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Werner Mölders

Werner Mölders (18 March 1913 – 22 November 1941) was a World War II German Luftwaffe pilot, wing commander, and the leading German fighter ace in the Spanish Civil War. He became the first pilot in aviation history to shoot down 100 enemy aircraft and was highly decorated for his achievements. Mölders developed fighter tactics that led to the finger-four formation. He died in a plane crash as a passenger.

Werner Mölders
Mölders as Oberstleutnant
Nickname(s)Vati ("Daddy")
Born(1913-03-18)18 March 1913
Gelsenkirchen, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire
Died22 November 1941(1941-11-22) (aged 28)
Breslau, Free State of Prussia, Nazi Germany
Buried
Allegiance Nazi Germany
Service/branch Luftwaffe
Years of service1931–1941
RankOberst (Colonel)
UnitCondor Legion, JG 53, JG 51
Commands heldIII./JG 53, JG 51
Battles/wars
Awards Spanish Cross in Gold with Swords and Diamonds
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords and Diamonds
Signature

Mölders joined the Luftwaffe, the air force of Nazi Germany, in 1934. In 1938 he volunteered for service in Germany's Condor Legion, then supporting General Francisco Franco's Nationalist side in the Spanish Civil War, and shot down 14 aircraft. Following the start of World War II in 1939, he took part in the "Phoney War" of 1939–1940, the Battle of France of May to June 1940, and the Battle of Britain (July 1940 onwards). With his tally standing at 68 victories, Mölders and his unit, Jagdgeschwader 51 (JG 51), transferred to the Eastern Front in June 1941 for the opening of Operation Barbarossa, achieving 101 victories by mid-July 1941.

Prevented from flying further combat missions for propaganda reasons, at the age of 28 Mölders was appointed Inspector of Fighters. While inspecting the Luftwaffe units in the Crimea he received orders to return to Berlin to attend the state funeral of Ernst Udet, a Luftwaffe general and World War I flying ace. The aircraft in which Mölders was traveling as a passenger to Berlin experienced an engine failure and attempted an emergency landing. It crashed at Breslau, killing Mölders and two others.

The Luftwaffe and the West German Bundeswehr both honoured Mölders by naming two fighter wings, a destroyer and a barracks after him. In 1998 the German Parliament decided that members of the Condor Legion such as Mölders should "no longer be honoured". In 2005 the German Ministry of Defence decided to remove the name "Mölders" from the fighter wing still bearing his name.

Education and early career edit

Mölders was born on 18 March 1913 in Gelsenkirchen, the son of teacher (Oberlehrer) Victor Mölders and his wife Annemarie Mölders, née Riedel. He was the third of four children, with an older sister, Annemarie, an older brother, Hans, and a younger brother, Victor.[1] After his father, a Reserve Leutnant in the King's 145th Infantry Regiment, was killed in action on 2 March 1915 in the Argonne Forest in France, his mother moved the family into her parents' house in Brandenburg an der Havel.[2]

 
Kurfürstenhaus (left) in Brandenburg, purchased by the Riedel family in 1902.[3]

In Brandenburg, Mölders found a benefactor in Father Erich Klawitter, who instilled firm religious beliefs in him.[4] From 1919 to 1931, Mölders attended, first, the elementary school and then from 1922 the Saldria-Realgymnasium, a secondary school that enjoyed a supraregional reputation.[5] In school he discovered his love for water sports, especially rowing. He joined two rowing clubs, first the Saldria-Brandenburg and later the Brandenburger Ruderclub, and enjoyed success at rowing-regattas.[5] From 1 October 1925, he was also a member of the Bund Neudeutschland in der katholischen Jugendbewegung, a Catholic youth organisation.[6] Mölders graduated from school in early 1931 with the Abitur (diploma) and expressed a desire to become an officer in the armed forces.[7]

Mölders joined the Preußisches Infanterieregiment Nr. 2, an infantry regiment under the command of Oberst Siegfried Haenicke and subordinated to the 1st Division of the Reichswehr in Allenstein, East Prussia on 1 April 1931, serving as an officer cadet in the infantry.[8] He attained the rank of Fahnenjunker-Gefreiter on 1 October 1931, rising to Fahnenjunker-Unteroffizier on 1 April 1932.[9] After completing his basic military training in October 1932, he transferred to the Military School Dresden. On 1 June 1933, he successfully completed his training in Dresden and was promoted to ensign. He again was transferred, this time to the 1st Prussian Pioneer Battalion (Infantry Regiment 2) at the Pioneer School in Munich.[10] During his training years, Mölders made his first attempt to fulfil his dream of flying and volunteered for pilot training, but was declared unfit for flying. He tried again and was given conditional permission (bedingt tauglich—with constraints) to begin flight training.[11]

After his promotion to Oberfähnrich on 1 February 1934, Mölders began his pilot training at the Deutsche Verkehrsfliegerschule (German transport flying school) in Cottbus, lasting from 6 February 1934 to 31 December 1934.[12] On 1 March 1934, he was promoted to Leutnant and assigned to the recently established Luftwaffe. In the early stages of his pilot training, he suffered continually from nausea and vomiting, but he eventually overcame these problems and finished the course at the top of his class. The next phase of his military pilot's training was from 1 January 1935 to 30 June 1935 at the combat flying school in Tutow and the Jagdfliegerschule (fighter pilot school) at Schleißheim near Munich. He received the newly created Pilot's Badge of the Luftwaffe on 21 May 1935.[13]

On 1 July 1935, Leutnant Mölders was posted to Fliegergruppe Schwerin (I./JG 162 "Immelmann"). On 7 March 1936, during the remilitarisation of the Rhineland, Mölders and his squadron (Staffel) were moved to Düsseldorf. During this period, Mölders met Luise Baldauf, whom he was to marry a few years later, shortly before his death. On 20 April 1936, Adolf Hitler's birthday, numerous promotions were handed out, and Mölders advanced to Oberleutnant, effective as of 1 April 1936. At the same time, he became leader of the fighter training squadron of the 2nd Group of Jagdgeschwader 134 "Horst Wessel". This group was under the command of Major Theo Osterkamp, who became another of Mölders' early mentors. Mölders was appointed squadron leader (Staffelkapitän) of the 1st squadron of Jagdgeschwader 334 on 15 March 1937 and served as an instructor in Wiesbaden.[14]

Condor Legion edit

In 1936, the Germans sent a Luftwaffe force, the Condor Legion, to assist the Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War. Mölders volunteered for service, and arrived by sea in Cadiz on 14 April 1938. He was assigned to the 3. Staffel (3rd squadron) of Jagdgruppe 88 (J/88) commanded by Oberleutnant Adolf Galland. The unit, stationed at the ValenciaEbro front, was equipped with the Heinkel He 51, but later switched to the Messerschmitt Bf 109.[Note 1] Mölders assumed command of the squadron on 24 May 1938, when Galland returned to Germany.[15] He claimed his first aerial victory, shooting down a Polikarpov I-15 "Chato" ("Curtiss" to the Germans) near Algar, on 15 July 1938.[16] Over the remaining months of the year, Mölders became the leading ace of the Condor Legion, claiming 15 aircraft in Spain: two I-15 "Curtiss", 12 I-16 "Rata" and one Tupolev SB (one "Rata" claimed on 23 September 1938 was not confirmed).[17]

 
Schwarm formation and cross-over turn[18]

In recognition of his exceptional performance as a commander and fighter pilot, Mölders was promoted to Hauptmann (Captain) on 18 October 1938, effective as of 1 October 1938.[19] He claimed his 14th and final confirmed aerial victory of the conflict by downing a Polikarpov I-16 "Rata" near Mola on 3 November 1938.[16] On 5 December, he passed on command of 3. Staffel to Hubertus von Bonin and flew from La Cenia back to Germany on a Junkers Ju 52.[20] From 6 December 1938 until March 1939, Mölders was a member of the 1st group of Jagdgeschwader 133 (JG 133) and held a staff position with the Inspector of Fighters at the Ministry of Aviation in Berlin. His task was to devise new fighter pilot tactics. In March 1939 he was given command as Staffelkapitän of 1./JG 133, taking over command from Oberleutnant Hubertus von Bonin. JG 133 was later renamed Jagdgeschwader 53 Pik As (Ace of Spades).[21][22][Note 2]

For his achievements in Spain, Mölders was honoured with the Spanish Medalla de la Campaña and Medalla Militar on 4 May 1939 and the German Spanish Cross in Gold with Swords and Diamonds (Spanienkreuz in Gold mit Schwertern und Brillanten) on 6 June 1939.[23] The Condor Legion officially returned to Germany on 6 June 1939 and troops marched through Berlin to the Lustgarten, where the fallen were honoured. A formal state banquet for the most highly decorated soldiers was held in the marble gallery of the Reich Chancellery. Mölders was seated at table 1, with General der Flieger Hugo Sperrle, General Antonio Aranda, General Gonzalo Queipo de Llano, Oberst Walter Warlimont, Oberstleutnant von Donat, Leutnant Reinhard Seiler and Oberfeldwebel Ignatz Prestele.[24]

Tactical innovations edit

With other airmen in Spain, Mölders developed the formation known as the "finger-four".[25] This improved the all-round field of vision and combat flexibility of a flight (Schwarm), enhanced mutual protection, and encouraged pilot initiative. In the "finger-four", the aircraft assumed positions corresponding to the fingertips of an outstretched hand. The fighters flew in two elements (Rotten) of two aircraft each; two Rotten (four aircraft) made up a Schwarm (swarm).[25]

Mölders is often credited with inventing the cross-over turn.[25] An early version of the manoeuvre, as used by a "Vic" of five aircraft (a tight formation forming the letter "V"), appeared in the Royal Air Force (RAF) Training Manual of 1922, and the manoeuvre may even date back to 1918. However, it had fallen into disuse due to the difficulty of performing it in a multi-aircraft formation with the contemporary spacing of less than 100 feet (30 m) between aircraft. The wide lateral separation of 1,800 feet (550 m) introduced by J 88 both necessitated such a turning manoeuvre, to enable a Schwarm to turn as a unit, and minimised the risk of midair collisions previously associated with it.[25]

