- Laupheim Air Base
Infobox Airport
name = Laupheim Air Base
nativename = Heeresflugplatz Laupheim
nativename-a =
nativename-r =
image-width =
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IATA =
ICAO = ETHL
type = Military
owner = Federal Ministry of Defence
operator =German Army
city-served =
location =Laupheim
built = 1940
used = 1940 - 1945; 1964 - present
commander =Colonel Hans-Christoph Specht
occupants = German Army Aviators Medium Transport Helicopter Regiment 25 "Oberschwaben"
elevation-f = 1,765
elevation-m = 538
website =
metric-elev =
metric-rwy =
r1-number = 03/21
r1-length-f = 1,969
r1-length-m = 600
r1-surface =Grass
r2-number = 09/27
r2-length-f = 5,400
r2-length-m = 1,646
r2-surface =Asphalt
stat-year =
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footnotes =Laupheim Air Base (German: "Heeresflugplatz Laupheim") is located close to the
city ofLaupheim ,Baden-Württemberg ,Germany .Pre-1945
In August 1938, works began to establish a base for the German Air Force ("Luftwaffe") in the vicinity of Laupheim. These works were completed in March 1940. During
World War II , several units of the Luftwaffe were based in Laupheim, including atraining unit, a wing of nightfighters and a wing ofbomber destroyer s. Additionally, a small production plant for the Focke Achgelis Fa 223 Drache twin-rotorhelicopter prototype was also placed on the air base.On 19 July 1944, the air force base was attacked by 45
B-24 bombers ofUSAAF 8th Air Force , dropping 115 tons ofexplosives andincendiary device s, while escortingfighter aircraft attacked the air base in low-level flight. The raid caused considerable damage, completely destroying ten planes (sevenMesserschmitt Bf 110 , oneArado Ar 96 and oneMesserschmitt Bf 108 ). Four other planes were partially damaged. The technical equipment of the air force units, ahangar ,barracks andair traffic control , as well as three previously completed helicopters of the type Focke-Achgelis Fa 223 were destroyed. Ananti-aircraft unit received a direct hit, killing one soldier and injuring four. Two days later, another anti-aircraft unit shot down a B-24 bomber which had sustained considerable damage during an air raid onMunich , therefore flying at low level. The crew managed to bail out but due to heavy shelling by anti-aircraft units, the roof of thechurch in nearbyBaustetten received considerable damage.The next attack took place on 31 July 1944. Eleven
P-51 Mustang s carried out a low-level attack, completely destroying two Messerschmitt Bf 110 and an Italian trainer and damaging two further Messerschmitt Bf 110. Consequently, the anti-aircraft units stationed around the air base were beginning to get nervous, so that, when on 9 August 1944, 28 planes suddenly appeared from the direction ofSchwendi , these units instantly opened fire, managing to shoot down one plane. However, the planes were German aircraft of 4th Fighter Wing "Udet ", equipped withFocke-Wulf Fw 190 . After that, the production plant of Focke-Achgelis was evacuated toOchsenhausen . On 26 November 1944, tenP-47 Thunderbolt attacked the air force base causing only slight damage.On 2 April 1945, 2nd Group of 53rd Fighter Wing, flying
Messerschmitt Bf 109 , was transferred to Laupheim. On 18 April and 19 April 1945, the base was attacked yet again, as a result of which one soldier was killed. The following day, the base came under heavy attack by French bombers and their protecting aircraft, destroying or severely damaging all planes stationed on the base. On 21 April 1945, the remnants of 2nd Group of 53rd fighter Fighter Wing were transferred to Schongau in Bavaria.On
23 April 1945 , French armed forces occupied Laupheim and the airbase.Post-1945
On the grounds of the former
German Air Force base, completely new military installations were constructed in 1964, designated to house helicopters of theGerman Army Aviators Corps . While the building works were still in progress, theGeneral Staff moved theheadquarters of German Army Aviators Corps Command 2 fromUlm to Laupheim. Operational flying started soon afterwards and the first helicopters stationed on the base were Sikorsky H-34.In 1971, following a period of continuous growth of German Army Aviators Corps, a reorganisation of all the units in southern
Germany took place, which resulted in Laupheim becoming the headquarters of all German Army Aviators Corps units in southern Germany. Thebattalion and the maintenancesquadron based in Laupheim were joined together to form German Army Aviators Corps Medium TransportRegiment 25.In 1972, the
CH-53 replaced the by now obsolete Sikorsky H-34 and has been in service ever since.In the following period, helicopters from Laupheim saw more than 120.000 hours in action in as different places as
Italy ,Greece , thePyrenees and theAlps , mainly by offering help and logistic support after natural disasters.On 21 June 1989, the base was officially named "
Kurt Georg Kiesinger " "Barracks" after the formerChancellor of Germany , a Swabian himself.In 1994, German Army Aviators Corps Regiment 20 in
Neuhausen ob Eck together with their base was dissolved. The helicopters from that base were partly transferred to Laupheim in order to form German Army Aviators Corps Support Squadron 10. Later, this squadron was also dissolved and its helicopters incoporated into German Army Aviators Corps Medium Transport Regiment 25. In the same year, the existence of Headquarters of German Army Aviators Corps Command 2 in Laupheim was discontinued and the base together with its staff was incorporated into a new command structure.Beginning in the early 1990s, helicopters from the German Army Aviators Corps Medium Transport Regiment 25 saw active service in as various part as the
Balkans ,Iraq ,Afghanistan andDemocratic Republic of the Congo under the auspices of eitherNATO , theUN or theEU .In 1995, after a further restructuring of theBundeswehr , during which a large number of bases were closed, German Army Aviators Corps Medium Transport Regiment 25 was given the honorary name "Oberschwaben" (i.e.Upper Swabia ), this being a result of the German Army's continuing commitment to the base.In 2002, German Army Aviators Corps Medium Transport Regiment 25 was incorporated into the
Airmobile Operations Division ("Division Luftbewegliche Operationen").See also
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German Army Aviators Corps
*History of the German Army Aviators Corps
*German Army
*Bundeswehr Further reading
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*External links
* [http://www.deutschesheer.de Official site of the German Army]
* [http://www.bundeswehr.de Official site of the German Armed Forces]
* [http://www.hubschraubermuseum.de/hubmus_/index.jsp?bsLangCode=EN Helicopter museum in Bückeburg]
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