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A book about "The Red Baron"
Last edited by Gibbs505; 11-11-2007 at 05:42 PM.
So I can't spell, so what!!!
Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
Those who beat their swords into ploughshares, will plough for those who don't!
Be polite. Be professional. But, have a plan to kill everyone you meet.
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11-11-2007 05:37 PM
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Is it me, or does he have an evil-looking face? Maybe he was a zombie? (j/k)
Союз нерушимый республик свободных Сплотила навеки Великая Русь. Да здравствует созданный волей народов Единый, могучий Советский Союз!
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Here is another view! More traditional then the'candid' shot above!
So I can't spell, so what!!!
Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
Those who beat their swords into ploughshares, will plough for those who don't!
Be polite. Be professional. But, have a plan to kill everyone you meet.
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Looks like two different people! Wish I had an original "Pour Le Merite" like he is wearing.
Союз нерушимый республик свободных Сплотила навеки Великая Русь. Да здравствует созданный волей народов Единый, могучий Советский Союз!
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it is a pretty good book. IIRC he did see action at the start of the war as a cavalryman and was praised at that time by one of the kaiser's sons.
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So was The Blue Max loosely based on his life?
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Originally Posted by
Swede
So was The Blue Max loosely based on his life?
doesn't the character in the blue max meet the red baron? i would assume the character is a composite of richtofen, immelmann, etc.
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Stachel is completely fictional.
Союз нерушимый республик свободных Сплотила навеки Великая Русь. Да здравствует созданный волей народов Единый, могучий Советский Союз!
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Moderator
(Book & Video Review Corner)
This book was a good read. Worth a look!
So I can't spell, so what!!!
Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
Those who beat their swords into ploughshares, will plough for those who don't!
Be polite. Be professional. But, have a plan to kill everyone you meet.
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FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Red Baron: Beware of the Hun in the Sun
His own brother, Lothar, posted to his jasta, called him a butcher. After that very long duel with Lanoe Hawker, the Baron chose to fly above his jasta and pounce on targets of opportunity. Usually, they were on the way down before they detected the threat.
In 1948, Air Trails interviewed his elderly mother, who told them that she was informed by the German
government that he had been killed by ground fire. While the RAF credited gunners Buie and Evans (who were firing Lewis guns) with the kill, it was really Cedric Popkin, who killed him instantly, with a single bullet from his watercooled Vickers on an AA mount. Roy Brown had put some rounds through the Fokker's airframe a few miles below Morlancourt Ridge before he turned for home due to severe stomach cramps, but none had hit the pilot. Had not the medical orderly who prepared Richtofen's body for autopsy stolen the fatal bullet, which had lodged in his wallet in his breast pocket, ballistics could have solved this dilemma. One wonders if he also stole the wallet; it contained a large amount of French
currency for use if he had been forced down behind enemy lines. (The fatal bullet, which had become a valuable souvenier, was lost when the former Aussie soldier moved to a different location in Australia
some time during 1936.)
Manfred was a mediocre pilot. Ernst Udet was the best pilot in the German air service and he survived the war to go on to develop the JU87 Stuka dive bomber of the second war. He became annoyed with Goering's making him a scapegoat and committed suicide in 1940.
Had the Baron met some of the better French aces or British
aces in fair combat, he would not have racked up that large tally. Luckily for him, he only fought the second string.
But, then, Monday morning quarterbacking is all supposition and prejudices coming out, isn't it?
Although Pete Kilduff is a good WW-I aerial historian, he has been known to stub his toe on research. The book by Paul Carisella, "Who killed the Red Baron?" is much better researched, but it also contains some strange errors and omissions.
Hello to all readers who are former members of the original American Cross and Cockade society of WW-I Aerial Historians. I miss it, don't you?
Last edited by John Lawson; 12-13-2007 at 04:12 PM.