'Ernst Udet' (
April 26 1896 –
November 17 1941) was the second-highest scoring
German flying ace of
World War I. He was one of the youngest aces and was the highest scoring German ace to survive the war (at the age of 22). His 62 victories were second only to
Manfred von Richthofen, his commander in the
Flying Circus.
Life of a flier
From motorcycling to flying
Born in
Frankfurt am Main, Udet was fascinated with
aviation from early childhood. He wanted to join the army in
1914, but was only 160 cm tall and did not qualify. In August, when the Allgemeine Deutsche Automobil Klub appealed for volunteers with
motorcycles, Udet applied and was accepted. Udet's father had given him his motorcycle when Ernst passed his first year examination. Along with four friends, Udet was posted to the 26 Württembergischen Reserve division as a "messenger rider". After injuring his shoulder when his motorcycle hit a shell hole, Udet went to a military hospital, and his bike went for repair. When he tried to track down the 26th division, he was unable to locate it and decided to serve in the vehicle depot in
Namur. During this time, Udet met officers from the
Chauny flying sector who advised him to get transferred as an
aerial observer. However, before he received his orders for Chauny, the army dispensed with the volunteer motorcyclists, and he was sent back to recruiting officials.
Udet tried in vain to get back to the fighting, but was unable to get into pilot or aircraft mechanic training offered by the army. He soon learned that if he were a trained pilot, he would be immediately accepted into the air force. Through a family friend,
Gustav Otto, owner of an aircraft factory, Udet received private flight training. The training cost 2,000 marks and new bathroom equipment from his father's firm. Udet obtained his civilian pilot's license at the end of April 1915 and joined the German Army Air Service.
Artillery ranging
Originally Udet flew in Flieger-Abteilung 206, an observation unit, as an enlisted pilot with observer Lieutenant Justinius. He and his observer won the
Iron Cross 2nd class for nursing their Aviatik B two-seater back to German lines after a shackle on a wing-cable snapped. Justinius had climbed out to hold the wing and balance it rather than land and accept capture. As a result of the structural failure of the Aviatik that caused Udet and Justinius to go down and that costed Leutnant Winter and Viezefeldwebel Preiss their lives in a similar incident, the Aviatik B was put out of duty.
Later, Udet was court-martialed for losing his aircraft in an incident the flying corps considered bad judgement. The aircraft, overloaded with fuel and bombs, stalled after a sharp bank, plunging the two men into the ground. Miraculously, they both survived. Udet was placed under arrest in the guardhouse for seven days.
On his way out of the guardhouse, he was asked to fly a Lieutenant Hartmann to observe a bombing raid on
Belfort. A bomb thrown by hand by the lieutenant became stuck in the landing gear. Udet performed some aerobatics to shake it loose. As soon as the Air Staff Officer heard about it, he was transferred to fighter command. That was in 1916.
Fighter pilot
Udet was given a new
Fokker to fly to his unit at Habsheim. Mechanically defective, it crashed into a hangar on takeoff. An older Fokker was then sent to Udet. At Habsheim, his first aerial combat was a near disaster. Lining up on a French
Caudron, he found he could not force himself pull the trigger and was strafed by the Frenchman. A bullet grazed his cheek and smashed his goggles. From then on, he learned to attack aggressively and made a number of kills, downing his first French opponent in March. Later that year, he joined Jasta 15, claiming five more victims before transferring to Jasta 37 in June 1917.
It was during his service with Jasta 15 that Udet wrote he had encountered
Georges Guynemer, the French ace, in single combat at 5000 meters. Guynemer preferred to hunt alone. Udet saw him coming and the two circled each other looking for an opening. They were close enough for Udet to read the "Vieux" of "Vieux Charles" on Guynemer's
Spad. For an instant, Udet had him in his sights, but the gun jammed. While pretending to dogfight, he tried to unjam it. Guynemer saw his predicament, waved and flew away. Udet wrote of the fight:
:"For seconds, I forget that the man across from me is Guynemer, my enemy. It seems as though I were sparring with an older comrade over our own airfield."
Eventually, all the pilots of Jasta 15 were killed except Udet and his commander, Gontermann. Gontermann became somewhat gloomy, remarking to Udet:
:"the bullets fall from the hand of God ... Sooner or later they will hit us."
Udet applied for a transfer to Jasta 37. Gontermann fell three months later, by accident, when the wing of his aircraft came off. He lingered for 24 hours without awakening. Udet said:
:"It was a good death."
By late November, Udet was a triple ace and ''Jastaführer.'' He modeled his attacks after those of Guynemer, coming in high out of the sun to pick off the rear aircraft in a squadron before the others knew what was happening. His commander in Jasta 37, Grashoff, witnessing one of these attacks, selected him for command over more senior men when Grashoff was transferred.
