- Jagdgeschwader 77
Infobox Military Unit
unit_name=Jagdgeschwader 77
caption=JG 77 "Herz As"
dates=1939-1945
country=Germany
allegiance=
branch=Air Force
type=Fighter Aircraft
role=Air superiority
size=Air Force Wing
command_structure=
current_commander=
garrison=
ceremonial_chief=
colonel_of_the_regiment=
nickname=Herz As
patron=
motto=
colors=
identification_symbol=
march=
mascot=
battles=
notable_commanders=Gordon Gollob (16 May 1942 - 1 October 1942),Johannes Steinhoff (1 April 1943 - 1 December 1944)
anniversaries=
decorations=
battle_honours=Jagdgeschwader 77 (JG 77) "Herz As" {Ace of Hearts) was a
Luftwaffe fighter wing duringWorld War II . It served in all the German theaters of war, from Western Europe to the Eastern Front, and from the high north in Norway to the Mediterranean.Formation and unit restructures
JG 77 was formed in May 1939 with I. and II. Gruppe. III./JG 77 was formed on
5 July 1940 inTrondheim from the II(J)./JG 186 . I./ JG 77 was reorganized on21 November 1940 into IV./JG 51 and a new I./JG 77 was established. In January 1942 I./JG 77 was transferred to I./JG 5 and a new I./JG 77 was created. In April 1942 1. Staffel was transferred toRomania and designated the defence unit for thePloieşti oil fields at Mizil. (This staffel was redesignated 1./JG 4 in August 1942.)ervice in World War II
Invasion of Poland, campaign in the West and the Balkans
I./JG 77 took part in the Invasion of Poland on
1 September 1939, while attached to "Luftflotte 3 ". II./JG 77 took part in the first Jagdwaffe victories in the West, which occurred on4 September 1939, when II./JG 77 shot down 2 RAF bombers over the North Sea.In April
1940 JG 77 took part inOperation Weserübung , the invasion ofNorway . A third "Gruppe" was created in Norway in July, while the original two "Gruppen" took part in theBattle of France from10 May 1940. After the successful invasion ofFrance I. Gruppe initially supported "Fliegerkorps X" (under "Luftflotte 5 ") in operations against Britain from bases in Norway. While the I./JG 77 was based in France during theBattle of Britain , III./JG 77 remained deployed aroundBerlin . 7. & 8. Staffel was transferred to Dinan, France, in late 1940.While stationed in Norway and Denmark in 1940 II./JG 77 claimed some 79 victories, for 6 pilots killed, before leaving in November 1940 for defence duties in
Brest . Their greatest achievement was the shooting down of an entire formation of 12Bristol Blenheim s of No. 82 Squadron on 13 August 1940.While I./JG 77 was based in Norway and Denmark, in May 1941 II. and III./JG 77 were used in support of the invasion of Greece and the paratroop assault on Crete. In fighter-bomber operations against the Royal Navy, III./JG 77 claimed some 34,000 tonnes of shipping sunk, including the 22,000 ton freighter 'Hellas' as well as damaging the RN cruiser HMS "Fiji" and a destroyer. On 22 May, Oblt Wolf Huy and Oblt
Kurt Ubben attacked the Royal Navy’s Force “C” off the islands of Kythera and Antikythera. Both pilots gained bomb hits on the battleship HMS "Warspite".Invasion of the Soviet Union
Following the operations in Crete, JG 77 was withdrawn to Romania in order to prepare for Operation Barbarossa. During this time, III. Gruppe was in the process of converting to the new Bf 109F, a process that would be completed shortly after the attack on the Soviet Union began. As
Operation Barbarossa , the invasion of theSoviet Union , started on22 June 1941, II. and III. Gruppe plus "Stab" supported the advance East as part ofArmy Group South , while I. Gruppe served on the Finland front. The Jagdgeschwader scored quickly ; Oblt. Walter Hoeckner of 6./JG77 claimed 8 of 10 Tupolev SB-2s claimed on 25 June by III./JG 77 and on 26 June Oblt. Kurt Ubben shot down 4 SB-2s. That same day Ofw. Reinhold Schmetzer claimed 5 SB-2s shot down. In the period22 June -5 December 1941 the unit, and its attachment I.(J)/LG 2, destroyed 1,166 Soviet aircraft, in return for 52 losses in aerial combat and two aircraft on the ground [Bergström 2007, p. 116.] .By early 1942 German Army Group South and "
Luftflotte 4 " in the eastern Ukraine had three fighter units at his disposal: III./JG 52 atKharkov-Rogan , I.(J)/LG 2 (later redesignated I./JG 77) at Mariupol, and III./JG 77 on the Crimean.Due to the adverse weather and the numerical weakness of the Soviets in the region, III gruppe and its sister units had little contact with the enemy, so that in January 1942, III./JG 77 recorded a 2.7 to 1 victories to loss ratio, a ratio far below the average for the other eastern Front Jagdgruppen.The war in the Crimea flared up in late February 1942 after a Soviet offensive aimed at relieving the Sevastopol area and pushing the Germans from the Crimea. III./JG 77's Oblt. Wolf-Dieter Huy claimed the Gruppe's 600th victory on 11 March, but was badly injured. Although combats on 16 March yielded 10 victory claims, three Bf 109s were lost. Soon after, III./JG 77 was returned to Germany for a period of rest. Replacing III gruppe was II./JG 77 after a three-month refit in Germany. Led by the capable and experienced Hptm.
