Otto Schulz (pilot) explained

Otto Schulz
Birth Date:11 February 1911
Nickname:Eins-Zwei-Drei Schulz
Birth Place:Treptow an der Rega, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire
Death Place:near Sidi Rezegh, Italian Libya
Serviceyears:1934–1942
Rank:Oberleutnant (first lieutenant)
Unit:Jagdgeschwader 27
Awards:Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross

Otto Schulz (11 February 1911 – 17 June 1942) was a German Luftwaffe military aviator and fighter ace in World War II. He is credited with 51 aerial victories claimed in over 450 combat missions whilst flying the Messerschmitt Bf 109. He claimed 48 aerial victories against the Western Allies and three over the Eastern Front.

Born in Treptow an der Rega, Schulz joined the Luftwaffe in 1934 and served as a fighter pilot instructor. In January 1940, he was transferred to Jagdgeschwader 27 (JG 27—27th Fighter Wing) and he claimed his first aerial victory on 31 August 1940 during the Battle of Britain. Following service during the Balkans Campaign and Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, he was transferred to the North African Theater in September 1941. He was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 22 February 1942 following his 44th aerial victory. On 17 June 1942, he was killed in action near Sidi Rezegh, shot down by James Francis Edwards.

Early life and career

Schulz was born on 11 February 1911 in Treptow an der Rega, present-day Trzebiatów in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland, at the time in the Province of Pomerania of the German Empire. He joined the military service of the Luftwaffe in 1934, was trained as a pilot, and served as a fighter pilot instructor. On 3 January 1940, Schulz was posted to Jagdgeschwader 27 (JG 27—27th Fighter Wing). There, he was assigned to the newly created 4. Staffel (4th squadron), a squadron of II. Gruppe (2nd group).[1]

II. Gruppe had been created that very same day at the airfield in Magdeburg-Ost (German: Fliegerhorst Magdeburg-Ost) and was initially placed under the command of Hauptmann Erich von Selle. Command transferred to Hauptmann Werner Anders on 6 February while 4. Staffel was commanded by Oberleutnant Hermann Hollweg. The Gruppe was equipped with Messerschmitt Bf 109 E-1 and E-3 variant. For the first weeks, the Gruppe conducted various flight exercises before on 10 February they were ordered to move to Döberitz. There, the unit was tasked with providing fighter protection for Berlin. On 19 April, II. Gruppe began its transfer to the west, with 4. Staffel moving to Essen-Mühlheim. For the upcoming Battle of France, II. Gruppe was placed under the control of the Stab (headquarters unit) of Jagdgeschwader 51 (JG 51—51st Fighter Wing) under command of Oberst Theo Osterkamp. The Gruppe was briefly ordered to return to Döberitz on 24 April before returning west again on 3 May.

World War II

World War II in Europe had begun on Friday 1 September 1939 when German forces invaded Poland. During the campaign against France, II. Gruppe, as a subordinated unit to JG 51 was controlled by Jagdfliegerführer 2, Oberst Kurt-Bertram von Döring, and was deployed on the right flank of Luftflotte 2 (Air Fleet 2), supporting the attack of Army Group B against the Netherlands. On 10 May, the day the Wehrmacht launched the attack, 4. Staffel was located in Wesel and flew missions to Rotterdam.

Following the Armistice of 22 June 1940, II. Gruppe was sent to Wunstorf near Hanover for replenishment. On 8 July, the Gruppe began its relocation west again, with 4. Staffel arriving in Leeuwarden on 11 July. Schulz claimed his first victory on 31 August 1940 over a Royal Air Force (RAF) Supermarine Spitfire fighter in the vicinity of Dover. On 7 September, 4. Staffel was placed under the command of Staffelkapitän (squadron leader) Oberleutnant Gustav Rödel. On 28 October, Schulz claimed his fourth overall and last aerial victory of 1940. On a fighter escort mission to London, he shot down a Spitfire in the vicinity of Gravesend. On 5 November, II. Gruppe was withdrawn from combat operations on the English Channel, relocating to Detmold on 9 November.

Schulz also participated in the brief Balkan Campaign in April 1941, scoring two victories, flying out of airbases in Bulgaria then Greece. His unit, as with most of the Luftwaffe, was then withdrawn for the imminent invasion of Russia. Despite II./JG 27's very brief 9-day participation in Operation Barbarossa, he scored three victories. Two of these were some of the 25 bombers shot down over Vilnius by II./JG 27 on 25 June, however most of that short time the Gruppe was tasked with fighter-bomber missions.

