Willi Nemitz Explained

Willi Nemitz
Nickname:Altvater (grandfather)
Birth Date:1 November 1910
Birth Place:Greifenhagen, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire
Death Place:Anapa, Krasnodar Krai, RFSR
Child:yes
Death Cause:Killed in action
Rank:Leutnant (second lieutenant)
Unit:JG 52
Commands:5./JG 52, 6./JG 52
Awards:Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross

Willi Nemitz (1 November 1910 – 11 April 1943) was a German Luftwaffe military aviator and fighter ace during World War II. He was one of the oldest operational fighter pilots and was credited with 81 aerial victories, all of which claimed on the Eastern Front, achieved in approximately 500 combat missions.

Born in Greifenhagen in Pomerania, Nemitz joined the military service in the Luftwaffe. Following flight training, he was posted to Jagdgeschwader 52 (JG 52—52nd Fighter Wing) in 1940. During Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, he claimed his first aerial victory on 3 July 1941. In November 1942, he was made Staffelführer, temporary command position, of 5. Staffel (5th squadron) of JG 52. He then commanded 6. Staffel of JG 52 and was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 24 March 1943. He was shot down and killed in action on 11 April 1943 near Anapa during the Battle of the Caucasus.

Career

Nemitz was born on 1 November 1910 in Greifenhagen in Pomerania, at the time in the Province of Pomerania, a province of the Kingdom of Prussia within the German Empire, present-day Gryfino in northwestern Poland. He was the son of a farmer. Following flight training, he was posted to 5. Staffel (5th squadron) of Jagdgeschwader 52 (JG 52—52nd Fighter Wing) in 1940. The Staffel was commanded by Oberleutnant August-Wilhelm Schumann and subordinated to II. Gruppe of JG 52 which was headed by Hauptmann Wilhelm Ensslen and fought in the Battle of Britain. On 2 November, Ensslen was killed in action and replaced by Hauptmann Erich Woitke.

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. On 25 June, the Gruppe moved to an airfield at Varėna in Lithuania which had previously been occupied by the Soviet Air Forces (VVS—Voyenno-Vozdushnye Sily). Two days later, the Gruppe moved to Maladzyechna, supporting the advance Panzergruppe 3 near Barysaw. Flying from this airfield, Nemitz claimed his first aerial victories, two Ilyushin DB-3 bombers shot down on 3 July. The next day, II. Gruppe moved to Sloboda, east of Minsk, before moving to an airfield named Lepel-West at Lyepyel on 5 July. From this airfield, II. Gruppe flew combat air patrols and fighter escort missions to combat areas near Vitebsk and Haradok, supporting Panzergruppe 2 and 3 in their advance to Vitebsk and Polotsk. On 12 July, the Gruppe moved to Kamary, an airfield in the western parts of Vitebsk. Ten day later on 22 July, II. Gruppe advanced to the airfield Andrejewka near Smolensk where it stayed until 5 August. Operating from Andrejewka, Nemitz shot down a Petlyakov Pe-2 bomber on 23 July, a DB-3 and Tupolev SB bomber on 26 July and another DB-3 bomber on 27 July.

II. Gruppe was ordered to relocate to Soltsy, 30abbr=offNaNabbr=off west of Lake Ilmen, on 5 August in support of the 16th Army and Army Group North. Here, the Gruppe supported the fighting south of Lake Ilmen, and the German attacks on Shlisselburg, Leningrad and the Soviet fleet at Kronstadt. Operating from Soltsy, Nemitz claimed an I-18 fighter, referring to the Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-1 fighter, shot down on 18 August near Chudovo. 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 on 30 August, Nemitz shot down another I-18 fighter. Since German forces had reached the proximity of Leningrad, II. Gruppe was ordered to Lyuban on 1 September, approximately 70abbr=offNaNabbr=off to Leningrad and located on the road to Moscow. The Gruppe stayed at Lyuban until 30 September, flying missions to Shlisselburg, Leningrad and Mga. Fighting in this combat area, Nemitz claimed two aerial victories in September 1941. On 13 September, he was credited with the destruction of an DB-3 bomber, followed by an Ilyushin Il-2 ground attack aircraft on 23 September.