World War II edit

Phoney War and the Battle of France edit

At the outbreak of World War II on 1 September 1939, Mölders' Staffel was stationed in the west protecting Germany's border in the MoselSaarPfalz region.[26] On 8 September 1939, Mölders' fighter suffered an engine failure; he crash-landed, flipping the aircraft over and injuring his back. The injury kept him out of combat for several days.[27] He returned to flying on 19 September. The following day, between Contz and Sierck, at the apex of the Dreiländereck,[28] over the three borders area, he shot down his first aircraft of the war, a Curtiss P-36 (according to other historians, it was one of a trio of French Hawk H-75As[28]), of Groupe de Chasse II/5 (Sgt Queginer bailed out). Thanks to that victory, he earned the Iron Cross 2nd Class (Eisernes Kreuz zweiter Klasse).[21][29] He recalled his first victory:

I took off with my Schwarm at 14.27 hrs to intercept six enemy monoplanes reported south of Trier. As the Schwarm overflew the river Saar near Merzig at 4500 metres, six machines were sighted south of Conz at 5000 metres. I climbed above the enemy in a wide curve to the north and carried out a surprise attack on the rearmost machine. I opened fire from approximately 50 metres, whereupon the Curtiss began to fishtail. After a further lengthy burst, smoke came out of the machine and individual pieces flew off it. It then tipped forward into a dive and I lost sight of it, as I had to defend myself against other opponents newly arriving on the scene.[28]

On 26 September 1939, JG 53 was ordered to form its III. Gruppe. Mölders relinquished command of 1./JG 53 to Oberleutnant Hans-Karl Mayer and organised the formation of III./JG 53 at Wiesbaden-Erbenheim Airfield; within two weeks, Gruppenkommandeur Mölders reported that the Gruppe was conditionally operational with 40 pilots and 48 aircraft.[30]

On 22 December, Mölders, leading four Bf 109s from III./JG 53, engaged three Hawker Hurricanes over the Saar River, between Metz and Thionville, that were trying to intercept an unidentified aircraft.[31] Mölders and Hans von Hahn shot down two Hurricanes flown by Sergeants R.M. Perry and J. Winn, becoming the first German fighter pilots to shoot down a Hawker Hurricane. Mölders shot down another Hurricane on 2 April, when he forced Flight Lieutenant C.D. "Pussy" Palmer of No. 1 Squadron RAF, to bail out, and on 20 April, he destroyed a French Curtiss P-36 Hawk (H-75A) east of Saarbrücken.[32]

By the time the Phoney War ended and the invasion of France and the Low Countries (Fall Gelb) began on 10 May 1940, Mölders' tally of aerial victories on the Western Front had increased to nine. This number included one Bristol Blenheim, two Curtiss P-36 Hawks, two Morane-Saulnier M.S.406s and four Hawker Hurricanes.[33] On 14 May, while engaging enemy bombers over Sedan, Mölders was shot down, but bailed out safely.[34] He claimed his 19th and 20th victories on 27 May 1940, downing two Curtiss Hawks 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) southwest of Amiens. Subsequently, he became the first fighter pilot to be awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross (Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes) and on 29 May 1940 was mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht propaganda radio report, the first of 11 such mentions.[35]

Prisoner of war edit

On 5 June 1940, on his 133rd combat mission of the war, engaging in aerial combat for the 32nd time, Mölders was shot down in his Bf 109 E-4 while engaged in aerial combat with French Air Force Dewoitine D.520s near Compiègne at about 18:40. Mölders was then captured by French soldiers and taken prisoner of war but liberated three weeks later upon the armistice with France.[21][36] According to a variety of sources, which include Edward R. Hooton and Alex Kershaw, his victor was Sous lieutenant René Pomier Layrargues from Groupe de Chasse II/7, who was shot down and killed just after downing Mölders.[34][37][38] Layrargues may have been shot down by Oberleutnant Gerhard Homuth from 3. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 27 (JG 27).[39]

Accounts regarding the events following his capture differ depending on the source. Ernst Obermaier and Werner Held, authors of the 1996 biography Fighter Pilot Colonel Werner Mölders - Images and Documents, state that while in French captivity, Mölders asked to shake hands with the pilot who had shot him down and learned that Pomier-Layrargues had been killed in action 30 minutes after their encounter. The authors claim that Mölders' initial experience in French captivity was harsh; he sustained abrasions to his face and his Knight's Cross was stolen from him. A French officer, Capitaine Giron, intervened, ensured he was treated fairly, and returned the stolen medal. When a French soldier was later sentenced to death by the Germans for beating Mölders, Mölders approached Hermann Göring and requested clemency, which was granted.[40]

Kurt Braatz, author of Werner Mölders - The Biography, analysed the available German and French records associated to the events of Mölders being shot down, his capture and its aftermath. Braatz's investigation revealed that Mölders was not shot down by Pomier-Layrargues. More likely, he was shot down by other German fighters operating in the same area. Braatz confirmed that Mölders was beaten and stripped of his possessions following his capture. Also confirmed is his fair treatment after he was taken to a prisoner of war camp. However, the story about the French soldier who was sentenced to death and later pardoned by Göring is very likely fictitious.[41]

Klaus Schmider, author of Werner Mölders and the Bundeswehr, states that his victor may have been Pomier-Layrargues. However, Schmider also acknowledges the research done by Braatz, indicating that Mölders could also have been shot down by Germans. French records held at Oise reveal that initially eight civilians had been arrested for the Mölders beating and only one, Edmond Maurice Caron, was brought before a Luftwaffe court. Caron was sentenced to twelve years imprisonment later commuted to six years. The records also show that Michel Duchènes, a local factory owner, contacted Göring's staff in early 1941. Contact with Kriegsgerichtsrat (Judge Advocate) Hans-Jürgen Soehring at the Luftwaffe headquarters in Paris was established on 6 March 1941. On 24 March, Mölders informed Duchènes that he had already done all he could for Caron. Duchènes again contacted Mölders on 17 July 1941. Caron, who should have been released on 19 November 1946, was released from the Rheinbach prison on 9 February 1942. Caron's release records in Oise state "Pardoned by Marshal Göring at the request of Colonel Mölders, who had requested this before his death."[42]

Battle of Britain edit

 
Theo Osterkamp's birthday party on 15 April 1941; from left to right: Major Wenzel (Mölders' aide), Adolf Galland, Mölders and Osterkamp.[43]

Returning to Germany, Mölders was promoted to Major on 19 July 1940 and the following day was informed that he was given command of Jagdgeschwader 51 (JG 51) from the recently promoted Generalmajor Osterkamp.[44] On 26 July, Mölders took command of JG 51 and flew from Brandenburg-Briest to the French coast on the English Channel.[45] At the time, JG 51 were based at the Saint-Inglevert Airfield, Pas-de-Calais, France.[46] Mölders flew his first combat sortie with JG 51 on 28 July, attacking a No. 41 Squadron RAF Supermarine Spitfire flown by Flying Officer Tony Lovell.[47][48] On this mission, according to legend, Mölders was hit in a dogfight over Dover by the South African ace Sailor Malan, sustaining three splinter wounds in the lower leg, one in the knee and one in the left foot. Oberleutnant Richard Leppla shot down the pursuing Spitfire, and Mölders was able to make an emergency landing at Wissant, France.[49][50] Recent research suggests Mölders was actually wounded in combat by Flight Lieutenant John Webster in a Spitfire of No. 41 Squadron RAF. Webster was killed in action on 5 September 1940.[51][52] Mölders wounds, although not serious, kept him from further operational flying for a month. Generalmajor Osterkamp briefly led the Geschwader again during Mölders' convalescence. On 7 August 1940, Mölders returned to the Geschwader without medical clearance for combat, to participate in Operation Eagle Attack (code name Adlertag). Hitler had issued Führer Directive no. 17 on 1 August 1940; the strategic objective was to engage and defeat the RAF so as to achieve air superiority in preparation for Operation Sea Lion (Unternehmen Seelöwe), the proposed amphibious invasion of Great Britain.[49]

Mölders returned to approved operational flying status and flew his next two combat missions on 28 August 1940. His aide and wingman, Oberleutnant Kircheis, was shot down and taken prisoner during one of these missions; Oberleutnant Georg Claus took his place.[53] Mölders claimed three Hurricanes on 31 August and was mentioned again in the Wehrmachtbericht.[54] Oberleutnant Victor Mölders, his younger brother, who had been appointed Staffelkapitän of the 2./JG 51 on 11 September, was shot down by Archie McKellar and taken prisoner of war on 7 October 1940.[55] Two Spitfires of No. 92 Squadron RAF (Sgt PR Eyles and P/O HP Hill, both killed) were shot down near Dungeness on 20 September increased Mölders' tally of aerial victories to 40. He was the first fighter pilot to reach this number during the war and was awarded the 2nd Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves (Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub) on 21 September 1940. The award was presented by Adolf Hitler on 23 September in the Reich Chancellery in Berlin. After the award ceremony, Hermann Göring invited Mölders to his hunting lodge in the Rominter Heide.[56]

 
Mölders with Arthur Laumann in September 1940

Mölders returned to his unit by the end of September and continued to win aerial victories. On 11 October, Mölders claimed his 43rd victory. The No. 66 Squadron RAF Spitfire I X4562 was flown by Pilot Officer J. H. T. Pickering, who bailed out, wounded, over Canterbury.[57] Three Hurricanes on 12 October brought his tally to 51 victories, and he received a preferential promotion to Oberstleutnant in recognition of his 50 victories on 25 October 1940.[58] While a severe bout of influenza then kept him grounded for a few weeks, his wingman in over 60 aerial combats, Oberleutnant Georg Claus, was killed over the Thames.[59][60] On 1 December, Mölders claimed his last and 55th victory of 1940, 25 of which occurred in the Battle of France and 30 in the Battle of Britain.[61]

Mölders and members of JG 53 spent a couple of weeks of R&R skiing in the Vorarlberg before continuing operations against the RAF over the Channel and occupied France during early 1941.[62] His new wingman from January 1941 was Oberleutnant Hartmann Grasser.[63] Mölders claimed his first aerial victory after the lengthy vacation on 10 February 1941; his tally reached 60 on 26 February and stood at 68 when the Geschwader was recalled from the Channel front. His logbook showed 238 combat missions plus an additional 71 reconnaissance flights; he had engaged in aerial combat 70 times.[64]

 
Messerschmitt Bf 109 F-2, Stab/JG 51, Geschwaderkommodore Oberstleutnant Werner Mölders, June 1941

Eastern Front edit

 
Mölders in 1941

In June 1941, JG 51 and the majority of the Luftwaffe were transferred to the Eastern Front in preparation for Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union. JG 51 was subordinated to II. Fliegerkorps (2nd Air Corps), which as part of Luftflotte 2 (Air Fleet 2). JG 51 area of operation during Operation Barbarossa was over the right flank of Army Group Center in the combat area of the 2nd Panzer Group as well as the 4th Army.[65]

