:40DB-3north of Dzisna415 October 194107:10I-18 (MiG-1)30km (20miles) northwest of Vyazma
207 July 194112:15DB-3west of Polotsk426 October 194106:25?I-1610km (10miles) southeast of Chełm
21?9 July 1941Pe-2northwest of Besvhenkowitschi4318 October 194115:17Pe-2north of Kalinin
2222 July 194111:05I-16south of Wyssokaja4418 October 194115:18Pe-2Kalinin
2326 July 194105:12V-11 (Il-2)northeast of Yartsevo4524 October 194115:55Pe-2southwest of Kalinin
2427 July 194118:05I-18 (MiG-1)north of Vyazma4614 November 194115:55?I-18 (MiG-1)5km (03miles) south of Vyazma
2528 July 194117:35I-18 (MiG-1)6km (04miles) east of Gorky4726 November 194113:20?I-26 (Yak-1)10km (10miles) south of Stolnetschnogorst
2629 July 194117:28DB-3northwest of Lake Tschutsche4828 November 194109:20Il-210km (10miles) east of Istra
2729 July 194117:34DB-3southwest of Tschernaja4928 November 194114:50BB-22 (Seversky)10km (10miles) southwest of Stolnetschnogorst
2810 August 194113:35?I-168km (05miles) north of Shimsk502 December 194108:25BB-22 (Seversky)Belji-Rast
2925 August 194112:10I-1610km (10miles) northwest of Tosno512 December 194114:30BB-22 (Seversky)10km (10miles) west of Moscow
3026 August 194108:50I-17 (MiG-1)10km (10miles) southwest of Lyuban
– II. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Eastern Front — 7 May 1942 – 3 February 1943
529 May 194204:00I-1535km (03miles) west of Akmonaj1028 September 194214:40LaGG-35km (03miles) northeast of Malgobek
539 May 194212:43I-1532km (01miles) west of Sedshent1038 September 194214:42LaGG-35km (03miles) northeast of Malgobek
5415 May 194204:17MiG-1Staryi Saltiv10410 September 194214:25LaGG-310km (10miles) southeast of Malgobek
5517 May 194209:34MiG-1Borogoditschnoje10516 September 194216:20LaGG-35km (03miles) north of Kalinowskaja
5619 May 194208:35MiG-13km (02miles) west of Jaskow10617 September 194214:40Su-25km (03miles) northwest of Meckenskaja
5719 May 194214:55Il-220km (10miles) south of Izium10717 September 194216:40LaGG-32km (01miles) west of Kalaus River
5823 May 194205:45MiG-12km (01miles) south of Petrowerka10820 September 194209:40I-16PQ 95371, Gelendzhik
5923 May 194214:26V-11 (Il-2)6km (04miles) northwest of Odjanyi10926 September 194215:39Yak-110km (10miles) northeast of Gelendzhik
6026 May 194211:30Il-24km (02miles) north of Petroskaja11026 September 194215:40Yak-110km (10miles) northeast of Gelendzhik
6126 May 194217:24Il-21km (01miles) east of Iwanowka11111 November 194208:10Yak-1PQ 94161, Lazarevskoye
622 June 194212:38I-165km (03miles) east of Grakowo11211 November 194214:18LaGG-310km (10miles) north of Lazarevskoye
634 June 194218:45Il-24km (02miles) east of Grakowo11328 November 194207:50P-405km (03miles) south of Pitomnik airfield
6414 June 194216:10LaGG-35km (03miles) west of Kosorsha11428 November 194210:40Yak-1PQ 49184, Pitomnik Airfield
6522 June 194217:55Hurricane5km (03miles) northwest of Kupiansk11530 November 194207:45Yak-125km (16miles) northwest of Morozovsk (Morosowskaja)
6623 June 194219:21Su-25km (03miles) north of Kupiansk11630 November 194207:47?Yak-125km (16miles) north of Morosowskaja
671 July 194210:05Il-2Krasowka11730 November 194210:15Yak-1PQ 39424, Marinowka
681 July 194210:10BostonKrasowka11830 November 194210:30P-40PQ 40754, Schirkokow
