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Herbert Huppertz - Pilot Profile - Herbert Huppertz

Herbert Huppertz

No Photo Available

Victories : 68
-----------------------------
Country : Germany
Fought in : WW2
Fought for : Axis
Died : 8th June 1944


Awarded the Knights Cross of the Iron CrossAwarded Oak Leaves to the Knights Cross
Knights
Cross
Oak Leaves


Latest Axis Aviation Artwork !
 In early May 1941, in conditions of strict secrecy because the United States was not yet at war, seventeen pilots of the US Navy had arrived in Britain and been attached to Catalina squadrons of Coastal Command.  These experienced PBY pilots were there to assist the Royal Air Force to become familiar with the Catalina, and also to gain operational experience for the US Navy.  On 26th May 1941 Catalina Z of No.209 Sqn, commanded by Flying Officer Dennis Briggs RAF, with Ensign Leonard B Smith USN as co-pilot, joined the search for the Bismarck.  At 1015 the aircraft was being flown in poor visibility at an altitude of 500ft when Ensign Smith sighted the Bismarck at a range of eight miles.  The Catalina was flown towards the contact so that a positive identification could be made and emerged from the cloud only 500 yards from the German ship.  The aircraft met a hail of anti-aircraft fire but was able to make its escape.  As a result of the sighting report from Catalina Z the Bismarck was again engaged by ships and aircraft of the Royal Navy and was sunk at 1040 on 27th May 1941.  Leonard Smith can be considered therefore, the first American to be directly involved in action in World War Two.  He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (American) for his actions.

The Aircraft That Found the Bismarck by Ivan Berryman.
 One of the all time great fighter aces, Adolf Galland is depicted flying Bf 109E-4/N of Stab/JG26 in September 1940.  Galland flew 705 combat missions during World War Two and was credited with a final tally of 104 aerial victories. He survived the war and died peacefully in February 1996.

Tribute to Generalleutnant Adolf Galland by Ivan Berryman.
 Walter Briegleb is shown in his Ju88 G.7 4R+BR as he stalks his prey - on this occasion a Lancaster.  Flying below their target, his crew would aim upward firing cannon at the inner wing of the bomber, igniting the fuel tanks.  For the bomber crews, they were very much defenceless against this type of attack, and often had no idea of the presence of an enemy aircraft in the dark.

Tribute to Walter Briegleb by Ivan Berryman.
 The attack by Leutnant Walter Briegleb and his crew on Lancaster Mk.III ND960 DX-I of No.57 Sqn early on 22nd May 1944.  Flying Me110 with codes D5+BV with his crew of Feldwebel Walter Bräunlich and Bordfunker Feldwebel Brandt, Briegleb flew undetected beneath the bomber and used the deadly 'Schräge Musik' - upward firing cannon - to hit the fuel tanks in the port wing between the fuselage and inner engine.  Pulling away, he watched the aircraft burn and could see both gunners in their turrets but no return fire came.  He wondered why none of the crew escaped by parachute with the bomber doomed - it disintegrated in the air over the coast of the island of Fyn, Denmark, impacting near Emtekær at 00:44hrs.<br><br><center>All of the crew were killed :<br>Flight Lieutenant Arthur Richards (Pilot)<br>Flying Officer William Woodall (Navigator)<br>Pilot Officer Athur Bugden (Flight Engineer)<br>Sergeant Thomas Edwards (Wireless Operator)<br>Flying Officer George Ferguson (Air Bomber)<br>Sergeant Harold Griffiths (Air Gunner)<br>Sergeant Cyril Woodmass (Air Gunner)

The Hunted and the Hunter by Ivan Berryman.

Herbert Huppertz

Squadrons for : Herbert Huppertz
A list of all squadrons known to have been served with by Herbert Huppertz. A profile page is available by clicking the squadron name.
SquadronInfo

JG1


Country : Germany
'Ace of Hearts'

Click the name above to see prints featuring aircraft of JG1
JG1

German World War II fighter unit or wing which used the Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Focke-Wulf Fw 190 aircraft, between 1940–1944. The name of the unit derives from Jagd, meaning hunt and Geschwader, meaning wing. First formed in May 1939 in eastern Prussia, I./JG 1 was one of the original groups created by the Luftwaffe as part of its expansion plans.

Between 1940 and 1942, JG 1 operated primarily over the Western Front and northern occupied Europe. During the initial days of the war, JG 1 faced little resistance, apart from occasional Royal Air Force (RAF) excursions. The unit was rarely engaged in large-scale confrontations during this time. From late 1942 onwards it was tasked with defense of the Reich duties. After D-Day, elements of JG 1 were moved to France and were tasked with air support to the army Wehrmacht, along with their air defense role. Operation Bodenplatte severely reduced the strength of JG 1.