On the first day of combat operations, 22 June 1941, Mölders shot down three Tupolev SB bombers and one Curtis Hawk, earning him the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords (Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern). Mölders was only the second German serviceman to receive this award; Galland, the Geschwaderkommodore of Jagdgeschwader 26 "Schlageter" (JG 26), had received one the day before.[66] The award was presented by Adolf Hitler on 3 July 1941 in the Wolfsschanze Hitler's Headquarters in Rastenburg. On 30 June, Mölders had become the highest-scoring fighter pilot in the history of aerial warfare after downing five Soviet bombers[67] and bringing his tally to 82, two more than the record set in World War I by the "Red Baron", Manfred von Richthofen.[68]

On 12 July 1941, JG 51 under the leadership of Mölders reported that it had destroyed 500 Soviet aircraft since the beginning of hostilities against the Soviets on 22 June, and had suffered three casualties. That day, JG 51 also reported its 1,200th aerial victory of the war, the credit going to Hauptmann Leppla.[69] Three days later, on 15 July 1941, Mölders surpassed the C mark, claiming victories Nos. 100 and 101, and celebrated with a victory roll over the airfield.[70] He was the first fighter pilot to amass 100 aerial victories in World War II.[71][72][73] The following day he received news that he had been awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords and Diamonds (Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub, Schwertern und Brillanten).[74] Mölders was the first of 27 German servicemen to receive this award. The diamonds added to the Knight's Cross were introduced officially on 28 September 1941, more than two months after Mölders earned the award. Mölders was promoted to Oberst on 20 July 1941, effective immediately, and banned from further combat flying. Surrendering command of JG 51 to Major Friedrich Beckh he was transferred to the Ministry of Aviation, a temporary position he held until 6 August 1941. Mölders was summoned to the Wolfsschanze again, where he received the Diamonds from Adolf Hitler on 26 July 1941. On 7 August 1941, he was appointed Inspector of Fighters.[75]

High command edit

An Oberst at 28, Mölders' appointment as Inspector of Fighters meant he was responsible for deciding the ongoing tactical and operational doctrine of the Luftwaffe's fighter arm. Returning to the Soviet Union in September 1941, he set up a command post at Chaplinka airfield, from where he flew in his personal Fieseler Fi 156 Storch on tours of the Jagdwaffe and personally directed German fighter operations.[76]

Mölders also flew unofficially on missions, and actively commanded his old unit, JG 51, for several more months. On 9 August 1941, he took Herbert Kaiser on a "teaching" mission against a formation of Il-2 Sturmoviks. Mölders showed Kaiser how to shoot them down. He recalled later: "He positioned himself off to one side of-and some distance away from-the last Il-2 in a formation of six. He then turned in quickly and opened fire at the enemy's cockpit from an angle of some 30 degrees. The Il-2 immediately burst into flames and crashed. 'Do you see how it's done?', Oberst Mölders' voice came over the R/T. 'Right, now you take the next one.' I carried out the same manoeuvre and, sure enough, the next Il-2 went down on fire. 'And again!' It was like being on a training flight. Another short burst and the third Il-2 was ablaze. The whole lesson had lasted no more than 12 minutes!"[77] In this way, Kaiser scored his 23rd and 24th kills. But because Mölders was officially banned from operational flying, the first Soviet aircraft was never officially credited to him.[77] Within the next two months, it is speculated that Mölders unofficially shot down around another 30 Soviet aircraft. At least six of Mölders' unofficial victories are recorded in his fellow pilots' private log books.[78]

Death edit

 
Werner Mölders' original grave marker, 1941

On 22 November 1941, Mölders travelled as a passenger in a Heinkel He 111 of Kampfgeschwader 27 "Boelcke" from Crimea to Germany to attend the funeral of his superior, Ernst Udet, who had committed suicide. Attempting to land at Breslau during a thunderstorm, the aircraft crashed. Mölders, pilot Oberleutnant Kolbe and flight engineer Oberfeldwebel Hobbie were killed. Major Dr. Wenzel and radio operator Oberfeldwebel Tenz survived the crash landing. Dr. Wenzel sustained a broken arm and leg as well as a concussion, and Tenz a broken ankle. Mölders' fatal injuries included a broken back and a crushed ribcage. Accident investigators then and since have speculated whether Mölders would have survived the crash if he had used his seat belt.[79]

Mölders was given a state funeral in Berlin on 28 November 1941. His coffin was laid out in the honour court of the Imperial Air Ministry. The guard of honour consisted of Johann Schalk, Günther Lützow, Walter Oesau, Joachim Müncheberg, Adolf Galland, Wolfgang Falck, Herbert Kaminski and Karl-Gottfried Nordmann. Mölders was buried next to Udet and Richthofen at the Invalidenfriedhof in Berlin. The 8.8 cm flak in Berlin Tiergarten fired a salute; Göring gave the eulogy.[80]

Personal life edit

Mölders's nickname was "Vati" (Daddy).[81] He was a devoutly religious individual.[82]

"He was a marvelous tactician. My admiration for him was boundless. He had a great wit and great personality."[83]

Günther Rall

Mölders married Luise Baldauf, née Thurner, the widow of a friend who had been killed in active service, on 13 September 1941.[84] Erich Klawitter, Mölders' childhood mentor, performed the religious ceremony in Falkenstein, Taunus. The marriage produced a posthumous daughter, Verena.[85]

Nazi officials disapproved of his choice of a Catholic marriage ceremony, performed by Klawitter. Klawitter had been barred from membership in the Reich Chamber of Culture and was considered politically unreliable after a 1936 breach of the Pulpit Law, a remnant of the 1870s Kulturkampf that among other religions barred Catholics from criticizing the state from the pulpit.[86]

In propaganda edit

Werner Mölders' old unit, Jagdgeschwader 51, was renamed "Mölders" in his honour, on 22 November 1941, only hours after his death. Its members were entitled to wear the "Mölders" cuffband.[75]

Mölders' death, just shortly after Udet's own suicide, was used by Sefton Delmer, the chief of the British black propaganda in the Political Warfare Executive (PWE), as part of a counter-propaganda campaign. His idea was to use Mölders' popularity in Germany by airdropping the Möldersbrief (Mölders-letter), a copy of correspondence supposedly written by Mölders to the provost of Schwerin, to create the assumption that Mölders' strong Catholic beliefs led him to oppose the Nazi regime in Germany. The letter did not bluntly call for opposition against the state and never mentioned the Nazi Party by name, instead using metaphors like "the godless". It stated that, especially in the face of death, many supporters of Nazism still found strength and courage with Catholicism.[87]

The letter caused a stir in the upper echelons of the Nazi regime. In his diaries, Joseph Goebbels, Reich Minister of Propaganda, assumed that someone in the German Catholic church organisation wrote, and distributed, the letter. A bounty of 100,000 Reichsmarks was posted in Hitler's name, but it revealed no clues to its origins. In the end, these actions did not affect the distribution of the letter.[88]

Commemoration and reversal of honours edit

 
Werner Mölders re-established grave site (1991) in the Invalidenfriedhof Berlin

The Invalidenfriedhof, where Mölders is buried, lay in East Berlin and in 1975 East German officials ordered all the graves leveled. After the 1990 German reunification, Mölders' grave was rebuilt and rededicated on 11 October 1991 by Mölders' school friend and canon (Domherr) of the St. Hedwig's Cathedral, Heribert Rosal. The ceremony was witnessed by guests from the United States, Great Britain, Austria, Spain and Hungary.[89]

On 13 April 1968, a destroyer of the West German Navy was christened Mölders in Bath, Maine (USA). It was in service between 1969 and 2003. As of 2018, it is the central attraction at the German Navy Museum in Wilhelmshaven.[75][90] On 9 November 1972, a base of a battalion of the 34th Signal Regiment of the Bundeswehr in Visselhövede received the name "Mölders".[91] The Fighter Wing 74 (Jagdgeschwader 74), stationed in Neuburg an der Donau, received the name "Mölders" in 1973. Now a general, Rall presented the cuffbands.[92]

In 1998, on the occasion of the 61st anniversary of the bombing of the Spanish town of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War, the German Parliament decided that members of the Condor Legion, such as Mölders, should "no longer be honoured".[91][93] In 2005, the Federal Ministry of Defence decided to remove the name "Mölders" from JG 74. The decision was confirmed on 11 March 2005 by the Federal Minister of Defence Peter Struck, and at 10:00, the flags and cufftitles were removed.[94]

Mölders' supporters challenged the ruling.[82] They pointed to his equivocal political attitude towards Nazism and his commitment to Catholicism; not only did he have a Catholic religious marriage ceremony but Klawitter, regarded by the Third Reich as politically "unreliable," had performed the ceremony.[95] Despite petitions from politicians and high-ranking active and retired servicemen, among them Horst Seehofer, Rall and Jörg Kuebart, the Office for Military History (MGFA) noted that Mölders' membership in the Bund Neudeutschland did not provide sufficient evidence of his having been critical of the regime, but rather showed the contrary and concluded that it was questionable whether Mölders had distanced himself enough from Nazism before his death in 1941. Consequently, the decision remained in force.[96][97]

 
This street sign was removed from a German air base following the reversal of honours. It is on display at the Aviation Museum Hannover-Laatzen.

