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Friedrich Beckh

1908 births | 1942 deaths | german military personnel killed in world war two | german world war ii flying aces | luftwaffe pilots | people from nuremberg | recipients of the knight's cross


Oberstleutnant Friedrich Beckh (born 17 January, 1908 in Nurembergkilled in action 21 June, 1981 near Charkow on the Eastern front) was German World War II Luftwaffe 78 victories Flying ace and recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross. He held the position of Geschwaderkommodore of fighter wing Jagdgeschwader 51.

Biography

Born in 1908 in Nuremberg, he was a career soldier having joined the cavalry in 1926 as part of the-then 100,000 strong German Army. He joined the Luftwaffe with the rank of Oberleutnant in 1935 and trained to be a fighter pilot but Beckh had no particular aptitude for flying.

By the time World War II broke out he had already occupied several positions on the General Staff and because of his age did not fly any combat sorties. Instead he was lecturing at the Air War Academy. It was during 1940 as Jägerverbindungsoffizier in the Luftgaukommando Wiesbaden (fighter communications or liaison officer) that he became close friends with Werner Mölders, the two men having previously served in Jagdgeschwader 134 Horst Wessel. When Mölders became Kommodore of JG 51 on 27 July 1940 he arranged for Beckh to transfer to his Geschwaderstab, as an officer on secondment from the General Staff.

Beckh was nonetheless an enthusiastic fighter pilot. However there was one further factor in Beckh's make-up that would constitute something of a handicap when flying fighters. He was simply unable to see anything in the air. In fact, Beckh's eyesight had deteriorated considerably since he had first joined the Luftwaffe and he was one of the rare Messerschmitt Bf 109 pilots wearing spectacles during the Battle of Britain.

During the opening weeks of Operation Barbarossa Beckh had considerable success, mostly in tandem with his Wingman Leutnant Bernd Gallowitsch, who at the time was credited with around twenty victories. The two pilots invariably returned from sorties with a victory each. On 21 July 1941 Beckh was appointed Geschwaderkommodore of JG 51 in succession to Werner Mölders and on 8 September while JG 51 supported Guderian's Panzerarmee in the battles around Kiev, Beckh was to claim the Geschwader's 2000th victory. However on 16 September his luck was to run out during a fighter sweep in his Bf 109 F-2 and he was hit by flak, taking an incendiary round through the left foot. Two days after being wounded in action he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross for 27 victories, 23 of them in Russia. He had also claimed around twenty aircraft destroyed on the ground. Initially he insisted on leading the Geschwader from the ground but on 3 October he was eventually admitted to a hospital with the foot infected.

Beckh returned to the Geschwader on 21 December 1941 and he was to achieve approximately twenty further victories, before being transferred back to the RLM on 9 April 1942. He was then appointed Kommodore of JG 52] barely two months later following the death of Major [[Wilhelm Lessmann.

On 21 June 1942 Beckh was airborne in his Bf 109 F-4 "weiße 4" W.Nr 13362 with his wingman for a low-level sortie of the type he preferred in the area of Isjum-Kupjansk-Waluiki, east of Charkov. East of Waluiki the duo observed a Russian air base teeming with Russian fighters. Beckh threw his aircraft into combat against a large force of LaGG-3s that appeared in the skies. While shooting down at least two Russian fighters, his wingman observed Beckh's F-4 taking a number of flak hits before it too nosed down and appeared to plunge to the ground. Beck is credited with 48 aerial victories.

Awards

References

  • Fellgiebel, Walther-Peer (2000). Die Träger des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939-1945. Podzun-Pallas. ISBN 3-7909-0284-5.

Category: 1908 births Category: 1942 deaths Category: People from Nuremberg Category: Luftwaffe pilots Category: German World War II flying aces Category: German military personnel killed in World War Two Category: Recipients of the Knight's Cross