Towards the end of the war, the unit was disbanded and its remaining pilots and aircraft were re-organized. What remained of these groups surrendered to Allied forces at the end of the war.

JG 1 was the first unit to attempt 'aerial bombing' techniques against the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) heavy bomber formations. It was the only unit to be equipped with the Heinkel He 162 jet fighter.

In 1944 the Oesau suffix was added to the unit's title, after its late Geschwaderkommodore Oberst Walter Oesau (127 kills), who was killed in action. Some 700 enemy aircraft were claimed shot down during the war.

JG2


Country : Germany
Founded : 1st May 1939
'Ace of Hearts'

Click the name above to see prints featuring aircraft of JG2
JG2

Jagdgeschwader 2 was formed from parts of Jagdgeschwader 131 Richthofen on 1 May 1939 in Döberitz and its first commander was Oberst Robert Ritter von Greim. At the outbreak of the war JG 2 was tasked with defence of the Reich and based in the Berlin area under Luftgaukommando III. Stab and II. Gruppe were equipped with the Bf 109E and were located at Döberitz with 10.(N) staffel flying the Bf 109D in Straussberg.

10.(N) Staffel was one of the first night fighter units formed in the Luftwaffe. Later this staffel was expanded into IV.(N) Gruppe. This Gruppe gained the Luftwaffe’s first night kill over the RAF Bomber Command on the night of 25/26 on April 1940 when Ofw Förster shot down a Handley Page Hampden.

The unit saw little combat until the Western offensive against France and the Low Countries from 10 May 1940 onwards. During the campaign against France, JG 2 was tasked with escorting raids and defending German airspace to the south of Heinz Guderian's Panzer forces which were encircling the French and the British Expeditionary Force further north. Leutnant Helmut Wick, who later became part of a trio of outstanding aces (including Adolf Galland from Jagdgeschwader 26 (JG 26) and Werner Mölders from Jagdgeschwader 51 (JG 51)) in the Battle of Britain, attained his first and the Geschwader's second kill on 22 November 1939, a French Curtiss Hawk Model 75. The first victory for the JG 2 was scored by Oberfeldwebel Kley (3. Staffel) at the same day.

JG 2 took part in the Battle of Britain, operating Bf 109Es over the South Coast of England and the English Channel from bases in Cherbourg and Normandy. Major Helmut Wick emerged as one of the Battle’s top Luftwaffe aces, claiming 31 kills for a personal total of 56, before being killed (MIA) in action versus Spitfires of No. 609 Squadron in November 1940. Wick was seen to bail out successfully but was not found by German Air/Sea Rescue attempts. The Spitfire who dispatched him was immediately shot down by Oberleutnant Rudolf Pflanz. Ofw. Schnell, Ofw. Machold and Olt. Hans Assi Hahn also claimed heavily during this period, with 16 kills each. Some 42 JG 2 pilots were killed or made POW during the battle.

JG51


Country : Germany
Founded : August 1939
'Ace of Hearts'

Click the name above to see prints featuring aircraft of JG51
JG51

Jagdgeschwader 51 Mölders was a Luftwaffe fighter wing during World War II, named after the fighter ace Werner Mölders in 1942. JG 51's pilots won more Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes than any other Jagdgeschwader, and flew combat from 1939 in all major theatres of war. Flying Bf 109s and then FW 190s, the wing claimed over 8,000 air victories. Experten included 'Toni' Hafner, Heinz Bär, Richard Leppla, Karl-Gottfried Nordmann, Günther Schack and the legendary Mölders.

Formed in August 1939, and commanded by 48-year-old World War I ace Onkel Theo Osterkamp, the early months of the war JG 51 was based in the West, fighting in the French campaign, and in the Battle of Britain. From late June to mid July JG 51 was the only fighter Geschwader engaged against the RAF constantly. During the whole battle JG 51 lost 68 pilots, the highest casualty rate of the Luftwaffe fighter units engaged. JG 51 was one of the two Geschewader that had four Gruppen. The other being JG 1.

Four Bf 109 of JG 51 in France 1940Whilst based out of the Belgian airfield at Mardyik in late 1940, the German ace Josef Pips Priller was a Staffelkapitän with JG 51, flying Bf 109-E Yellow One. Josef Priller went on to score over 100 victories, the third highest scoring Luftwaffe day fighter ace on the Western Front, fighting solely against the Western Allies.