Other evidence has surfaced illustrating Mölders' ambiguous relationship with the Nazi regime. Mölders may have been in contact with bishop Clemens August Graf von Galen, who was highly critical of the Nazi regime. Von Galen publicly criticised the regime for the Gestapo's tactics and the deportation and euthanasia of the mentally ill. According to the diary kept by Heinrich Portmann, von Galen's secretary and chaplain, Mölders threatened to return his awards if von Galen's euthanasia accusation turned out to be true. Furthermore, Portmann stated that Hitler had asked Mölders during the presentation of the Diamonds to the Knight's Cross if there was anything he wished for. Mölders reportedly responded, "Please leave the bishop of Münster alone." Hitler assured him that "Yes, nothing will happen to the bishop of Münster." The MGFA concluded in 2004 that this story was most likely false. The MGFA revised its position again on 28 June 2007, concluding that there had been contact between Mölders and von Galen.[98]

According to Viktor Mölders, his brother had saved Georg Küch, one of Werner Mölders' closest friends, who had been classified as a half-Jew by the Nuremberg Laws. Küch's mother, Alice née Siegel, was of Jewish birth.[99] Küch's father, Richard Küch, owned and operated a pharmacy in Brandenburg. Georg, himself a pharmacy student, was expelled from university under the Nuremberg Laws. In 1940, Richard Küch fell ill, and owning and operating the pharmacy became a bureaucratic problem for the family. Georg Küch contacted his friend Mölders in mid-February 1941, asking for help. Werner Mölders wrote back that he had taken care of the matter. When Richard Küch died in June 1941, his wife was able to sell the pharmacy for fair market value. Normally, since she was Jewish, it would have been confiscated. Friedel Küch repeatedly claimed that Werner Mölders had been responsible for protecting the family; the mantle of his protection had persisted beyond his death.[100] The MGFA ruled this assertion "highly speculative," and did not investigate further.[101]

In 2004, the MGFA concluded that the assumption Mölders had distanced himself from the Nazi regime was not demonstrable by a concrete behavioral action pattern. Additionally, it was assumed that he had deliberately and repeatedly attacked civilian targets in Spain. The MGFA expert had built his analysis on the provability of concrete actions or omissions. According to Schmider, these conclusions have now been negated by recent research. In the light of these new findings, Mölders cannot be attributed with any personal wrongdoing or even associated with a war crime, even during his engagement in the Spanish Civil War. Schmider states that Mölders campaigned for victims of Nazi persecution and, in particular, helped the Küch family far beyond what most Germans were prepared to do.[102] However, Schmider recommends that future research should focus on Mölders perception and interpretation of Operation Barbarossa, in particular his view on the Commissar Order needs to be investigated. Schmider speculates that Mölders may have been informed about the Commissar Order. During Operation Barbarossa, JG 51 was subordinated to II. Fliegerkorps under the command of General der Flieger Bruno Loerzer, which was part of Luftflotte 2, commanded by Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring. Schmider assumes that Mölders was either informed of the Commissar Order at the headquarters of the Fliegerkorps in Otwock or by the Luftflotte in Warsaw just prior to the invasion of the Soviet Union.[103]

The street "Möldersstraße" in Geilenkirchen and Ingolstadt were named after him.[104][105] In 2005, the city council in Geilenkirchen rejected a request to rename the "Möldersstraße". The request had been submitted by the Alliance 90/The Greens party while the majority in the city council was held by the Christian Democratic Union of Germany.[106]

Summary of career edit

Aerial victory claims edit

According to US historian David T. Zabecki, Mölders was credited with 115 aerial victories, 14 of which during the Spanish Civil War.[107] Stockert lists him with 102 enemy aircraft shot down in 642 combat missions, of which 63 were claimed over the Western Front.[108] Mathews and Foreman, authors of Luftwaffe Aces — Biographies and Victory Claims, researched the German Federal Archives and found documentation for 108 aerial victory claims, plus ten further unconfirmed claims. This number includes 14 claims during the Spanish Civil War, 62 on the Western Front, and 32 on the Eastern Front.[109]

Chronicle of aerial victories
  This and the ♠ (Ace of spades) indicates those aerial victories which made Mölders an "ace-in-a-day", a term which designates a fighter pilot who has shot down five or more airplanes in a single day.
  This and the – (dash) indicates unconfirmed aerial victory claims for which Mölders did not receive credit.
  This and the ! (exclamation mark) indicates those aerial victories listed by Forsyth or by Prien, Stemmer, Rodeike and Bock.
  This and the # (hash mark) indicates those aerial victories listed by Mathews and Foreman.
  This and the ? (question mark) indicates information discrepancies listed by Prien, Stemmer, Rodeike, Bock, Mathews and Foreman.
Claim! Claim# Date Time Type Location Unit Claim! Claim# Date Time Type Location Unit
Spanish Civil War
– Claims with Jagdgruppe 88 in Spain –[110][16]
1 1 15 July 1938
I-15[111] Algar de Palancia area 3. J/88
23 September 1938
I-16 3. J/88
2 2 17 July 1938
I-15[111] north of Llíria 3. J/88 9 9 10 October 1938
I-16[111] northeast of Flix 3. J/88
3 3 19 July 1938
I-16[111] west of Villar del Arzobispo 3. J/88 10 10 15 October 1938
I-16[111] west of La Figuera 3. J/88
4 4 19 August 1938
I-16[111] Flix area 3. J/88 11 11 15 October 1938
I-16[111] Serra de Montsant area 3. J/88
5 5 23 August 1938
SB-2[111] Albi area 3. J/88 12 12 31 October 1938
I-16[111] northwest of Flix 3. J/88
6 6 9 September 1938
I-16[111] Flix area 3. J/88 13 13 31 October 1938
I-16[111] south of Ribarroja 3. J/88
7 7 13 September 1938
I-16[111] Flix area 3. J/88 14 14 3 November 1938
I-16[111] Mola area 3. J/88
8 8 23 September 1938
I-16[111] southwest of Ginestar 3. J/88
World War II
– Claims with Jagdgeschwader 53 on the Western Front–[110]
"Phoney War" — 1 September 1939 – 9 May 1940
1 15 20 September 1939 14:30?[Note 3] P-36 Sierck-les-Bains[112] 1./JG 53 6 20 26 March 1940 15:00 M.S.406 Wolkenfeld[113]
Diedenhofen
III./JG 53
2 16 30 October 1939 11:12 Blenheim Klüsserath, northeast of Trier[113] III./JG 53 7 21 2 April 1940 12:10 Hurricane south of Saargemünd[113] III./JG 53
3 17 22 December 1939 15:05 M.S.406 15 km (9.3 mi) northeast of Metz[113] III./JG 53 8 22 20 April 1940 11:54 P-36 7 km (4.3 mi) east of Saargemünd[113] III./JG 53
4 18 2 March 1940 12:20?[Note 4] Hurricane south of Bitsch[113]
Völklingen
III./JG 53 9 23 23 April 1940 11:14 Hurricane south of Diedenhofen[113] III./JG 53
5 19 3 March 1940 13:55 M.S.406 12 km (7.5 mi) southeast of Diedenhofen[113] III./JG 53
– Claims with Jagdgeschwader 53 in France –[110]
Battle of France — 10 May – 25 June 1940
10 24 14 May 1940 16:30 Hurricane Sedan[114]
Sedan-Charleville
III./JG 53 18 31 25 May 1940 18:55 M.S.406 Forest of Compiègne[115]
Villers-Cotterêts forest
III./JG 53
11 25 15 May 1940 13:05 Hurricane Charleville[114]
Sedan
III./JG 53 19 32 27 May 1940 09:10 P-36 15 km (9.3 mi) southwest of Amiens[115] III./JG 53
12 26 19 May 1940 09:35 MB.152 northeast of Reims[114] III./JG 53 20 33 27 May 1940 09:11 P-36 15 km (9.3 mi) southwest of Amiens[115] III./JG 53
13 27 20 May 1940 19:15 Wellesley Compiègne[114] III./JG 53 21 34 31 May 1940 19:00?[Note 5] LeO 451 30 km (19 mi) south of Abbeville[115] III./JG 53
14 28 21 May 1940 17:30 M.S.406 southwest of Compiègne[115] III./JG 53 22 35 3 June 1940 14:30?[Note 6] P-36 Paris[115] III./JG 53
15
21 May 1940 17:50 M.S.406 southwest of Compiègne[115] III./JG 53 23 36 3 June 1940 14:40 Spitfire southeast of Paris[115] III./JG 53
16 29 21 May 1940 19:18 M.S.406 southwest of Compiègne[115] III./JG 53 24 37 5 June 1940 11:20 Bloch west of Compiègne[116] III./JG 53
17 30 22 May 1940 17:50 Potez 63 southwest of Mourmelon airfield[115] III./JG 53 25 38 5 June 1940 11:23 Potez 63 northwest of Pont-Sainte-Maxence[116]
Beauvais-Compiègne
III./JG 53
– Claims with Jagdgeschwader 51 during the Battle of Britain and on the English Channel –[117]
26
28 July 1940 15:30 Spitfire Dover[118] Stab/JG 51 48 59 17 October 1940 16:22 Spitfire London[119] Stab/JG 51
27
26 August 1940 12:55 Spitfire Folkestone[118] Stab/JG 51 49 60 22 October 1940 15:40 Hurricane northwest of Maidstone[119] Stab/JG 51
28 39 28 August 1940 10:05 P-36 northeast of Dover[118] Stab/JG 51 50 61 22 October 1940 15:41 Hurricane northwest of Maidstone[119] Stab/JG 51
29 40 28 August 1940 18:25 Hurricane Canterbury[118] Stab/JG 51 51 62 22 October 1940 15:42 Hurricane northwest of Maidstone[119] Stab/JG 51
30 41 31 August 1940 10:00 Hurricane northeast of Folkestone[118] Stab/JG 51 52 63 25 October 1940 10:45 Spitfire northwest of Dover[119] Stab/JG 51
31 42 31 August 1940 10:01 Hurricane northeast of Folkestone[118] Stab/JG 51 53 64 25 October 1940 13:20 Spitfire Margate[119] Stab/JG 51
32 43 31 August 1940 10:10 Hurricane northeast of Folkestone[118] Stab/JG 51 54 65 29 October 1940 13:55 Hurricane Dungeness[119] Stab/JG 51
33 44 6 September 1940 14:45 Spitfire Folkestone[118] Stab/JG 51 55 66 1 December 1940 15:15 Hurricane Ashford[119] Stab/JG 51
34 45 7 September 1940 18:32 Spitfire London[118] Stab/JG 51 56 67 10 February 1941 17:29 Spitfire 5 km (3.1 mi) northeast of Calais[119]
5 km (3.1 mi) nort-northwest of Calais
Stab/JG 51
35 46 9 September 1940 18:45 Spitfire London[118] Stab/JG 51 57
20 February 1941 16:56 Spitfire Dover[119] Stab/JG 51
36 47 11 September 1940 17:10 Hurricane southeast of London[118] Stab/JG 51 58 68 20 February 1941 16:57 Spitfire Dover[119] Stab/JG 51
37 48 14 September 1940 17:30 Spitfire southwest of London[118] Stab/JG 51 59
25 February 1941 15:20 Spitfire north of Gravelines[119] Stab/JG 51
38 49 16 September 1940 09:24 Hurricane south of London[118] Stab/JG 51 60 69 26 February 1941 18:37 Spitfire southeast of Dungeness[119] Stab/JG 51
39 50 20 September 1940 12:34 Spitfire Dungeness[118] Stab/JG 51 61
12 March 1941 19:15 Spitfire Dungeness[119] Stab/JG 51
40 51 20 September 1940 12:35 Spitfire Dungeness[118] Stab/JG 51 62 70 13 March 1941 15:22 Spitfire 20 km (12 mi) west of Cap Gris-Nez[120]
southwest of Boulogne
Stab/JG 51
41 52 27 September 1940 17:03 Spitfire Maidstone[119] Stab/JG 51 63
15 April 1941 18:00 Spitfire southwest of Boulogne[120] Stab/JG 51
42 53 28 September 1940 15:01 Spitfire Littlestone[119] Stab/JG 51 64 71 16 April 1941 18:32 Spitfire 5 km (3.1 mi) west of Berck[120] Stab/JG 51
43 54 11 October 1940 12:30 Spitfire Folkestone[119] Stab/JG 51 65 72 16 April 1941 18:42 Hurricane southwest of Dungeness[120] Stab/JG 51
44 55 12 October 1940 10:40 Hurricane Lympne[119]
Lympne-Canterbury
Stab/JG 51
73 28 April 1941 13:10 Hurricane Dungeness[120] Stab/JG 51
45 56 12 October 1940 10:43 Hurricane Canterbury[119]
Lympne-Canterbury
Stab/JG 51 66 74 4 May 1941 12:17 Hurricane east of Deal[120] Stab/JG 51
46 57 12 October 1940 14:12 Hurricane Dungeness[119] Stab/JG 51 67 75 6 May 1941 12:00 Hurricane Dover[120] Stab/JG 51
47 58 15 October 1940 09:15 Hurricane south of London[119]
Kenley
Stab/JG 51 68 76 8 May 1941 12:20 Spitfire off Dover[120] Stab/JG 51
– Claims with Jagdgeschwader 51 on the Eastern Front –[121]
Operation Barbarossa — 22 June – 5 December 1941
69 77 22 June 1941 05:00 I-153[122] Stab/JG 51 86 94 5 July 1941 12:10 I-18 (MiG-1)[122] Stab/JG 51
70 78 22 June 1941 12:35 SB-2[122] Stab/JG 51 87 95 9 July 1941 09:25 I-153[122] Stab/JG 51
71 79 22 June 1941 12:36 SB-2[122] Stab/JG 51 88 96 9 July 1941 09:35 I-153[122] Stab/JG 51
72 80 22 June 1941 12:38 SB-2[122] Stab/JG 51 89 97 9 July 1941 09:55 I-16[122] Stab/JG 51
73 81 24 June 1941 17:50 SB-2[122] Stab/JG 51 90 98 10 July 1941 07:45 R-Z?[122][Note 7] Stab/JG 51
74 82 25 June 1941 12:30 SB-2[122] Stab/JG 51 91 99 10 July 1941 07:50 R-Z?[122][Note 7] Stab/JG 51
75 83 25 June 1941 12:31 SB-2[122] Stab/JG 51 92 100 11 July 1941 10:35 I-153[122] Stab/JG 51
76 84 29 June 1941 15:30 Pe-2[122] Stab/JG 51 93 101 11 July 1941 15:15 I-153[122] Stab/JG 51
77 85 29 June 1941 19:50 I-16[122] Stab/JG 51 94 102 12 July 1941 18:50 DB-3[122] Stab/JG 51
78♠ 86 30 June 1941 11:40 DB-3[122] Stab/JG 51 95 103 13 July 1941 19:25 DB-3[122] Stab/JG 51
79♠ 87 30 June 1941 11:45 DB-3[122] Stab/JG 51 96 104 13 July 1941 19:30 DB-3[122] Stab/JG 51
80♠ 88 30 June 1941 11:50 DB-3[122] Stab/JG 51 97 105 14 July 1941 11:50 Pe-2[122] Stab/JG 51
81♠ 89 30 June 1941 15:45 DB-3[122] Stab/JG 51 98 106 14 July 1941 11:55 Pe-2[122] Stab/JG 51
82♠ 90 30 June 1941 15:50 DB-3[122] Stab/JG 51 99 107 14 July 1941 12:00 Pe-2[122] Stab/JG 51
83 91 5 July 1941 12:00 SB-2[122] Stab/JG 51 100 108 15 July 1941 18:40 Pe-2[122] Stab/JG 51
84 92 5 July 1941 12:05 SB-2[122] Stab/JG 51 101
15 July 1941
Pe-2[122] Stab/JG 51
85 93 5 July 1941 12:10 I-18 (MiG-1)[122] Stab/JG 51
– Claims with Jagdgeschwader 77 on the Eastern Front –
Operation Barbarossa — 22 June – 5 December 1941
8 November 1941
Il-2[124] III./JG 77