North Africa

Following the withdrawal from the Eastern Front, II. Gruppe arrived in Döberitz on 24 July 1941. The entire personnel then went on vacation, returning to Döberitz on 18 August. Over the next three weeks, the Gruppe converted to the Bf 109 F-4 fighter. Relocation to the North African Theater began on 7 September, with 4. Staffel transferring south on 16 September and was based at an airfield in Ain el Gazala. There, II. Gruppe joined I. Gruppe of JG 27 which was already based in North Africa. On 26 September, II. Gruppe flew its first combat missions in North Africa, a combat air patrol to Sollum.

On 6 October 1941, 30 October and 28 November, he recorded three victories on each day. On 6 October Lieutenants Miller or Neville McGarr from 2 Squadron SAAF were one other those claims—Rödel downed one of them. On the latter date he downed Lieutenant Palm, Pilot Officer Muhart and Flying Officer Vos. Muhart was hospitalised with burns but the other pilots failed to return.

Schulz's score-sheet is slightly unusual in that many of his victories can be positively identified with specific Allied pilots: On 30 November 1941, his 23rd and 24th victims were aces Sergeant Alan Cameron (6.5 victories) and Pilot Officer Neville Duke (27 victories). Cameron was rescued by Wing Commander Peter Jeffrey and flown to base. Schulz claimed his 30th victory on 15 December, when he shot down and killed Pilot Officer Geoffrey Ranger (5 victories) of No. 250 Squadron. This was followed by downing the Australian ace Nicky Barr on 11 January 1942. On 25 January 1942, Schulz claimed two Curtiss P-40 Warhawk fighters for his 34th and 35th victories. This put him two aerial victories ahead of Rödel and made him the top scorer in II./JG 27 at the time.

On 8 February 1942, Schulz engaged 1 SAAF Hurricanes. He shot down Lieutenants Finney and Biden and then damaged Lieutenant Powell's aircraft in the tail. Each time Schulz descended to strafe and destroy the crash landed fighters from combat altitude of 9000feet. On 15 February 1942, he took off on his own and chased after 20 aircraft of No. 94 and No. 112 Squadron that had just strafed his airfield at Martuba. He shot down five P-40 Kittyhawks in ten minutes, including the top 17-victory RAF ace Ernest "Imshi" Mason, making him an "ace-in-a-day". Schulz was credited with five, the last was Sergeant McQueen's P-40. McQueen was wounded but limped back to base—an Italian 6°Gruppo pilot also claimed a P-40 and may have attacked McQueen. The remaining pilots, Pilot Officer John Robert Vernall Marshall, Sergeant Charles Belcher, and Edward Weightman were killed. Schulz was given credit in part due to the witness report of a German tank commander.

This put him on 44 victories, just behind the 48 of the then top-scorer in the Desert, Hans-Joachim Marseille. In recognition of this success, they were both awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross (German: Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes) on the same day - 22 February - the first such awards for JG 27 since arriving in North Africa. After this his scoring slowed down to only three victories in March. On 15 March Schulz downed Sergeant Rozanski, No. 112 Squadron. Sent to officer-training school, he was promoted to Leutnant in April. At the end of May, now an Oberleutnant and assigned to the Stab (headquarters unit) flight of II. Gruppe as Technical Officer, he had another quick flurry of four victories including his 50th on 31 May: a P-40 flown by South African ace Major Andrew Duncan (5.5 victories) of No. 5 Squadron SAAF, who was killed.

Death

On 17 June 1942, after claiming his 51st and last victory (Canadian ace Flight Lieutenant Walter "Wally" Conrad (6.5 victories) of No. 274 Squadron), Schulz himself was shot down and killed in his Bf 109 F-4trop (Werknummer 10 271—factory number) by RAF Kittyhawks near Sidi Rezegh. Schulz descended to low level to strafe Conrad's P-40 when he was caught by an Allied fighter. Research suggests the victory should be credited to Canadian ace James "Stocky" Edwards of No. 260 Squadron RAF. At the time of his death, behind Marseille and Günther Freiherr von Maltzahn, Schulz was in third place with respect to the number of aerial victories claimed in the North African Theater.

Summary of career

Aerial victory claims

According to Obermaier, Schulz was credited with 51 aerial victories claimed in approximately 400 combat missions, including three victories on the Eastern Front and 42 in North Africa. Mathews and Foreman, authors of Luftwaffe Aces — Biographies and Victory Claims, researched the German Federal Archives and found records for more than 50 aerial victory claims, plus one further unconfirmed claim. This number includes three claims on the Eastern Front and 47 on the Western Front.