In the Flying Circus
Udet's success attracted attention for his skill, earning him an invitation to join the
Flying Circus, ''Jagdgeschwader'' 1, an elite unit of German fighter aces under the command of the Red Baron
Manfred von Richthofen and later
Hermann Göring. Richthofen drove up one day as Udet was trying to pitch a tent in
Flanders in the rain. Pointing out that Udet had 20 kills, the Red Baron said:
:"Then you would actually seem ripe for us. Would you like to?"
Of course Udet would. After watching him down an artillery spotter by frontal attack, Richthofen gave Udet command of Jasta 11, his own Jasta. The group commanded by Richthofen also contained Jastas 4, 6 and 10.
Udet's enthusiasm for Richthofen was unbounded. In contrast, he had little good to say about Göring. Richthofen demanded total loyalty and total dedication from his pilots, cashiering immediately anyone who did not give it. At the same time he treated them with every consideration. When it came time to requisition supplies, he traded favors for autographed photos of himself with the words:
:"Dedicated to my esteemed fighting companion."
Udet says:
:"...sausage and ham never ran out."
One night they invited a captured English flier for dinner, treating him as a guest. When he excused himself for the '
W.C.' the Germans fell over themselves trying to hide from him that they were watching to see if he would try to escape. On his return the Englishman said:
:"I would never forgive myself for disappointing such hosts."
He did escape later from another unit.
Udet considered Richthofen as scientific in battle and cold in his combats, describing his blue eyes and the sun shining off his blonde hair. Richthofen liked to strafe enemy columns in squadron formation, both guns firing, killing large numbers. He was the first to invent the forward base. While the enemy could mount three missions a day, Richthofen could mount five. In dogfights the head-on attack found favor, with each aircraft, as Udet says,
:"...firing like two tournament knights with lances at rest."
Richthofen fell in April 1918. Udet was not at the front. He had been invalided out with a painful ear infection, which he avoided having treated as long as he could. While at home he reacquainted himself with his childhood sweetheart, Eleanor "Lo" Zink. Notified that he had received the
Pour le Mérite, he had one made up in advance so that he could impress her. He painted her name on the side of his
Fokker D VII. On the tail was the message "Doch du nicht" - "Definitely not you".
[1]
Of Richthofen, Udet said:
:"He was the least complicated man I ever knew. Entirely Prussian and the greatest of soldiers."
Udet returned to JG.I against the doctor's advice and remained there to the end of the war, commanding Jasta 4. He scored 20 victories in August alone, mainly against the British. Udet would become a national hero with 62 confirmed kills to his credit. Privately, he would question Göring's own achievements during the war.
Udet was one of the early fliers to be saved by parachuting from a disabled aircraft. On
June 29,
1918 he jumped after a clash with a French
Breguet. His harness caught on the rudder and he had to break off the rudder tip to escape. His parachute didn't open until he was 250 feet from the ground, causing him to sprain his ankle.
Between the wars

Ernst Udet, a recoloured portrait
Between the First and
Second World Wars, Udet was known primarily for his work as a stunt pilot and for playboy-like behavior. He flew for
movies and for
airshows (e.g. picking the cloth from the ground with the top of the wing). He appeared with
Leni Riefenstahl in three films: ''
Die weiße Hölle vom Piz Palü'', ''
Stürme über dem Montblanc'', and ''
S.O.S. Eisberg''.
He married 'Lo' on
February 25 1920; however, the marriage lasted less than three years. They divorced on
February 16,
1923. It has been said that Udet had many lovers on the side. His talents were numerous -
juggling, drawing
cartoons, party entertainment, etc.
The adventure of Udet's life continued without pause after the war. On his way home, he had to defend himself against a Communist who wished to rip the medals off his chest. Udet and
Ritter von Greim performed mock dogfights on weekends for the POW Relief Organization, using surplus aircraft in Bavaria. He was invited to start the first International Air Service between Germany and Austria, but after the first flight the Entente Commission confiscated his aircraft.
These efforts were good publicity for Udet. An American, William Pohl of Milwaukee, telephoned him with an offer to back an aircraft manufacturing company. Udet Flugzeug was born in a shed in Milbertshofen. Its intent was to build small aircraft that the general public could fly. It soon ran into trouble with the Entente Commission and transfered its operations to a beehive and chicken coop factory.
The first model out was the U2. Udet took the second, the U4, to the Wilbur Cup race in
Buenos Aires at the expense of Aero Club Aleman there. It was outclassed by new American aircraft. The club wanted him to do cigarette commercials to reimburse them for the expense, but he refused. He was rescued by the Chief of the Argentinian Railways, a man of Swedish descentnamed Tornquist. The railway company picked up the tab.
In 1924 Udet left Udet Flugzeug when they decided to build a four-engine aircraft, which was larger and not for the general population. He and another friend from the war, Angermund, started an exhibition flying enterprise in Germany, which also was successful, but
:"In time this too begins to get tiresome. ... We stand in the present, fighting for a living. It isn't always easy. ... But the thoughts wander back to the times when it was worthwhile to fight for your life."