Awards edit

Promotions edit

1 October 1931: Fahnenjunker-Gefreiter[9]
1 April 1932: Fahnenjunker-Unteroffizier[9]
1 June 1933: Fähnrich[9]
1 February 1934: Oberfähnrich[9]
1 March 1934: Leutnant (Second Lieutenant)[134]
20 April 1936: Oberleutnant (First Lieutenant), effective as of 1 April 1936[134]
18 October 1938: Hauptmann (Captain), effective as of 1 October 1938[134]
19 July 1940: Major (Major)[58]
25 October 1940: Oberstleutnant (Lieutenant Colonel)[58]
20 July 1941: Oberst (Colonel)[75]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Condor Legion used the Bf 109B through D variants during the conflict. This provided valuable combat experience for both the Luftwaffe and Messerschmitt leading up to the start of World War II. The He 51s were turned over to the 4th squadron, commanded by Hauptmann Eberhard d'Elsa, and continued in service until the end of the Spanish Civil War.
  2. ^ For an explanation of Luftwaffe unit designations see Organisation of the Luftwaffe during World War II.
  3. ^ According to Mathews and Foreman claimed at 14:50.[110]
  4. ^ According to Mathews and Foreman claimed at 12:15.[110]
  5. ^ According to Mathews and Foreman claimed at 19:55.[110]
  6. ^ According to Mathews and Foreman claimed at 15:00.[110]
  7. ^ a b According to Mathews and Foreman claimed as a Polikarpov R-5.[123]
  8. ^ According to Thomas on 27 September 1939.[127]
  9. ^ According to Thomas on 3 April 1940.[127]
  10. ^ According to Scherzer 1st Diamonds on 16 July 1941.[128]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Braatz 2009, pp. 18–19.
  2. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 19.
  3. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 22.
  4. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 33.
  5. ^ a b Braatz 2009, p. 28.
  6. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 27.
  7. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 44.
  8. ^ Braatz 2009, pp. 45, 378.
  9. ^ a b c d e Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 31.
  10. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 378.
  11. ^ Braatz 2009, pp. 72–73.
  12. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 11, 32.
  13. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 11, 32, 66.
  14. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 11–12, 32.
  15. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 12.
  16. ^ a b c Braatz 2009, p. 380.
  17. ^ Braatz 2009, pp. 152, 380.
  18. ^ Spick 1996, p. 18.
  19. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 148.
  20. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 153.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 33.
  22. ^ Prien 1997, p. 30.
  23. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 33, 89.
  24. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 88–92.
  25. ^ a b c d Spick 1996, p. 15.
  26. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 191.
  27. ^ Prien 1997, p. 40.
  28. ^ a b c Weal 2007a, p. 13.
  29. ^ Prien 1997, p. 44.
  30. ^ Prien 1997, pp. 50–51.
  31. ^ Weal 1999, p. 44.
  32. ^ Weal 1999, p. 46.
  33. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 40.
  34. ^ a b Hooton 2007, p. 65.
  35. ^ Braatz 2009, pp. 210, 381.
  36. ^ Prien et al. 2000, p. 358.
  37. ^ Kershaw 2008, chpt. 2.
  38. ^ Prien 1997, p. 119.
  39. ^ Goss 2017, p. 30.
  40. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 16–18, 33.
  41. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 218.
  42. ^ Schmider 2016, "IV. Neue Forschungen".
  43. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 287.
  44. ^ Aders & Held 1993, p. 62.
  45. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 232.
  46. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 233.
  47. ^ Shores & Williams 1994, p. 406.
  48. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 234.
  49. ^ a b Aders & Held 1993, p. 63.
  50. ^ Kaplan 2007, p. 56.
  51. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 19.
  52. ^ Shores & Williams 1994, p. 622.
  53. ^ Aders & Held 1993, p. 67.
  54. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 247.
  55. ^ Aders & Held 1993, pp. 69, 71.
  56. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 256.
  57. ^ Weal 1999, p. 7.
  58. ^ a b c d Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 34.
  59. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 20, 124–125.
  60. ^ Braatz 2009, pp. 273–274.
  61. ^ Braatz 2009, pp. 277, 380–381.
  62. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 21, 137–141.
  63. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 288.
  64. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 21, 40–41.
  65. ^ Prien et al. 2003, p. 206.
  66. ^ Braatz 2009, pp. 312, 315.
  67. ^ Bergström 2007, p. 27.
  68. ^ Weal 2001, p. 22.
  69. ^ Aders & Held 1993, p. 91.
  70. ^ Weal 2001, p. 18.
  71. ^ Obermaier 1989, p. 243.
  72. ^ Spick 1996, p. 83.
  73. ^ Kaplan 2007, p. 57.
  74. ^ Braatz 2009, p. 317.
  75. ^ a b c d Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 35.
  76. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 188–189.
  77. ^ a b Weal 2001, p. 29.
  78. ^ Weal 2007b, p. 11.
  79. ^ Braatz 2009, pp. 350–351.
  80. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 200–206.
  81. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 14.
  82. ^ a b Weal 2006, p. 120.
  83. ^ MacLean 2007, p. 6.
  84. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 22.
  85. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 35, 180–182, 209.
  86. ^ Hagena 2008, p. 54.
  87. ^ Hagena 2008, pp. 67–68.
  88. ^ Hagena 2008, p. 67.
  89. ^ Hagena 2008, p. 119.
  90. ^ German Navy Museum Wilhelmshaven 2018.
  91. ^ a b Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 36.
  92. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, pp. 214–218.
  93. ^ Hagena 2008, p. 8.
  94. ^ Hagena 2008, p. 132.
  95. ^ Hagena 2008, p. 56.
  96. ^ Hagena 2008, p. 138.
  97. ^ Kaplan 2007, p. 51.
  98. ^ Hagena 2008, pp. 60–64.
  99. ^ Hagena 2008, p. 73.
  100. ^ Hagena 2008, pp. 74–83.
  101. ^ Hagena 2008, p. 72.
  102. ^ Schmider 2016, p. 22.
  103. ^ Schmider 2016, pp. 21–22.
  104. ^ "Möldersstraße in Geilenkirchen". strassenkatalog.de (in German). Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  105. ^ "Möldersstraße in Ingolstadt". strassenkatalog.de (in German). Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  106. ^ Stüßer 2005.
  107. ^ Zabecki 2019, p. 328.
  108. ^ Stockert 2012, p. 2.
  109. ^ Mathews & Foreman 2015, pp. 865–867.
  110. ^ a b c d e f g Mathews & Foreman 2015, p. 865.
  111. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Forsyth 2011, p. 102.
  112. ^ Prien et al. 2001, p. 368.
  113. ^ a b c d e f g h Prien et al. 2001, p. 406.
  114. ^ a b c d Prien et al. 2000, p. 353.
  115. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Prien et al. 2000, p. 355.
  116. ^ a b Prien et al. 2000, p. 356.
  117. ^ Mathews & Foreman 2015, pp. 865–866.
  118. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Prien et al. 2002, p. 11.
  119. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Prien et al. 2002, p. 12.
  120. ^ a b c d e f g h Prien et al. 2002, p. 13.
  121. ^ Mathews & Foreman 2015, pp. 866–867.
  122. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Prien et al. 2003, p. 220.
  123. ^ Mathews & Foreman 2015, p. 867.
  124. ^ Prien 1995, p. 2397.
  125. ^ Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 75.
  126. ^ a b Berger 1999, p. 228.
  127. ^ a b Thomas 1998, p. 91.
  128. ^ a b c d Scherzer 2007, p. 548.
  129. ^ Fellgiebel 2000, p. 313.
  130. ^ Fellgiebel 2000, p. 53.
  131. ^ Fellgiebel 2000, p. 39.
  132. ^ Fellgiebel 2000, p. 36.
  133. ^ Die Wehrmachtberichte 1939–1945 Band 1, pp. 174, 296, 311, 339, 341, 420, 433, 494, 587, 598, 617.
  134. ^ a b c Obermaier & Held 1996, p. 32.

