- AGO Flugzeugwerke
AGO Flugzeugwerke was, until 1945 a German aircraft manufacturing company. The initials AGO had a variety of meanings during the company's lifetime, but in the its final version stood for "Apparatebau GmbH Oschersleben". At its peak, the company employed around 4,500 people.
Overview
AGO was founded in 1911 in
Munich as "Flugmaschinenwerke Gustav Otto" byGustav Otto and a Dr Alberti. Gustav, the son of DrNikolaus Otto - inventor of thefour-stroke engine , was a pioneer aviator (pilot's licence No. 34) and engine-builder. As was usual in those days, a flying school was attached to the business - one of its later students wasErnst Udet .Its first success came from the company's head desiger,
Gabriel Letsch , in the form of an observation biplane with a pusher propeller that soon became the standard equipment of the "Bayerischen Fliegertruppe ". The machine was powered by a 75 kW (100 hp) engine of the firm's own design, branded "Aviatiker Gustav Otto".In 1912, a separate division was set up in
Johannisthal under the name Ago Flugzeugwerke, with Elisabeth Woerner and Hermann Fremery as directors. After the outbreak ofWorld War I , AGO built a series of military reconnaissance aircraft, beginning with the C.I - a pusher-powered biplane designed by A. Haefeli. The most successful of AGO's wartime aircraft was the C.IV of 1916, of which 70 examples were built, but which proved unpopular with its pilots.Fact|date=August 2008In 1916, Gustav Otto opened a new plant in Munich under the name
Bayerische Flugzeugwerke , and shortly afterwards one inOschersleben (withJosef Schnittisser ) again named AGO, this time for "Aktiengesellschaft Gustav Otto". The Oschersleben plant was used to manufacture components for other manufacturers' aircraft until the end of the war.Between the Wars
After the Armistice, Otto tried automobile manufacturing for a while, but in 1919 had to dismiss the employees of the Berlin company and divest himself of the Oschersleben factory. He himself withdrew to
Lake Starnberg where he died in 1926. The company continued onwards however, and in the same year developed 20 new hectares of factory space near the "Sudenburger Maschinenfabrik und Eisengießerei AG" plant atMagdeburg . However, this was not to last, and by 1928 this enterprise was also forced to close. On 30 July 1930, AGO's remaining assets were sold at auction by order of the court.1933 - 1945
Some years later, the Nazi government resurrected AGO by refurbishing the Oschersleben plant for aircraft production once more. The first order was for 36
Arado Ar 65 fighters, 197Arado Ar 66 trainers, and 71Heinkel He 51 fighters. The first of these to fly was probably one of the Ar 65s, on 1 May 1935. This was followed by an order for 140Henschel Hs 123 dive-bombers delivered at the end of 1937, AGO's introduction to all-metal construction. Next came orders for 241Gotha Go 145 trainers and 187Arado Ar 96 , and then 150Henschel Hs 126 reconnaissance aircraft. This latter order was increased to 390 units in Summer 1938. Between March 1937 and March 1938, AGO built 121Focke-Wulf Fw 44 . In 1938, production of theMesserschmitt Bf 109 began, and from 1941 onwards, theFocke-Wulf Fw 190 became the mainstay of AGO's production.In 1935, the design department was re-established, with the first new AGO aircraft becoming the Ao 192 "Kurier" of 1937. Seven examples wer built, but the
Siebel Si 104 won the construction contract instead. A design for a heavy fighter project, the Ao 225 did not progress past the wind-tunnel stage and even the -225 designation was withdrawn by theRLM and re-assigned toFocke-Achgelis .From 1943 onwards, the AGO factory came under attack by Allied bombing raids, suffering increasingly heavy damage up to the end of the war. In 1947, the last remains of the factory were blown up by the
Red Army and AGO's history was over.References
*
* Peter Supf: "Das Buch der Deutschen Fluggeschichte, Bände I und II"
* Uwe Schmidt: "AGO-Flugzeugwerke Oschersleben"
* "Flugzeuglieferpläne des RLM LC II"
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