Anton Mader , the gruppe claimed 21 Soviet aircraft for no losses on 19 March. Four days later, II./ JG 77 bounced a group of 247 lAP Yak-1s and shot down two, killing 21-kill ace Major Mikhail Fedoseyev. In ten days of intensive operations II./JG 77 managed to achieve sixty victories against just four combat losses.Meantime in the Southern Ukraine sector of Mius were I./JG 77, commanded by Hptm.
Herbert Ihlefeld . Of the 62 victories claimed by I./JG 77 in April 1942, (without losses) some 43 were claimed by Ihlefeld and his wingman, Oblt.Friedrich Geisshardt . On 22 April, Ihlefeld passed the 100-victory mark, while Geisshardt attained his 60th claim. Two days later Ihlefeld was awarded the 'Swords' to the "Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes " and was promoted to the rank of Major. Shortly afterwards he was taken out of operations to be trained as a "Geschwaderkommodore".Hauptmann Gordon Gollob (86 kills) was sent from the Test Centre at Rechlin to take over as "Geschwaderkommodore " on 16 May 1942, and Hauptmann Heinrich 'Pritzl' Bär (91 victories) was transferred from IV./JG 51 as "Gruppekommandeur " to command I./JG 77. The total victory claims tally of Jagdgeschwader 77 by 19 May was 2,011.The fighter units directed against Sevastopol - III./JG 3, plus II./JG 77 and the returned III./JG 77 - were led by Hptm.Gollob. When Sevastopol fell after a month's battle, the Germans had claimed 123 Soviet aircraft shot down against 30 of their own destroyed or severely damaged.During the summer of 1942, Bär and Gollob would dominate the air war over the Kerch area. Gollob became the first fighter pilot to claim 150 air victories in August 1942 and left JG 77 soon after, being replaced by Major
Joachim Müncheberg fromJagdgeschwader 26 .ervice in the Mediterranean
I. Gruppe, which was still based in Norway, was reorganized into I. Gruppe/
JG 5 in January1942 , and the entire JG 77 (with a newly created I. Gruppe) was then transferred south to theMediterranean area.During operations against
Malta from June-Oct 1942, I./JG 77, still commanded by Bär, claimed 99 aircraft shot down to add to the 900 claimed in Russia. Oblt. Freytag claimed 25 kills over Malta, Obfw. Walter Brandt claiming 14.III./JG 77, with "Geschwaderkommodore" Maj. Müncheberg, arrived direct from the Russian Front, replacing
Jagdgeschwader 27 inNorth Africa in October 1942. II./JG 77 arrived in December 1942, with 1,300 victories claimed on the Eastern Front. The two "Gruppen" had claimed between them a total of 775 Soviet aircraft in the last four months, with a quarter of these claimed by just four pilots (Setz, Hackl, Clausen and Reinhardt).JG 77 saw extensive action against the
Desert Air Force fighter-bombers, the unit's aces continuing to build their scores. During theMareth offensive in Feb-March 1943, JG 77 claimed 18 Kittyhawks on26 February . Total Allied air superiority led to the various JG 77 bases inTunisia coming under constant air attack, and a large number of Bf109's were written off on the ground. After claiming a further 23 kills, Maj. Müncheberg was killed in action withUSAAF Spitfires on23 March . It was as a tribute to Müncheberg that the red heart emblem was adopted as JG 77's badge. (Müncheberg had been "Staffelkapitän " of 7. JG 26 in 1940-41 who had first used the red heart motif.)The experienced Oberstleutnant
Johannes Steinhoff took over as "Kommodore". Even under increasingly difficult circumstances, the Geschwader did their utmost to protect the retreatingAfrika Korps forces. Hpt. Bär claimed 61 victories during their African service (45 over Tunisia), while ObltErnst-Wilhelm Reinert of II./JG 77 claimed another 51 kills and I/JG 77's Oblt. Freytag claimed 19. By the20 April 1943, JG 77 were the sole fighter presence in Northern Africa. The unit flew out on8 May , withdrawing to Sicily, leaving most of their ground crews behind. The Wing had suffered heavy losses in the air and on the ground, while claiming 333 air kills in total in North Africa. While I. and II./JG 77 returned to Germany to re-equip, III./JG 77 remained in Italy, based atFoggia , north-east ofNaples and flying sorties into Sardinia and Sicily.In mid June I./JG 77 flew intoSciacca on Sicily.Defence of the South Front