Bibliography edit

  • Aders, Gebhard; Held, Werner (1993). Jagdgeschwader 51 'Mölders' Eine Chronik – Berichte – Erlebnisse – Dokumente [Fighter Wing 51 'Mölders' A Chronicle - Reports - Experiences - Documents] (in German). Stuttgart, Germany: Motorbuch Verlag. ISBN 978-3-613-01045-1.
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External links edit

Military offices
Preceded by Commander of Jagdgeschwader 51
27 July 1940 – 19 July 1941
Succeeded by
Oberstleutnant Friedrich Beckh
Preceded by Inspekteur der Jagdflieger
7 August 1941 – 22 November 1941
Succeeded by
Generalleutnant Adolf Galland

werner, mölders, march, 1913, november, 1941, world, german, luftwaffe, pilot, wing, commander, leading, german, fighter, spanish, civil, became, first, pilot, aviation, history, shoot, down, enemy, aircraft, highly, decorated, achievements, mölders, developed. Werner Molders 18 March 1913 22 November 1941 was a World War II German Luftwaffe pilot wing commander and the leading German fighter ace in the Spanish Civil War He became the first pilot in aviation history to shoot down 100 enemy aircraft and was highly decorated for his achievements Molders developed fighter tactics that led to the finger four formation He died in a plane crash as a passenger Werner MoldersMolders as OberstleutnantNickname s Vati Daddy Born 1913 03 18 18 March 1913Gelsenkirchen Kingdom of Prussia German EmpireDied22 November 1941 1941 11 22 aged 28 Breslau Free State of Prussia Nazi GermanyBuriedInvalidenfriedhof BerlinAllegiance Nazi GermanyService wbr branch LuftwaffeYears of service1931 1941RankOberst Colonel UnitCondor Legion JG 53 JG 51Commands heldIII JG 53 JG 51Battles warsSee battlesSpanish Civil War World War II Battle of France Battle of Britain Operation BarbarossaAwardsSpanish Cross in Gold with Swords and DiamondsKnight s Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves Swords and DiamondsSignatureMolders joined the Luftwaffe the air force of Nazi Germany in 1934 In 1938 he volunteered for service in Germany s Condor Legion then supporting General Francisco Franco s Nationalist side in the Spanish Civil War and shot down 14 aircraft Following the start of World War II in 1939 he took part in the Phoney War of 1939 1940 the Battle of France of May to June 1940 and the Battle of Britain July 1940 onwards With his tally standing at 68 victories Molders and his unit Jagdgeschwader 51 JG 51 transferred to the Eastern Front in June 1941 for the opening of Operation Barbarossa achieving 101 victories by mid July 1941 Prevented from flying further combat missions for propaganda reasons at the age of 28 Molders was appointed Inspector of Fighters While inspecting the Luftwaffe units in the Crimea he received orders to return to Berlin to attend the state funeral of Ernst Udet a Luftwaffe general and World War I flying ace The aircraft in which Molders was traveling as a passenger to Berlin experienced an engine failure and attempted an emergency landing It crashed at Breslau killing Molders and two others The Luftwaffe and the West German Bundeswehr both honoured Molders by naming two fighter wings a destroyer and a barracks after him In 1998 the German Parliament decided that members of the Condor Legion such as Molders should no longer be honoured In 2005 the German Ministry of Defence decided to remove the name Molders from the fighter wing still bearing his name Contents 1 Education and early career 2 Condor Legion 2 1 Tactical innovations 3 World War II 3 1 Phoney War and the Battle of France 3 2 Prisoner of war 3 3 Battle of Britain 3 4 Eastern Front 3 5 High command 3 6 Death 4 Personal life 5 In propaganda 6 Commemoration and reversal of honours 7 Summary of career 7 1 Aerial victory claims 7 2 Awards 7 3 Promotions 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Bibliography 9 External linksEducation and early career editMolders was born on 18 March 1913 in Gelsenkirchen the son of teacher Oberlehrer Victor Molders and his wife Annemarie Molders nee Riedel He was the third of four children with an older sister Annemarie an older brother Hans and a younger brother Victor 1 After his father a Reserve Leutnant in the King s 145th Infantry Regiment was killed in action on 2 March 1915 in the Argonne Forest in France his mother moved the family into her parents house in Brandenburg an der Havel 2 nbsp Kurfurstenhaus left in Brandenburg purchased by the Riedel family in 1902 3 In Brandenburg Molders found a benefactor in Father Erich Klawitter who instilled firm religious beliefs in him 4 From 1919 to 1931 Molders attended first the elementary school and then from 1922 the Saldria Realgymnasium a secondary school that enjoyed a supraregional reputation 5 In school he discovered his love for water sports especially rowing He joined two rowing clubs first the Saldria Brandenburg and later the Brandenburger Ruderclub and enjoyed success at rowing regattas 5 From 1 October 1925 he was also a member of the Bund Neudeutschland in der katholischen Jugendbewegung a Catholic youth organisation 6 Molders graduated from school in early 1931 with the Abitur diploma and expressed a desire to become an officer in the armed forces 7 Molders joined the Preussisches Infanterieregiment Nr 2 an infantry regiment under the command of Oberst Siegfried Haenicke and subordinated to the 1st Division of the Reichswehr in Allenstein East Prussia on 1 April 1931 serving as an officer cadet in the infantry 8 He attained the rank of Fahnenjunker Gefreiter on 1 October 1931 rising to Fahnenjunker Unteroffizier on 1 April 1932 9 After completing his basic military training in October 1932 he transferred to the Military School Dresden On 1 June 1933 he successfully completed his training in Dresden and was promoted to ensign He again was transferred this time to the 1st Prussian Pioneer Battalion Infantry Regiment 2 at the Pioneer School in Munich 10 During his training years Molders made his first attempt to fulfil his dream of flying and volunteered for pilot training but was declared unfit for flying He tried again and was given conditional permission bedingt tauglich with constraints to begin flight training 11 After his promotion to Oberfahnrich on 1 February 1934 Molders began his pilot training at the Deutsche Verkehrsfliegerschule German transport flying school in Cottbus lasting from 6 February 1934 to 31 December 1934 12 On 1 March 1934 he was promoted to Leutnant and assigned to the recently established Luftwaffe In the early stages of his pilot training he suffered continually from nausea and vomiting but he eventually overcame these problems and finished the course at the top of his class The next phase of his military pilot s training was from 1 January 1935 to 30 June 1935 at the combat flying school in Tutow and the Jagdfliegerschule fighter pilot school at Schleissheim near Munich He received the newly created Pilot s Badge of the Luftwaffe on 21 May 1935 13 On 1 July 1935 Leutnant Molders was posted to Fliegergruppe Schwerin I JG 162 Immelmann On 7 March 1936 during the remilitarisation of the Rhineland Molders and his squadron Staffel were moved to Dusseldorf During this period Molders met Luise Baldauf whom he was to marry a few years later shortly before his death On 20 April 1936 Adolf Hitler s birthday numerous promotions were handed out and Molders advanced to Oberleutnant effective as of 1 April 1936 At the same time he became leader of the fighter training squadron of the 2nd Group of Jagdgeschwader 134 Horst Wessel This group was under the command of Major Theo Osterkamp who became another of Molders early mentors Molders was appointed squadron leader Staffelkapitan of the 1st squadron of Jagdgeschwader 334 on 15 March 1937 and served as an instructor in Wiesbaden 14 Condor Legion editIn 1936 the Germans sent a Luftwaffe force the Condor Legion to assist the Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War Molders volunteered for service and arrived by sea in Cadiz on 14 April 1938 He was assigned to the 3 Staffel 3rd squadron of Jagdgruppe 88 J 88 commanded by Oberleutnant Adolf Galland The unit stationed at the Valencia Ebro front was equipped with the Heinkel He 51 but later switched to the Messerschmitt Bf 109 Note 1 Molders assumed command of the squadron on 24 May 1938 when Galland returned to Germany 15 He claimed his first aerial victory shooting down a Polikarpov I 15 Chato Curtiss to the Germans near Algar on 15 July 1938 16 Over the remaining months of the year Molders became the leading ace of the Condor Legion claiming 15 aircraft in Spain two I 15 Curtiss 12 I 16 Rata and one Tupolev SB one Rata claimed on 23 September 1938 was not confirmed 17 nbsp Schwarm formation and cross over turn 18 In recognition of his exceptional performance as a commander and fighter pilot Molders was promoted to Hauptmann Captain on 18 October 1938 effective as of 1 October 1938 19 He claimed his 14th and final confirmed aerial victory of the conflict by downing a Polikarpov I 16 Rata near Mola on 3 November 1938 16 On 5 December he passed on command of 3 Staffel to Hubertus von Bonin and flew from La Cenia back to Germany on a Junkers Ju 52 20 From 6 December 1938 until March 1939 Molders was a member of the 1st group of Jagdgeschwader 133 JG 133 and held a staff position with the Inspector of Fighters at the Ministry of Aviation in Berlin His task was to devise new fighter pilot tactics In March 1939 he was given command as Staffelkapitan of 1 JG 133 taking over command from Oberleutnant Hubertus von Bonin JG 133 was later renamed Jagdgeschwader 53 Pik As Ace of Spades 21 22 Note 2 For his achievements in Spain Molders was honoured with the Spanish Medalla de la Campana and Medalla Militar on 4 May 1939 and the German Spanish Cross in Gold with Swords and Diamonds Spanienkreuz in Gold mit Schwertern und Brillanten on 6 June 1939 23 The Condor Legion officially returned to Germany on 6 June 1939 and troops marched through Berlin to the Lustgarten where the fallen were honoured A formal state banquet for the most highly decorated soldiers was held in the marble gallery of the Reich Chancellery Molders was seated at table 1 with General der Flieger Hugo Sperrle General Antonio Aranda General Gonzalo Queipo de Llano Oberst Walter Warlimont Oberstleutnant von Donat Leutnant Reinhard Seiler and Oberfeldwebel Ignatz Prestele 24 Tactical innovations edit With other airmen in Spain Molders developed the formation known as the finger four 25 This improved the all round field of vision and combat flexibility of a flight Schwarm enhanced mutual protection and encouraged pilot initiative In the finger four the aircraft assumed positions corresponding to the fingertips of an outstretched hand The fighters flew in two elements Rotten of two aircraft each two Rotten four aircraft made up