Against the Western Allies JG 51 had claimed 345 aircraft destroyed by May 1941. JG 51 were therefore one of the Jagdwaffe's elite units, with 'top ten' aces at this time including Werner Mölders with 68 claims, Walter Oesau with 34 claims, and Hermann-Friedrich Joppien with 31. Major Werner Mölders became unit Geschwaderkommodore during July 1940 and led the unit into the invasion of Russia in June 1941.

Barbarossa (1941)

Claiming 69 kills on the first day of the offensive, by 30 June 1941 JG 51 became the first fighter Geschwader to claim 1,000 air victories (113 kills in 157 sorties were claimed for the day). On 24 June JG 51 claimed 57 bombers shot down for the day. Mölders became the first fighter pilot to reach 100 claims in August and in the same month JG 51's Oberfeldwebel Heinz Bär reached 60 claims and was decorated with the Oak Leaves. A total of 500 Soviet claims was reached on 12 July 1941, although 6 pilots had been lost by JG 51 in the intervening 3 weeks since the offensive had started.

After Mölders' departure in September 1941 (and death later that year) the Geschwader adopted his name as a title of honor in early 1942. Jagdgeschwader 51 Mölders was to remain on the centre sector of the Russian front throughout the rest of 1941. However Oberstleutnant Friedrich Beckh ( one of the few fighter pilots to wear spectacles) proved an uncharismatic commander after Mölders, and it was not until Major Karl-Gottfried Nordmann took over in April 1942 that a worthy successor to Mölders was found. In the period 22 June - 5 December 1941 the unit destroyed 1,881 Soviet aircraft, in return for 84 losses in aerial combat and a single aircraft on the ground.

Air support for the Wehrmacht's Army Group Centre was entrusted to General Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen's VIII. Fliegerkorps. In early January 1942, among the fighter units available to von Richthofen were II, III and IV/ JG 51. With the onset of the sub-zero conditions of the Russian winter, the majority of JG 51's available aircraft became grounded.

The Russian winter counter offensive forced III./ JG 51 into flying numerous fighter-bomber operations in direct support of the infantry, and the gruppe filed few aerial 'kill' claims through January 1942. II./ JG 51 however, accounted for most of VIII. Fliegerkorps's aerial victories during the Soviet offensive. Particularly successful was the duo of Lt. Hans Strelow and Ofw. Wilhelm Mink, both of 5. JG 51. They claimed five MiG-3s of 16 IAP on 4 January (Mink claimed three) and 9 days later Mink claimed a Pe-2 and Strelow destroyed two R-Z biplanes for his 30th and 31st victories. On 4 February, Strelow increased his victories to 36 by shooting down four Russian aircraft. The 19 year-old Strelow claimed his 40th victory on 28 February and claimed 4 victories on both 6 March and 17 March. The next day he was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes and also shot down seven Soviet aircraft. He was awarded the Eichenlaub on 24 March, his claims total at 66.

Normandy (1944)

7./JG 51, (with Bf 109G-6's) was attached to II./JG 1 in May 1944 from Brest-Litovsk, with pilots arriving at Störmede late in May and hurriedly converting to the FW-190. (It was later renamed 8./JG 1 on 15 August 1944 when the four-Staffeln Gruppe became standard) 7. Staffel was led by Ritterkreuzträger (Knight's Cross winner) Hptm. Karl-Heinz Weber with 136 confirmed kills. Its two other experten were Lt. Friedrich Krakowitzer (23 kills) and Ofhr. Günther Heckmann with 12 kills.

7./JG 51 joined II. Gruppe with 15 pilots on strength at the end of May, and during the first two months of the Normandy campaign the staffel was decimated, with twelve pilots killed, one POW and one severely wounded.

As the war turned against Germany JG 51 was forced to operate closer and closer to Germany, finally staging out of East Prussia.