Chronicle of aerial victories
ClaimDateTimeTypeLocationUnitClaimDateTimeTypeLocationUnit
– Claims with II. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 27 –
On the Channel Front — August – November 1940
131 August 194013:40SpitfireDover4./JG 7733 September 194011:35SpitfireThames Estuary4./JG 77
21 September 194015:15SpitfireAshford4./JG 77428 October 194015:30SpitfireGravesend4./JG 77
– Claims with II. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 27 –
During the Balkan Campaign — April 1940
515 April 194106:55PZL P.24west Trikkala4./JG 77620 April 194117:10HurricaneMegara4./JG 77
– Claims with II. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 27 –
On the Eastern Front — 22 June – 19 July 1941
722 June 194108:20I-15north of Alytus4./JG 77926 June 194114:40SB-3east of Paratjanowo4./JG 77
826 June 194109:25SB-3north-northwest of Vilnius4./JG 77
– Claims with II. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 27 –
In North Africa — 22 September 1941 – June 1942
106 October 194109:10P-40southeast of Sidi Omar4./JG 773120 December 194109:40P-40west of Maraua4./JG 77
116 October 194109:15Hurricanesoutheast of Sidi Omar4./JG 773220 December 194109:43P-40west of Maraua4./JG 77
126 October 194109:20Hurricanesoutheast of Sidi Omar4./JG 773311 January 194213:10P-40Antelat4./JG 77
1330 October 194109:30Hurricanesouth of Bardia4./JG 773425 January 194216:35P-40northeast of Antelat4./JG 77
1430 October 194109:35Hurricanewest-southwest of Bardia4./JG 773525 January 194216:40P-4025km (16miles) northeast Antelat4./JG 77
1530 October 194109:43Hurricane25km (16miles) southwest of Sollum4./JG 77368 February 194210:35P-40Ain el Gazala airfield4./JG 77
1617 November 194107:10Bombaynortheast of Ain el Gazala4./JG 77378 February 194210:40P-40east of Ain el Gazala4./JG 77
1721 November 194109:55Wellingtonsouthwest of El Adem4./JG 773813 February 194210:22P-40northeast of Tobruk4./JG 77
1822 November 194116:55P-4020km (10miles) southeast of Bir Hacheim4./JG 773913 February 194210:30P-40Tobruk4./JG 77
1925 November 194116:00P-40north of Tobruk4./JG 7740♠15 February 194217:45P-40southeast of Martuba4./JG 77
2028 November 194116:00P-40north of El Adem4./JG 7741♠15 February 194217:46P-40southeast of Martuba4./JG 77
2128 November 194116:10Hurricanesouthwest of El Adem4./JG 7742♠15 February 194217:47P-40southeast of Martuba4./JG 77
2228 November 194116:12HurricaneEl Adem4./JG 7743♠15 February 194217:50P-40west of Ain el Gazala4./JG 77
2330 November 194109:10P-40northeast of Bir el Gubi4./JG 7744♠15 February 194217:55P-4035km (22miles) southeast of Martuba4./JG 77
2430 November 194109:20P-40southwest of El Adem4./JG 774513 March 194212:35P-40southwest of Tobruk4./JG 77
254 December 194110:16P-40Bir el Gubi4./JG 7746?15 March 194211:32P-4010km (10miles) south Fort Acroma4./JG 77
266 December 194112:28Blenheimsoutheast of El Adem4./JG 774728 May 194212:20P-4015km (09miles) northwest of El Adem4./JG 77
276 December 194112:30Blenheimsoutheast of El Adem4./JG 774828 May 194216:12P-4015km (09miles) east of El Adem4./JG 77
287 December 194109:50Bostonsouth of Ain el Gazala4./JG 774931 May 194218:57P-4020km (10miles) southwest of El Adem4./JG 77
298 December 194113:10Bostonnorth of Ridotto4./JG 775031 May 194219:00P-4015km (09miles) southwest of El Adem4./JG 77
3015 December 194111:30P-40southwest of Geziregh4./JG 775117 June 194210:20Hurricaneeast of Bu Amud4./JG 77

Awards

References

Bibliography

. . 2000 . 1986 . Die Träger des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939–1945 — Die Inhaber der höchsten Auszeichnung des Zweiten Weltkrieges aller Wehrmachtteile . The Bearers of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross 1939–1945 — The Owners of the Highest Award of the Second World War of all Wehrmacht Branches . de . Friedberg, Germany . Podzun-Pallas . 978-3-7909-0284-6.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. For an explanation of Luftwaffe unit designations see Organization of the Luftwaffe during World War II.