a Schwarm swarm 25 Molders is often credited with inventing the cross over turn 25 An early version of the manoeuvre as used by a Vic of five aircraft a tight formation forming the letter V appeared in the Royal Air Force RAF Training Manual of 1922 and the manoeuvre may even date back to 1918 However it had fallen into disuse due to the difficulty of performing it in a multi aircraft formation with the contemporary spacing of less than 100 feet 30 m between aircraft The wide lateral separation of 1 800 feet 550 m introduced by J 88 both necessitated such a turning manoeuvre to enable a Schwarm to turn as a unit and minimised the risk of midair collisions previously associated with it 25 World War II editPhoney War and the Battle of France edit At the outbreak of World War II on 1 September 1939 Molders Staffel was stationed in the west protecting Germany s border in the Mosel Saar Pfalz region 26 On 8 September 1939 Molders fighter suffered an engine failure he crash landed flipping the aircraft over and injuring his back The injury kept him out of combat for several days 27 He returned to flying on 19 September The following day between Contz and Sierck at the apex of the Dreilandereck 28 over the three borders area he shot down his first aircraft of the war a Curtiss P 36 according to other historians it was one of a trio of French Hawk H 75As 28 of Groupe de Chasse II 5 Sgt Queginer bailed out Thanks to that victory he earned the Iron Cross 2nd Class Eisernes Kreuz zweiter Klasse 21 29 He recalled his first victory I took off with my Schwarm at 14 27 hrs to intercept six enemy monoplanes reported south of Trier As the Schwarm overflew the river Saar near Merzig at 4500 metres six machines were sighted south of Conz at 5000 metres I climbed above the enemy in a wide curve to the north and carried out a surprise attack on the rearmost machine I opened fire from approximately 50 metres whereupon the Curtiss began to fishtail After a further lengthy burst smoke came out of the machine and individual pieces flew off it It then tipped forward into a dive and I lost sight of it as I had to defend myself against other opponents newly arriving on the scene 28 On 26 September 1939 JG 53 was ordered to form its III Gruppe Molders relinquished command of 1 JG 53 to Oberleutnant Hans Karl Mayer and organised the formation of III JG 53 at Wiesbaden Erbenheim Airfield within two weeks Gruppenkommandeur Molders reported that the Gruppe was conditionally operational with 40 pilots and 48 aircraft 30 On 22 December Molders leading four Bf 109s from III JG 53 engaged three Hawker Hurricanes over the Saar River between Metz and Thionville that were trying to intercept an unidentified aircraft 31 Molders and Hans von Hahn shot down two Hurricanes flown by Sergeants R M Perry and J Winn becoming the first German fighter pilots to shoot down a Hawker Hurricane Molders shot down another Hurricane on 2 April when he forced Flight Lieutenant C D Pussy Palmer of No 1 Squadron RAF to bail out and on 20 April he destroyed a French Curtiss P 36 Hawk H 75A east of Saarbrucken 32 By the time the Phoney War ended and the invasion of France and the Low Countries Fall Gelb began on 10 May 1940 Molders tally of aerial victories on the Western Front had increased to nine This number included one Bristol Blenheim two Curtiss P 36 Hawks two Morane Saulnier M S 406s and four Hawker Hurricanes 33 On 14 May while engaging enemy bombers over Sedan Molders was shot down but bailed out safely 34 He claimed his 19th and 20th victories on 27 May 1940 downing two Curtiss Hawks 15 kilometres 9 3 mi southwest of Amiens Subsequently he became the first fighter pilot to be awarded the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes and on 29 May 1940 was mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht propaganda radio report the first of 11 such mentions 35 Prisoner of war edit On 5 June 1940 on his 133rd combat mission of the war engaging in aerial combat for the 32nd time Molders was shot down in his Bf 109 E 4 while engaged in aerial combat with French Air Force Dewoitine D 520s near Compiegne at about 18 40 Molders was then captured by French soldiers and taken prisoner of war but liberated three weeks later upon the armistice with France 21 36 According to a variety of sources which include Edward R Hooton and Alex Kershaw his victor was Sous lieutenant Rene Pomier Layrargues from Groupe de Chasse II 7 who was shot down and killed just after downing Molders 34 37 38 Layrargues may have been shot down by Oberleutnant Gerhard Homuth from 3 Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 27 JG 27 39 Accounts regarding the events following his capture differ depending on the source Ernst Obermaier and Werner Held authors of the 1996 biography Fighter Pilot Colonel Werner Molders Images and Documents state that while in French captivity Molders asked to shake hands with the pilot who had shot him down and learned that Pomier Layrargues had been killed in action 30 minutes after their encounter The authors claim that Molders initial experience in French captivity was harsh he sustained abrasions to his face and his Knight s Cross was stolen from him A French officer Capitaine Giron intervened ensured he was treated fairly and returned the stolen medal When a French soldier was later sentenced to death by the Germans for beating Molders Molders approached Hermann Goring and requested clemency which was granted 40 Kurt Braatz author of Werner Molders The Biography analysed the available German and French records associated to the events of Molders being shot down his capture and its aftermath Braatz s investigation revealed that Molders was not shot down by Pomier Layrargues More likely he was shot down by other German fighters operating in the same area Braatz confirmed that Molders was beaten and stripped of his possessions following his capture Also confirmed is his fair treatment after he was taken to a prisoner of war camp However the story about the French soldier who was sentenced to death and later pardoned by Goring is very likely fictitious 41 Klaus Schmider author of Werner Molders and the Bundeswehr states that his victor may have been Pomier Layrargues However Schmider also acknowledges the research done by Braatz indicating that Molders could also have been shot down by Germans French records held at Oise reveal that initially eight civilians had been arrested for the Molders beating and only one Edmond Maurice Caron was brought before a Luftwaffe court Caron was sentenced to twelve years imprisonment later commuted to six years The records also show that Michel Duchenes a local factory owner contacted Goring s staff in early 1941 Contact with Kriegsgerichtsrat Judge Advocate Hans Jurgen Soehring at the Luftwaffe headquarters in Paris was established on 6 March 1941 On 24 March Molders informed Duchenes that he had already done all he could for Caron Duchenes again contacted Molders on 17 July 1941 Caron who should have been released on 19 November 1946 was released from the Rheinbach prison on 9 February 1942 Caron s release records in Oise state Pardoned by Marshal Goring at the request of Colonel Molders who had requested this before his death 42 Battle of Britain edit nbsp Theo Osterkamp s birthday party on 15 April 1941 from left to right Major Wenzel Molders aide Adolf Galland Molders and Osterkamp 43 Returning to Germany Molders was promoted to Major on 19 July 1940 and the following day was informed that he was given command of Jagdgeschwader 51 JG 51 from the recently promoted Generalmajor Osterkamp 44 On 26 July Molders took command of JG 51 and flew from Brandenburg Briest to the French coast on the English Channel 45 At the time JG 51 were based at the Saint Inglevert Airfield Pas de Calais France 46 Molders flew his first combat sortie with JG 51 on 28 July attacking a No 41 Squadron RAF Supermarine Spitfire flown by Flying Officer Tony Lovell 47 48 On this mission according to legend Molders was hit in a dogfight over Dover by the South African ace Sailor Malan sustaining three splinter wounds in the lower leg one in the knee and one in the left foot Oberleutnant Richard Leppla shot down the pursuing Spitfire and Molders was able to make an emergency landing at Wissant France 49 50 Recent research suggests Molders was actually wounded in combat by Flight Lieutenant John Webster in a Spitfire of No 41 Squadron RAF Webster was killed in action on 5 September 1940 51 52 Molders wounds although not serious kept him from further operational flying for a month Generalmajor Osterkamp briefly led theGeschwader again during Molders convalescence On 7 August 1940 Molders returned to the Geschwader without medical clearance for combat to participate in Operation Eagle Attack code name Adlertag Hitler had issued Fuhrer Directive no 17 on 1 August 1940 the strategic objective was to engage and defeat the RAF so as to achieve air superiority in preparation for Operation Sea Lion Unternehmen Seelowe the proposed amphibious invasion of Great Britain 49 Molders returned to approved operational flying status and flew his next two combat missions on 28 August 1940 His aide and wingman Oberleutnant Kircheis was shot down and taken prisoner during one of these missions Oberleutnant Georg Claus took his place 53 Molders claimed three Hurricanes on 31 August and was mentioned again in the Wehrmachtbericht 54 Oberleutnant Victor Molders his younger brother who had been appointed Staffelkapitan of the 2 JG 51 on 11 September was shot down by Archie McKellar and taken prisoner of war on 7 October 1940 55 Two Spitfires of No 92 Squadron RAF Sgt PR Eyles and P O HP Hill both killed were shot down near Dungeness on 20 September increased Molders tally of aerial victories to 40 He was the first fighter pilot to reach this number during the war and was awarded the 2nd Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub on 21 September 1940 The award was presented by Adolf Hitler on 23 September in the Reich Chancellery in Berlin After the award ceremony Hermann Goring invited Molders to his hunting lodge in the Rominter Heide 56 nbsp Molders with Arthur Laumann in September 1940Molders returned to his unit by the end of September and continued to win aerial victories On 11 October Molders claimed his 43rd victory The No 66 Squadron RAF Spitfire I X4562 was flown by Pilot Officer J H T Pickering who bailed out wounded over Canterbury 57 Three Hurricanes on 12 October brought his tally to 51 victories and he received a preferential promotion to Oberstleutnant in recognition of his 50 victories on 25 October 1940 58 While a severe bout of influenza then kept him grounded for a few weeks his wingman in over 60 aerial combats Oberleutnant Georg Claus was killed over the Thames 59 60 On 1 December