On 2 October, German forces launched Operation Typhoon, the failed strategic offensive to capture Moscow. In support of this offensive, II. Gruppe was moved to Stabna, located just north of Smolensk. On 5 October, Nemitz claimed a Pe-2 bomber shot down. On 4 November, II. Gruppe had moved to Ruza. Here, Nemitz claimed his last aerial victories of 1941 when on 14 November he was credited with the destruction of two I-18 fighters, taking his total to 13 aerial victories.

Eastern Front

In late January 1942, II. Gruppe was withdrawn from the Eastern Front and sent to Jesau near Königsberg for a period of recuperation and replenishment, arriving on 24 January 1942. In Jesau, the Gruppe received many factory new Messerschmitt 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. The Gruppe had also received a new commander, Woitke had been transferred and was replaced by Hauptmann Johannes Steinhoff. The Gruppe then moved to Wien-Schwechat on 24 April before flying to Zürichtal, present-day Solote Pole, a village near the urban settlement Kirovske in the Crimea. There, II. Gruppe participated in Operation Trappenjagd, a German counterattack during the Battle of the Kerch Peninsula, launched on 8 May. On 11 May, Nemitz claimed his first aerial victory of 1942 when he shot down a Polikarpov R-5 reconnaissance bomber aircraft.

On 16 May, II. Gruppe relocated to Artyomovsk, present-day Bakhmut where JG 52 supported the German forces fighting in the Second Battle of Kharkov. Operating from Artyomovsk, the Gruppe flew combat missions in the combat area of Izium, flying fighter escort for bombers from Kampfgeschwader 27 (KG 27—27th Bomber Wing) and Sturzkampfgeschwader 77 (StG 77—77th Dive Bomber Wing). On 19 May, Nemitz claimed a MiG-1 fighter shot down. Four days later, the Gruppe was ordered to relocate to Barvinkove where they stayed until 1 June. Flying from Barvinkove, Nemitz claimed an Il-2 ground-attack aircraft on 26 May and a MiG-1 fighter the next day.

On 1 June, II. Gruppe moved to an airfield at Grakowo, located approximately halfway between Kharkov and Kupiansk. The main German objectives in that combat area were, breakthrough to the upper Don and capture of Voronezh. Here, Nemitz claimed four aerial victories in June, including a MiG-1 fighter on 4 June, a Lavochkin-Gorbunov-Gudkov LaGG-3 fighter 22 June, and a Yak-1 fighter on both 23 and 24 June. On 28 June, the Wehrmacht initiated Fall Blau (Case Blue), the 1942 strategic summer offensive in southern Russia. The objective was to secure the oil fields of Baku as well as an advance in the direction of Stalingrad along the Volga River, to cover the flanks of the advance towards Baku. Tasked with aerial support of this offensive was Luftflotte 4 (Air Fleet 4) to which JG 52 was subordinated. On 22 July, II. Gruppe moved to an airfield named Nowy Cholan, approximately 200abbr=offNaNabbr=off northeast of Rostov-on-Don. On 20 August, II. Gruppe reached the airfield at Tusov, approximately 25abbr=offNaNabbr=off southwest of Kalach-na-Donu on the western bank of the Don, from where the Gruppe operated in the combat area of Stalingrad. Flying from this airfield, Nemitz's number of aerial victories increased to 33 by end of August. On 27 October, he received the German Cross in Gold .