693 July 194213:15Hurricane8km (05miles) east of Novy Oskol1191 December 194208:20Yak-15km (03miles) south of Spartek
704 July 194210:32LaGG-31km (01miles) southwest of Ostroghosk1202 December 194212:15Yak-15km (03miles) south of Bassargewo
7110 July 194210:30LaGG-31217 December 194213:23P-4010km (10miles) southeast of Bratkij
7217 July 194207:55I-161228 December 194209:10BostonPQ 29253, Sslepichin
7319 July 194213:50I-1535km (03miles) southwest of Koisug1238 December 194212:30Boston10km (10miles) west of Karachev
7420 July 194216:15LaGG-35km (03miles) southeast of Batajsk1248 December 194212:40MiG-13km (02miles) east of Nishnj Kubanskij
7523 July 194218:10I-162km (01miles) south of Kastora1258 December 194212:50MiG-13km (02miles) east of Nishnj Kubanskij
7624 July 194216:23Il-24km (02miles) south of Wislyi12610 December 194211:40LaGG-38km (05miles) west of Pitomnik airfield
7725 July 194217:40I-1535km (03miles) west of Martinowskaja12711 December 194209:23Yak-1PQ 29633, southwest of Grosnaja
7821 August 194216:00I-180 (Yak-7)PQ 49411, Stalingrad
5km (03miles) east of Stalingrad
12811 December 194209:26Yak-1PQ 2949, Ostrowskoj
7922 August 194210:20LaGG-31km (01miles) south of Serepta12912 December 194212:22Pe-2PQ 38342, west of Kotelnikowo
8022 August 194210:55HurricanePQ 49411, Stalingrad13013 December 194212:15Pe-2PQ 38282, Ssamchin
81♠23 August 194205:40LaGG-34km (02miles) south of Semenk13113 December 194212:16Yak-15km (03miles) south of Aksay
82♠23 August 194205:50LaGG-32km (01miles) north of Jaryew13217 December 194207:10P-405km (03miles) north of Shutow 2
83♠23 August 194212:20I-15310km (10miles) west of Gorodischtsche13317 December 194213:15Yak-110km (10miles) northeast of Shutow 2
84♠23 August 194215:10I-180 (Yak-7)PQ 49413, Krasnaya Sloboda13418 December 194210:33Yak-16km (04miles) east of Gromoslawka
85♠23 August 194217:25LaGG-3PQ 49411, Stalingrad13520 December 194210:53Yak-15km (03miles) southwest of Vasilyevka
8624 August 194206:20I-180 (Yak-7)PQ 59323, Leninsk13625 December 194213:00Yak-1PQ 38241, south of Shutowo
8725 August 194211:05LaGG-31km (01miles) north of Stalingrad13725 December 194213:30Pe-2PQ 38334, north of Tschernj
8825 August 194211:07LaGG-310km (10miles) northwest of Akhtuba13828 December 194210:37?La-55km (03miles) north of Kotelnikowo
8925 August 194214:45I-180 (Yak-7)2km (01miles) north of Saplaunoje13928 December 194212:55La-510km (10miles) east of Kotelnikowo
9025 August 194217:37I-180 (Yak-7)5km (03miles) east of Stalingrad1409 January 194312:43Yak-1PQ 28782, 2km (01miles) north of Kuberke railway station
9127 August 194205:35I-180 (Yak-7)PQ 49431, Srednyaya Akhtuba1419 January 194312:50Yak-1PQ 28872, 2km (01miles) east of Matschenkow
9227 August 194211:34I-180 (Yak-7)1km (01miles) east of Krasnaya Sloboda14214 January 194314:32Il-2PQ 17263, east of Igand
9328 August 194214:50LaGG-3PQ 49223, Werchne14314 January 194314:33La-5PQ 17263, east of Igand
9428 August 194214:57LaGG-310km (10miles) east of Rachinka14414 January 194314:33La-5PQ 27242, east of Igand
95♠30 August 194213:10LaGG-35km (03miles) north of Konnoja railway station14525 January 194311:50La-5PQ 9865, east of Rostov