Udet's war time friends were in seemingly inexhaustible supply. He and another, Suchocky, became pilots to an African filming expedition. The cameraman was another veteran, Schneeberger, whom Udet called "Flea", and the guide was Siedentopf, a former East African estate owner. The Africa that Udet reports seeing has long gone. He says of the
Serengeti:
:"It is blindingly bright, and we can see for hundreds of kilometers in the crystal clear air."
Udet reports that lions jumped up to claw at the low-flying aircraft, one of them removing a strip of Suchocky's wing surface. They discover the Figtree Hotel, built by Lord Lovelace, and went hunting with an American named Sullivan. Of the buffalo, so formidable to others, Ernst says:
:"It is no great accomplishment to shoot a buffalo. The weapons are too unequal in such a fight."
Sullivan told the story of a Canadian hunter who, given a shot at a lion, did not pull the trigger. Udet writes:
:"Only a hunter can understand."
Building the Luftwaffe
Though not interested in politics, Udet joined the
Nazi party in
1933 when Göring promised to buy him two new US airplanes, the
Curtiss Export Hawk II. The planes were used for evaluation purposes and thus indirectly influenced the German idea of dive bombing airplanes, such as the
Junkers Ju 87 (Stuka) bombers. They were also used for acrobatic shows held during the
1936 Summer Olympics. Udet piloted one of them, which luckily survived the war and is now on display in the Polish Aviation Museum (pictured).
Udet became a major proponent of the
dive bomber, taking credit for having introduced it to the
Luftwaffe, which was already interested in such designs. By
1936 he had, due to his political connections, been placed in command of the ''T-Amt'', the
Reich Air Ministry's development wing. However, he had no real interest in this job, especially the bureaucracy of it, and the pressure led to his addiction to alcohol (brandy and cognac).
When the
Second World War began, his internal conflicts grew more intense. Aircraft production requirements were much more than the German industry could supply, given limited access to raw materials such as
aluminium. Göring responded to this problem by simply lying about it, which further upset Udet. After the Luftwaffe's defeat in the
Battle of Britain, Göring tried to deflect
Hitler's ire by blaming it on Udet. Hitler's
attack on the Soviet Union drove Udet further into despair.
Suicide
On
November 17,
1941 Udet committed suicide, shooting himself in the head while speaking on the phone to his girlfriend. Evidence indicates his unhappy relationship with Göring,
Erhard Milch and the Nazi Party in general was the cause his mental breakdown.
According Udet's biography ''The Fall of an Eagle'', he wrote a suicide note in red pencil which included: "Ingelein, why have you left me?" and "Iron One, you are responsible for my death". "Ingelein" referred to his girlfriend, Inge Bleyle. The "Iron One" was Göring. The book ''The Luftwaffe War Diaries'' states something similar, that Udet wrote, "Reichsmarschall, why have you deserted me?" in red on the headboard of his bed.
Udet's suicide was concealed from the public, and at his funeral he was lauded as a hero who had died in flight while testing a new weapon. (On his way to attend Udet's funeral, the World War II fighter ace
Werner Mölders would die in a plane crash.) Udet was buried in the
Invalidenfriedhof Cemetery, which is located in Berlin.
See also
★
Carl Zuckmayer's play ''Des Teufels General'' ("The Devil's General"), whose main character is based upon Ernst Udet.
★ The character of "Ernst Kessler" in the 1975 film ''
The Great Waldo Pepper'' is clearly based upon Ernst Udet. It also contains superb dogfighting scenes between a
Fokker Dr.I and a
Sopwith Camel.
Notes
1. This account and translation from Stanley M. Ulanoff, the editor of ''Ace of the Iron Cross'', An Ace Book, 1970 - the English translation of ''Mein Fliegerleben'' by Udet. Udet does not mention the dare.
References
★
The Royal Flying Corps in World War I, Barker, Ralph, , , Robinson, 2002, ISBN 1-84119-470-0
★
The Luftwaffe War Diaries, Bekker, Cajus, , , Da Capo Press, 1994, ISBN 0-306-80604-5
★
UDET - A Man's Life, Herlin, Hans, , , MacDonald, 1960,
★
Ace of the Iron Cross, Udet, Ernst (edited by Stanley M. Ulanoff), , , Arco, 1981, ISBN 0-668-05163-9
★
The Fall of an Eagle: The Life of Fighter Ace Ernst Udet, van Ishoven, Armand, , , Kimber & Co, 1979, ISBN 0-7183-0067-X
External links
★
Ernst Udet page on theaerodrome.com
★
Udet's U-12 Flamingo
★
Leni's Rising Star Includes info on the films Udet was in with Leni Riefenstahl. Also has video downloads.
★
"Ernst Udet: The Rise and Fall of a German World War I Ace"
★
Ernst Udet: Photos & Gravesite