Known Victory Claims - Herbert Huppertz

DATE

PILOT

UNIT

JG

CLAIMED

LOCATION

TIME

FRONT

07/07/1940Ltn. Herbert Huppertz6JG 51SpitfireNW Dungeness21.38Western Front
25/10/1940Ltn. Herbert Huppertz6JG 51HurricaneTunbridge Wells: 5000m13.3Western Front
29/10/1940Ltn. Herbert Huppertz6JG 51Spitfire20-25km NW London: 7000m18.05Western Front
14/11/1940Ltn. Herbert Huppertz6JG 51SpitfireThemesmündung16.02Western Front
11/03/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz6JG 51Hurricane25km N. Dungeness19.25Western Front
22/06/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51SB-3-16.3Eastern Front
24/06/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-9.3Eastern Front
24/06/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-9.5Eastern Front
28/06/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-16.03Eastern Front
29/06/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-18.2Eastern Front
30/06/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51R-10-13.12Eastern Front
02/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51I-17-17.32Eastern Front
03/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-19.35Eastern Front
07/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51I-16 Rata-17.15Eastern Front
14/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-12.4Eastern Front
14/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-12.45Eastern Front
22/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51I-153-10.25Eastern Front
22/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51I-153-18.2Eastern Front
22/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51I-153-18.25Eastern Front
23/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51Pe-2-12.55Eastern Front
23/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51Pe-2-18.2Eastern Front
23/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51Pe-2-18.25Eastern Front
26/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-9.05Eastern Front
26/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-9.08Eastern Front
26/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-9.1Eastern Front
26/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51Pe-2-18.15Eastern Front
28/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-7.47Eastern Front
31/07/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51I-18-19.15Eastern Front
08/08/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-15.35Eastern Front
08/08/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51DB-3-15.38Eastern Front
09/08/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51I-16 Rata-18.17Eastern Front
09/08/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz12JG 51SB-3-19Eastern Front
25/08/1941Ltn. Herbert Huppertz9JG 51I-16 Rata-16.1Eastern Front
02/04/1942Oblt. Herbert Huppertz12JG 1MosquitoTrondheim-Western Front
10/04/1942Oblt. Herbert Huppertz12JG 1Spitfire25km E. Trondheim12.33Western Front
15/05/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz3JG 2Spitfire7-8km W. Bonnières: 3000m17.1Western Front
17/05/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz3JG 2Spitfire10km S. Caen: 6000m10.54Western Front
29/06/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz10JG 2P-383867/14 West: 8200-5000m16.37Western Front
04/07/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2B-174881/14 West: 6000m13.1Western Front
05/07/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2Whitley59363/14 West: 200m16.53Western Front
03/08/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2Typhoon14 West N/5947: 1000m20.3Western Front
27/08/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2Mitchell05 Ost S/002: 3500m9.45Western Front
30/08/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2Mustang15 West S/5967: tiefflug16.12Western Front
31/08/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2Spitfire15 West S/4074: 30m16.49Western Front
11/09/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2Spitfire05 Ost S/00483: 5000m18.07Western Front
15/09/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2B-172km N. St. Germain-en-Laye: 7000m19.43Western Front
23/09/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2B-173973/14 West: 7000m18.39Western Front
23/09/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2B-175846/14 West: 7000m9.29Western Front
24/09/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz8JG 2Spitfire05 Ost S/20378: 6000m17Western Front
03/10/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz12JG 2SpitfireHécourt: 4000m [Oise]18.33Western Front
14/10/1943Oblt. Herbert Huppertz12JG 2B-17W. Pont-à-Mousson: 7000m16Western Front
26/11/1943Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2SpitfireW. St. Sauveur: 7000m10.36Western Front
01/12/1943Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2B-173271/05 Ost: 6000m13.15Western Front
30/12/1943Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2B-24206/05 Ost: 7500m11.45Western Front
30/12/1943Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2B-17203/05 Ost: 5000m14.43Western Front
31/12/1943Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2B-1715 West S/3035: 5500m14.53Western Front
07/01/1944Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2B-24198/04 Ost Nord13.17Western Front
07/01/1944Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2B-2404 Ost N/2977-813.04Western Front
06/02/1944Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2P-3804 Ost N/BD: 2000m13Western Front
06/02/1944Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2B-17QO-8: 7000m10.4Western Front
08/02/1944Hptm. Herbert Huppertz11JG 2B-1705 Ost S/203: 7000m10.39Western Front
20/02/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2B-1712km NW Mons: 5000m15.16Western Front
22/02/1944Hptm. Herbert Huppertz2JG 2B-2405 Ost S/423: 7000m12.2Western Front
16/03/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2B-17BK-BL W. St. Dizier: 7500m10.4Western Front
18/03/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2B-17SW - W. Ulm: 6000m14.5Western Front
18/03/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2P-51SW to W. Ulm: 4000m15.02Western Front
06/06/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2P-513km NW Évreux: 500m20.35Western Front
06/06/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2P-47UC: 600m [10km WNW Évreux]20.59Western Front
06/06/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2TyphoonUU: 800m [E. Caen]18.2Western Front
06/06/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2TyphoonUU: 500m [E. Caen]12.14Western Front
06/06/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2TyphoonUU: 500m [E. Caen]12.15Western Front
07/06/1944Hptm. Herbert HuppertzStab III.JG 2P-47TT 6: 4000m [Arromanches]19.07Western Front

Known Claims : 72

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