Now based in
Italy andSicily the Geschwader, now part of "FliegerKorps II (Süd)", prepared for the Allies to invade Sicily. For a vivid account of Luftwaffe operations at this time see Steinhoff's book "Messerschmitts over Sicily: Diary of a Luftwaffe Fighter Commander" (Stackpole Military History Series).During the rest of
1943 and1944 JG 77 was stationed on the Southern Front, mainly in theBalkans Sardinia andItaly , but also inRomania . On24 April 1944 III./JG 77 intercepted USAAF heavy bombers raidingPloieşti , losing Hpt. Emil Omert (70 kills) killed in action. By June 1944, just two gruppen of JG 77 were the sole air defense left in Italy and the easternMediterranean .Back to Germany
In
1945 JG 77 was relocated to Germany itself to help with the "Reichsverteidigung" (Defense of the Reich ). In the last months of the war part of JG 77 was employed against Soviet Air Force inSilesia . In this area on7 March 1945 Kommodore MajorErich Leie , a 118-kill ace, was killed in combat with Yak-9 fighters.Commanding officers
Geschwaderkommodore
*Oberstleutnant
Eitel Roediger von Manteuffel ,1 October 1939
*MajorBernhard Woldenga ,22 December 1940
*MajorGotthard Handrick ,23 June 1941
*MajorGordon M. Gollob ,16 May 1942
*MajorJoachim Müncheberg ,1 October 1942
*OberstleutnantJohannes Steinhoff ,1 April 1943
*MajorJohannes Wiese ,1 December 1944
*MajorSiegfried Freytag ,26 December 1944
*MajorErich Leie ,29 December 1944
*MajorSiegfried Freytag ,7 March 1945
*MajorFritz Losigkeit ,1 April 1945Gruppenkommandeure
I./JG 77
*Hauptmann Johannes Janke, 1 May 1939
*Hauptmann Walter Grommes, February 1941
*Major Joachim Seegert, June 1941
*HauptmannHerbert Ihlefeld , 6 January 1942
*MajorHeinz Bär , 11 May 1942
*Oberstleutnant Armin Köhler, 31 July 1943
*Hauptmann Lutz-Wilhelm Burkhardt, 19 August 1943
*Hauptmann Theo Lindemann, 30 November 1943
*Hauptmann Armin Köhler, May 1944
*Hauptmann Lothar Baumann, 1 August 1944
*Major Münnichow, 24 December 1944
*Hauptmann Joachim Deicke, 10 Januar 1945
*Hauptmann Heinz Grosser, 17 April 1945II./JG 77
*Oberstleutnant
Carl-Alfred Schumacher , 1 May 1939
*MajorHilmer von Bülow-Bothkamp , 30 November 1939
*Hauptmann Karl Hentschel, 31 March 1940
*Hauptmann Franz-Heinz Lange, 9 September 1940
*Hauptmann Helmut Henz, 23 April 1941
*MajorAnton Mader , 26 May 1941
*Oberleutnant Heinz Dudeck, 7 March 1943
*MajorSiegfried Freytag , 13 March 1943
*Hauptmann Emil Omert, 29 January 1944
*Major Armin Köhler, 4 April 1945III./JG 77
*Major Heinrich Seeliger, 5 July 1940
*Major Alexander von Winterfeldt, October 1940
*unknown, 2 August 1941
*MajorKurt Ubben , 5 September 1941
*Hauptmann Karl Bresoschek, 10 March 1944
*Hauptmann Emil Omert, 3 April 1944
*Hauptmann Karl Bresoschek, 24 April 1944
*Oberleutnant Erhard Niese, 6 June 1944
*Major Armin Köhler, August 1944Ergänzungsgruppe/JG 77
* Oberleutnant Schultz, March 1941
* Major Albert Blumensaat, May 1941
* Major Kurt Fischer, 1 July 1941taffelkapitäne
Ölschutzstaffel/JG 77
*Oberleutnant Günther Hannak, April 1942
Pilots attached to JG 77
*
Heinrich Bär
*Heinrich Ehrler
*Erich Ett
*Gordon Gollob
*Reinhard Heydrich
*Karl-Fritz Schlosstein
*Johannes Steinhoff
*Maximilian Volke ee also
Organization of the Luftwaffe during World War II References
* Bergström, Christer (2007). Barbarossa - The Air Battle: July-December 1941. London: Chervron/Ian Allen. ISBN 978-1-85780-270-2.
*Jochen Prien: "Geschichte des Jagdgeschwaders 77" (1992-95, Struve)External links
* [http://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Gliederungen/Jagdgeschwader/JG77-R.htm A short history of JG 77 with a complete list of commanders]
* [http://www.ww2.dk/air/jagd/jg77.htm Overview of unit commanders, air-bases including monthly summary of aircraft quantities]
* [http://members.aol.com/falkeeins/index.html Kaczmarek - Luftwaffe pilot accounts, including bios of leading JG 77 aces Wolf-Dieter Huy & Johann Pichler - a first in English on the net]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.