96♠30 August 194213:12LaGG-330km (20miles) west of Dubovka14626 January 194310:15BostonPQ 08521, Nowo Tscherkassk
97♠30 August 194217:00LaGG-3PQ 49362, Beketowka14731 January 194313:00BostonPQ 09871, east of Rostov
98♠30 August 194217:10LaGG-35km (03miles) south of Andrejewka1481 February 194314:25Yak-1PQ 9962, east of Rostov
99♠30 August 194217:12LaGG-35km (03miles) south of Andrejewka1492 February 194309:25Yak-1PQ 9962, east of Rostov
10031 August 194205:20LaGG-31km (01miles) south of Kurpjok1502 February 194309:28Yak-1PQ 99622, east of Rostov
10131 August 194217:05LaGG-310km (10miles) north of Krasnoarmejsk
– II. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Eastern Front — February 1943
15112 February 194312:02Yak-1PQ 34 Ost 8659, Flamanskaja15423 February 194312:47Yak-1PQ 34 Ost 8656, 10km (10miles) north of Staromyschastowskaja
15223 February 194309:02Il-2PQ 34 Ost 76664, west of Flamjanskaja15525 February 194308:40Yak-1PQ 34 Ost 7523, Krymskaja
Krymsk
15323 February 194312:45Yak-1PQ 34 Ost 8656
Stab of Jagdgeschwader 77 –
North Africa — April 1943
1564 April 1943Spitfiresouthwest of La Fauconnerie
Stab of Jagdgeschwader 77 –
Italy — June – 31 December 1943
15725 June 194313:25B-17PQ 03 Ost 19154, west of Trapani16125 August 194309:59P-388km (05miles) south of San Severo
1587 July 194317:25Martlet20km (10miles) southwest of Marsala162?25 August 194310:00P-3810km (10miles) south-southwest of San Severo
159?8 July 1943P-40Trapani16325 August 194310:01P-3815km (09miles) south-southwest of San Severo
16025 August 194309:58P-385km (03miles) south of San Severo1641 December 194310:59Mosquitosouthwest of Piacenza
Stab of Jagdgeschwader 77 –
Italy — June – 31 December 1943
165?25 February 1944B-17*southwest of Klagenfurt1679 June 194411:45B-24PQ 14 Ost S/TH-1, south of Pula
16610 May 194412:50P-3860km (40miles) southeast of Zagreb14 July 1944B-25
Stab of Jagdgeschwader 77 –
Eastern Front — September 1944
22 September 1944Yak-924 September 1944Yak-9
24 September 1944Il-225 September 1944Bf 109vicinity of Klausenberg
Stab of Jagdgeschwader 7 "Nowotny" –
Eastern Front — February – March 1945
16927 February 1945Yak-917120 March 1945Il-2
17027 February 1945Yak-9
Jagdverband 44 –
Defense of the Reich — April 1945
1723 April 1945B-171749 April 1945P-51
1735 April 1945P-51Riem

Awards and honours

In 1990, the former Royal Air Force Gatow in Berlin Gatow, was named General Steinhoff Kaserne on being taken over by the German Federal Armed Forces. On 18 September 1997 the Jagdgeschwader 73 (fighter wing 73) of the German Air Force was named "Steinhoff" in honour of the general. Steinhoff is one of only a handful of pilots honoured in this way, along with Manfred von Richthofen and Max Immelmann.

Publications

Steinhoff wrote the following books:

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. For a list of Luftwaffe Jet aces see List of German World War II jet aces
  2. News: Reagan to Honor German War Dead on V-E Day Trip. Los Angeles Times. 12 April 1985. Skelton. George.
  3. Web site: Ronald Reagan: Remarks at a Joint German-American Military Ceremony at Bitburg Air Base in the Federal Republic of Germany. 5 May 1985.
  4. News: Reagan joins Kohl in brief memorial at Bitburg graves. The New York Times. 6 May 1985.