An account of the renowned German fighter unit in World War I, “a
wonderful journey through these pilots’ lives, in victory and
defeat” (Aerodrome). As August drew to a close in 1916, the German
Air Service was reeling almost helplessly towards inevitable defeat on
the Somme. The Artillery and Feldflieger Abteilungen, the
Kampfstaffeln, had been quickly reduced to relative impotency by the
overwhelming quantitative and qualitative superiority of the Allies.
The once feared Fokker and Pfalz Eindeckers proved unequal to the task
of checking the aerial flood which daily scoured the ravaged German
front. A crisis was reached. Germany was compelled to seek a new
solution. Jagdstaffel 2 was formed to stem the tide and fight back.
Later by Imperial decree renamed Jasta Boelcke in honor of its
distinguished commander Oswald Boelcke, this military formation had no
prolonged, entangled gestation period. There was no parent, no prior
stirrings of life. Jasta 2 was lifted from the keyboard of a
typewriter, assigned to the First Army and provided with a leader.
Between 2 September and 31 December 1916, it scored 85 kills, and was
destined to end the war with 336 confirmed victories. Here, for the
first time, is the story of that auspicious and audacious unit, told
in his inimitable style by Norman Franks, an expert in his subject.
Les mer
The History of Jasta 2, 1916–1918
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781909166356
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter