Kurt Ungewitter Explained

Kurt Ungewitter
Birth Date:13 November 1891
Birth Place:Elberfeld, German Empire
Allegiance:Germany
Branch:Aviation (Luftstreitkräfte)
Serviceyears:1913 - ca 1918
Rank:Vizefeldwebel
Unit:Schutzstaffel 5 (Protection Squadron 5), Jagdstaffel 24 (Fighter Squadron 24)
Awards:Iron Cross (both classes)

Vizefeldwebel Kurt Ungewitter was a German test pilot for Rumpler Flugzeugwerke and Albatros Flugzeugwerke, aircraft manufacturers in 1913. During World War I, he became a flying ace credited with seven aerial victories.[1] He died in a postwar flying accident on 14 March 1927.

Biography

Kurt Ungewitter was born in Elberfeld on 13 November 1891. He had an early interest in aviation; he learned to fly in 1913 and became a test pilot for two German aircraft companies, Albatros and Rumpler until the start of the First World War.[2] On 27 February 1914, just before the First World War began, he qualified for pilot certificate No. 683.[3]

His assignments and actions in the early days of the war are unknown; however, he was still a Gefreiter when assigned to Schutzstaffel 5 (Protection squadron 5) in 1917.[2]

On 3 January 1918, Ungewitter flew a DFW C.V that attacked a British aerial photography mission flown by Keith Park and his observer. The latter, Lieutenant John Henry Robertson, fired a burst of machine gun fire into the German two-seater, which dropped away in a sharp dive. The British air crew submitted a combat report claiming a "driven down out of control" victory. It was confirmed.[4] Ungewitter also submitted a combat report claiming victory over Park and Robertson. It was denied.[2]

However, flying with Vizefeldwebel Meinke as the aerial observer manning the guns in the rear seat, Ungewitter and Meinke scored two confirmed aerial victories in early 1918, on 9 January and 18 February. Ungewitter was awarded both the Second Class and First Class Iron Cross.[2]

He was subsequently promoted, first to Unteroffizier, then to Vizefeldwebel. Though there is no mention of Ungewitter receiving the usual advanced training at Jastaschule (Fighter School), on 6 June 1918 he left Flug Park 18 (Flight Park 18) on a posting to a fighter squadron, Jagdstaffel 24. At 1940 hours on 27 June, he scored his first single-seater victory when he destroyed an observation balloon over Saint Just.[2]

Ungewitter would not score again until 23 September 1918, when he downed a Bristol F.2b Fighter at 1725 hours over Levergies. He would destroy a Royal Aircraft Factory SE.5 on morning sorties on both 3 and 8 October. A final victory over Sopwith Dolphin number C8165 from No. 87 Squadron RAF on 4 November 1918, just one week before the war ended, brought his total to seven victories.[2]

Kurt Ungewitter was killed in a flying accident on 14 March 1927.[2]

References

, 9781846032011.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kurt Ungewitter.
  2. Franks et al 1993, p. 222.
  3. http://autoveteranen.de/flugzeug/piloten4.html German pilot's license listing
  4. Guttman 2007, p. 16.