Squadron leader and death

On 4 November 1942, Oberleutnant Siegfried Simsch, the Staffelkapitän (squadron leader) of 5. Staffel of JG 52, was severely injured in a flight accident. In consequence, Nemitz then briefly led the Staffel before Oberleutnant Gustav Denk officially took command in January 1943. On 22 January 1943, II. Gruppe had to retreat further and moved to an airfield at Rostov-on-Don. Here, Nemitz reached his 56th aerial victory by end of January. On 10 February 1943, Hauptmann Rudolf Resch, the commander of 6. Staffel of JG 52, was transferred. In consequence, Denk was also transferred to take command of 6. Staffel. When Denk was killed in action on 13 February, Nemitz led 6. Staffel as well as 5. Staffel until Leutnant Helmut Haberda was given command. On 13 March, the Gruppe moved to an airfield at Anapa. Here on 20 March, Nemitz was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross (German: Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes). At the end of March 1943, his number of aerial victories had reached 80.

On 9 April, Nemetz claimed his 81st and last aerial victory when he shot down a Pe-2 bomber. Two days later on 11 April, Nemitz was killed in action in the area of Anapa. His Bf 109 G-4 (Werknummer 14898—factory number) crashed near the village Nishne Bakanskaja located approximately 10abbr=offNaNabbr=off east-northeast of Anapa. According to Helmut Lipfert, who occasionally flew as his wingman, Nemitz Bf 109 crashed into a German infantry position. Command of 6. Staffel was then transferred to Oberleutnant Karl Ritzenberger. Posthumously, Nemitz was promoted to Leutnant (second lieutenant).

Summary of career

Aerial victory claims

According to Spick, Nemitz was credited with 81 aerial victories claimed in over 500 combat missions. Mathews and Foreman, authors of Luftwaffe Aces — Biographies and Victory Claims, researched the German Federal Archives and found records for 82 aerial victory claims, plus one further unconfirmed claim. All of his confirmed aerial victories were claimed on the Eastern Front.

