- Eduard Neumann
Infobox Military Person
name=Eduard 'Edu' Neumann
lived=birth date|1911|6|5|df=y — death date and age|2004|8|9|1911|6|5|df=y
placeofbirth=Molodia
placeofdeath=
caption=Eduard Neumann (right) with Adolf Galland in North Africa,22 September 1942 .
nickname="Edu"
allegiance=flagicon|Nazi GermanyNazi Germany
branch=Luftwaffe
serviceyears=1934 - 1945
rank=Oberst
commands=JG 27
unit=Condor Legion ,JG 26 ,JG 27
battles=Spanish Civil War World War II
*Battle of France
*Battle of Britain
*North African campaign
awards=Spanish Cross Iron Cross 2nd and 1st ClassGerman Cross in Gold
laterwork=Eduard 'Edu' Neumann (
5 June 1911 –9 August 2004 ) was a GermanLuftwaffe Officer and commanded the famousJagdgeschwader 27 ‘Afrika’ during theNorth African Campaign from 1941 to 1943.Early life
Neumann was born in the city of
Molodia ,Bukovina , in the formerAustria-Hungarian Empire . In 1914, at the age of three, Eduard lost his mother, and his father not long afterwards. He and his sister Else came under the affectionate but strict guidance of their Grandmother, after theGreat War the family moved toGermany . [www.alteadler.de - German website, Fighter Pilots Society]Into the Luftwaffe
In 1928 Neumann went to
Berlin to study mechanical and aviation engineering. It was here that he discovered his enthusiasm for flight and quickly became a member of the 'Akakflieg'Glider club in 1929. In 1932 he passed his flying examinations in powered flight in Cottbus. In 1934 he began training on theFieseler Fi 5 aircraft, then later the same year he joined the fledglingLuftwaffe , which was still under secret construction. In Schleissheim he received final combat training, Neumann was then deployed to II./JG 132 ‘Richthofen’ in July 1935 [www.alteadler.de - German website, Fighter Pilots Society] .After the re-training on the
Bf 109 D at Barth in August 1937 he was transferred to the Luftwaffe's ‘Condor Legion ’ which was to be sent to aid GeneralFrancisco Franco 'sFascists in theSpanish Civil War along with other notable personalities likeAdolf Galland andWerner Mölders . After a year's service Neumann returned to Germany at the rank ofOberleutnant with two victories and theSpanish Cross in Gold with Swords, and was then appointed "Gruppenkommandeur" with 4./JG 26 in Düsseldorf, remaining with the unit until departing forJagdgeschwader 27 in early 1940, becoming the unit'sAdjutant .The day after scoring his first (World War II) victory during the opening phase of the
Battle of Britain , a RAFNo. 236 Squadron RAF Blenheim off the coast ofCherbourg on the20 July 1940 , he was appointed "Gruppenkommandeur " of I./JG 27 to replace Major Helmut Riegel, shot down and killed by 501 Squadron Hurricanes off the Island of Alderney. After a brief participation In the Invasion of Yugoslavia, in April 1941 the unit moved to Ain-el Gazala, Libya, North Africa on18 April 1941 . [Weal, p. 30.] He received theGerman Cross in Gold on11 May 1942 asHauptmann andGruppenkommandeur I./JG 27 . [Patzwall]On
8 June 1942 he was promoted to Major andGeschwaderkommodore of JG 27, which he successfully led until22 April 1943 when he joined the Staff ofGeneral der Jagdflieger . In March 1943 Neumann was promoted toOberstleutnant (Lieutenant Colonel), and later in 1944 toOberst (Colonel ). [Scutts 1994] Neumann finished the war as the Commander of Fighter Forces in Northern Italy.Neumann was a believer in leading his squadron from the ground, and given these long periods of adminastrative command, Neumann's active combat career was somewhat limited, although he became one of the most respected and influential field commanders in the Luftwaffe. As a consequence he only achieved 13 victories during his Luftwaffe career (2 in
Spain ). In early 1945 Neumann was among those courageous men to protest againstHermann Göring in what came to be known as the "Fighter Pilots Revolt " or "Fighter Pilots Mutiny".One of Neumann's most successful achievements was the moulding of the career of
Hans-Joachim Marseille , giving the unorthodox fighter pilot free rein to practice his tactics. Marseille went on to score 158 victories against the Western Allied Air Forces, a number no other pilot would match. [Kurowski 1994, p. 216.]In 1989 Neumann and other members of JG 27 erected a
Pyramid with the co-operation of the Egyptian Government on the place that Marseille fell to his death.After the war
After the war Neumann developed an engineering company. He continued to fly as hobby, after the banning of civilian flight clubs had been lifted.
Neumann remained a member of the German Fighter Pilot's Association, until his death from a long illness aged 93.
References
* Kurowski, Franz. "German Fighter Ace Hans-Joachim Marseille". Schiffer Military History, 1994. ISBN 0-88740-517-7
* Patzwall, Klaus D. and Scherzer, Veit. "Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941 - 1945 Geschichte und Inhaber Band II". Norderstedt, Germany: Verlag Klaus D. Patzwall, 2001. ISBN 3-931533-45-X.
* Prien, Jochen & Rodeike, Peter & Stemmer, Gerhard. "Messerschmidt Bf 109 im Einsatz bei Stab und I./Jagdgeschwader 27 1939 - 1945". struve-druck, Eutin. ISBN 3-923457-46-4
* Scutts, Jerry. "Bf 109 Aces of North Africa and the Mediterranean". Osprey Publishing, 1994. ISBN 1-85532-448-2
* Weal, John. "Jagdgeschwader 27 "Afrika". ISBN 1-84176-538-4
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