Victory claims were logged to a map-reference (PQ = Planquadrat), for example "PQ 7152". 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
– 5. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Operation Barbarossa — 22 June – 5 December 1941
13 July 194118:43DB-3830 August 194106:05I-18 (MiG-1)10km (10miles) northwest of Dubrovka
23 July 194118:45DB-3913 September 194116:45DB-3east of Klemenka
323 July 194106:35Pe-21023 September 194113:55Il-2
426 July 194104:35DB-311?5 October 1941Pe-2
526 July 194104:45SB-21214 November 194108:35I-18 (MiG-1)
627 July 194116:50DB-31314 November 194108:45I-18 (MiG-1)
718 August 194113:40?I-18 (MiG-1)30km (20miles) north of Chudovo
– 5. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Eastern Front — 7 May 1942 – July 1942
1411 May 194212:03R-5226 July 194215:15Hurricane
1519 May 194204:15MiG-12316 July 194217:55LaGG-3
1626 May 194210:21Il-22419 July 194206:03LaGG-3
1727 May 194204:43MiG-12519 July 194217:20LaGG-3
184 June 194204:15MiG-12621 July 194212:20R-5
1922 June 194206:40LaGG-3PQ 71522722 July 194206:35LaGG-3
2023 June 194214:15Yak-12823 July 194212:55Il-2
2124 June 194216:47Yak-1
– 4. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Eastern Front — July – August 1942
2923 August 194216:02LaGG-3PQ 49242
10km (10miles) northeast of Stalingrad
3227 August 194210:10LaGG-3PQ 49231
35- east-northeast of Stalingrad
30 23 August 194216:03LaGG-3PQ 49242
10km (10miles) northeast of Stalingrad
3329 August 194206:08LaGG-3PQ 49213
northeast of Grebenka
3124 August 194217:25LaGG-3PQ 49233
35- east-northeast of Stalingrad
– 5. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Eastern Front — August 1942 – 3 February 1943
3431 August 194210:50LaGG-3PQ 49282
20- east of Stalingrad
4611 December 194209:28LaGG-3PQ 29632, northwest of Kulpinskij
3531 August 194217:20LaGG-3PQ 594544717 December 194211:18La-5PQ 38241, south of Shutow 2
south of Shutow railroad
361 September 194216:45LaGG-3PQ 75272
vicinity of Bakanskij
4818 December 194209:16La-5PQ 49722
30km (20miles) northeast of Aksal
377 September 194205:50I-16PQ 446644918 December 194209:22Il-2PQ 49753
30km (20miles) east-northeast of Aksal
388 September 194214:48LaGG-3PQ 545135019 December 194214:08LaGG-35km (03miles) southeast of Dubowyi
3929 October 194215:50LaGG-3PQ 947525122 December 194213:18La-5PQ 39863
10km (10miles) north of Aksal
4026 November 194212:00P-40PQ 49271
5km (03miles) east of Stalingrad
5222 December 194213:25La-5PQ 49713
65km (40miles) south-southeast of Stalingrad
4128 November 194209:20LaGG-3PQ 49294
40km (30miles) east of Stalingrad
5328 December 194212:48La-5PQ 49473
vicinity of Sarepka
4228 November 194212:45Il-2PQ 49321
vicinity of Bassargeno
5422 January 194310:15Il-2PQ 08742
25km (16miles) east-southeast of Rostov-on-Don
4330 November 194208:52LaGG-3PQ 49443
20km (10miles) southeast of Stalingrad
5522 January 194310:22Il-2PQ 08761
40km (30miles) southeast of Novocherkassk
441 December 194207:23La-5PQ 39384
10km (10miles) north of Nizhnii Chir
5630 January 194308:54La-5PQ 08813
?8 December 194210:50Pe-2572 February 194311:13La-5PQ 1854
?8 December 194212:10Boston20km (10miles) southwest of Kletskaya582 February 194314:50La-5PQ 08692
4511 December 194209:22LaGG-3PQ 39511, northwest of Kulpinskij
10km (10miles) west of Nizhnii Chir
– 5. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Eastern Front — 4–13 February 1943
595 February 194310:35La-5PQ 44 Ost 08841
30km (20miles) east of Szolnok
6112 February 194313:10LaGG-3PQ 34 Ost 86 483
southwest of Timashyovsk
595 February 194310:40La-5PQ 44 Ost 08672
– 6. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 52 –
Eastern Front — 13 February – 11 April 1943
6222 February 194306:10LaGG-3PQ 34 Ost 85371
vicinity of Gelendzhik
7217 March 194309:02Il-2PQ 34 Ost 76881
southeast of Warenikowskaja
6325 February 194308:35I-153PQ 34 Ost 75261
north of Nowo-Bakanskaja
7317 March 194309:06Il-2PQ 34 Ost 75261
north of Nowo-Bakanskaja
645 March 194309:40BostonPQ 34 Ost 86334
vicinity of Barily
7417 March 194309:10Il-2PQ 34 Ost 75251
vicinity of Natuchajewskaja
655 March 194314:02I-153PQ 34 Ost 75431
3km (02miles) southeast of Novorossiysk
7518 March 194309:45LaGG-3PQ 34 Ost 86561
vicinity of Staronishe-Steblijewskaja
669 March 194308:07Pe-2PQ 34 Ost 75194
southeast of Anapa
7618 March 194309:55LaGG-3PQ 34 Ost 86584
east of Slavyansk-on-Kuban
6711 March 194308:13DB-3PQ 34 Ost 65214
Black Sea, southeast of Cape Takyl
7718 March 194309:58LaGG-3PQ 34 Ost 86593
6812 March 194310:19I-16PQ 34 Ost 769817819 March 194309:05P-39PQ 34 Ost 86591
northwest of Iwanowskaja
6914 March 194306:40BostonPQ 34 Ost 76773
Black Sea, west of Blagoweschtschenskoje
7920 March 194309:17LaGG-3PQ 34 Ost 86513
east of Petrovskaya
7014 March 194306:54BostonPQ 34 Ost 76754
vicinity of Utasch
8029 March 194312:40Il-2 m.H.PQ 34 Ost 66653
over the Kerch Strait
7116 March 194314:20Il-2PQ 34 Ost 76582
vicinity of Fischer
819 April 194309:43Pe-2PQ 34 Ost 76833
vicinity of Anaetasiwskaja

Awards

References

Bibliography