Molders claimed his last and 55th victory of 1940 25 of which occurred in the Battle of France and 30 in the Battle of Britain 61 Molders and members of JG 53 spent a couple of weeks of R amp R skiing in the Vorarlberg before continuing operations against the RAF over the Channel and occupied France during early 1941 62 His new wingman from January 1941 was Oberleutnant Hartmann Grasser 63 Molders claimed his first aerial victory after the lengthy vacation on 10 February 1941 his tally reached 60 on 26 February and stood at 68 when the Geschwader was recalled from the Channel front His logbook showed 238 combat missions plus an additional 71 reconnaissance flights he had engaged in aerial combat 70 times 64 nbsp Messerschmitt Bf 109 F 2 Stab JG 51 Geschwaderkommodore Oberstleutnant Werner Molders June 1941Eastern Front edit nbsp Molders in 1941In June 1941 JG 51 and the majority of the Luftwaffe were transferred to the Eastern Front in preparation for Operation Barbarossa the invasion of the Soviet Union JG 51 was subordinated to II Fliegerkorps 2nd Air Corps which as part of Luftflotte 2 Air Fleet 2 JG 51 area of operation during Operation Barbarossa was over the right flank of Army Group Center in the combat area of the 2nd Panzer Group as well as the 4th Army 65 On the first day of combat operations 22 June 1941 Molders shot down three Tupolev SB bombers and one Curtis Hawk earning him the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern Molders was only the second German serviceman to receive this award Galland the Geschwaderkommodore of Jagdgeschwader 26 Schlageter JG 26 had received one the day before 66 The award was presented by Adolf Hitler on 3 July 1941 in the Wolfsschanze Hitler s Headquarters in Rastenburg On 30 June Molders had become the highest scoring fighter pilot in the history of aerial warfare after downing five Soviet bombers 67 and bringing his tally to 82 two more than the record set in World War I by the Red Baron Manfred von Richthofen 68 On 12 July 1941 JG 51 under the leadership of Molders reported that it had destroyed 500 Soviet aircraft since the beginning of hostilities against the Soviets on 22 June and had suffered three casualties That day JG 51 also reported its 1 200th aerial victory of the war the credit going to Hauptmann Leppla 69 Three days later on 15 July 1941 Molders surpassed the C mark claiming victories Nos 100 and 101 and celebrated with a victory roll over the airfield 70 He was the first fighter pilot to amass 100 aerial victories in World War II 71 72 73 The following day he received news that he had been awarded the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves Swords and Diamonds Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub Schwertern und Brillanten 74 Molders was the first of 27 German servicemen to receive this award The diamonds added to the Knight s Cross were introduced officially on 28 September 1941 more than two months after Molders earned the award Molders was promoted to Oberst on 20 July 1941 effective immediately and banned from further combat flying Surrendering command of JG 51 to Major Friedrich Beckh he was transferred to the Ministry of Aviation a temporary position he held until 6 August 1941 Molders was summoned to the Wolfsschanze again where he received the Diamonds from Adolf Hitler on 26 July 1941 On 7 August 1941 he was appointed Inspector of Fighters 75 High command edit An Oberst at 28 Molders appointment as Inspector of Fighters meant he was responsible for deciding the ongoing tactical and operational doctrine of the Luftwaffe s fighter arm Returning to the Soviet Union in September 1941 he set up a command post at Chaplinka airfield from where he flew in his personal Fieseler Fi 156 Storch on tours of the Jagdwaffe and personally directed German fighter operations 76 Molders also flew unofficially on missions and actively commanded his old unit JG 51 for several more months On 9 August 1941 he took Herbert Kaiser on a teaching mission against a formation of Il 2 Sturmoviks Molders showed Kaiser how to shoot them down He recalled later He positioned himself off to one side of and some distance away from the last Il 2 in a formation of six He then turned in quickly and opened fire at the enemy s cockpit from an angle of some 30 degrees The Il 2 immediately burst into flames and crashed Do you see how it s done Oberst Molders voice came over the R T Right now you take the next one I carried out the same manoeuvre and sure enough the next Il 2 went down on fire And again It was like being on a training flight Another short burst and the third Il 2 was ablaze The whole lesson had lasted no more than 12 minutes 77 In this way Kaiser scored his 23rd and 24th kills But because Molders was officially banned from operational flying the first Soviet aircraft was never officially credited to him 77 Within the next two months it is speculated that Molders unofficially shot down around another 30 Soviet aircraft At least six of Molders unofficial victories are recorded in his fellow pilots private log books 78 Death edit nbsp Werner Molders original grave marker 1941On 22 November 1941 Molders travelled as a passenger in a Heinkel He 111 of Kampfgeschwader 27 Boelcke from Crimea to Germany to attend the funeral of his superior Ernst Udet who had committed suicide Attempting to land at Breslau during a thunderstorm the aircraft crashed Molders pilot Oberleutnant Kolbe and flight engineer Oberfeldwebel Hobbie were killed Major Dr Wenzel and radio operator Oberfeldwebel Tenz survived the crash landing Dr Wenzel sustained a broken arm and leg as well as a concussion and Tenz a broken ankle Molders fatal injuries included a broken back and a crushed ribcage Accident investigators then and since have speculated whether Molders would have survived the crash if he had used his seat belt 79 Molders was given a state funeral in Berlin on 28 November 1941 His coffin was laid out in the honour court of the Imperial Air Ministry The guard of honour consisted of Johann Schalk Gunther Lutzow Walter Oesau Joachim Muncheberg Adolf Galland Wolfgang Falck Herbert Kaminski and Karl Gottfried Nordmann Molders was buried next to Udet and Richthofen at the Invalidenfriedhof in Berlin The 8 8 cm flak in Berlin Tiergarten fired a salute Goring gave the eulogy 80 Personal life editMolders s nickname was Vati Daddy 81 He was a devoutly religious individual 82 He was a marvelous tactician My admiration for him was boundless He had a great wit and great personality 83 Gunther Rall Molders married Luise Baldauf nee Thurner the widow of a friend who had been killed in active service on 13 September 1941 84 Erich Klawitter Molders childhood mentor performed the religious ceremony in Falkenstein Taunus The marriage produced a posthumous daughter Verena 85 Nazi officials disapproved of his choice of a Catholic marriage ceremony performed by Klawitter Klawitter had been barred from membership in the Reich Chamber of Culture and was considered politically unreliable after a 1936 breach of the Pulpit Law a remnant of the 1870s Kulturkampf that among other religions barred Catholics from criticizing the state from the pulpit 86 In propaganda editWerner Molders old unit Jagdgeschwader 51 was renamed Molders in his honour on 22 November 1941 only hours after his death Its members were entitled to wear the Molders cuffband 75 Molders death just shortly after Udet s own suicide was used by Sefton Delmer the chief of the British black propaganda in the Political Warfare Executive PWE as part of a counter propaganda campaign His idea was to use Molders popularity in Germany by airdropping the Moldersbrief Molders letter a copy of correspondence supposedly written by Molders to the provost of Schwerin to create the assumption that Molders strong Catholic beliefs led him to oppose the Nazi regime in Germany The letter did not bluntly call for opposition against the state and never mentioned the Nazi Party by name instead using metaphors like the godless It stated that especially in the face of death many supporters of Nazism still found strength and courage with Catholicism 87 The letter caused a stir in the upper echelons of the Nazi regime In his diaries Joseph Goebbels Reich Minister of Propaganda assumed that someone in the German Catholic church organisation wrote and distributed the letter A bounty of 100 000 Reichsmarks was posted in Hitler s name but it revealed no clues to its origins In the end these actions did not affect the distribution of the letter 88 Commemoration and reversal of honours edit nbsp Werner Molders re established grave site 1991 in the Invalidenfriedhof BerlinThe Invalidenfriedhof where Molders is buried lay in East Berlin and in 1975 East German officials ordered all the graves leveled After the 1990 German reunification Molders grave was rebuilt and rededicated on 11 October 1991 by Molders school friend and canon Domherr of the St Hedwig s Cathedral Heribert Rosal The ceremony was witnessed by guests from the United States Great Britain Austria Spain and Hungary 89 On 13 April 1968 a destroyer of the West German Navy was christened Molders in Bath Maine USA It was in service between 1969 and 2003 As of 2018 update it is the central attraction at the German Navy Museum in Wilhelmshaven 75 90 On 9 November 1972 a base of a battalion of the 34th Signal Regiment of the Bundeswehr in Visselhovede received the name Molders 91 The Fighter Wing 74 Jagdgeschwader 74 stationed in Neuburg an der Donau received the name Molders in 1973 Now a general Rall presented the cuffbands 92 In 1998 on the occasion of the 61st anniversary of the bombing of the Spanish town of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War the German Parliament decided that members of the Condor Legion such as Molders should no longer be honoured 91 93 In 2005 the Federal Ministry of Defence decided to remove the name Molders from JG 74 The decision was confirmed on 11 March 2005 by the Federal Minister of Defence Peter Struck and at 10 00 the flags and cufftitles were removed 94 Molders supporters challenged the ruling 82 They pointed to his equivocal political attitude towards Nazism and his commitment to Catholicism not only did he have a Catholic religious marriage ceremony but Klawitter regarded by the Third Reich as politically unreliable had performed the ceremony 95 Despite petitions from politicians and high ranking active and retired servicemen among them Horst Seehofer Rall and Jorg Kuebart the Office for Military History MGFA noted that Molders membership in the Bund Neudeutschland did not provide sufficient evidence of his having been critical of the regime but rather showed the contrary and concluded that it was questionable whether Molders had distanced himself enough from Nazism before his death in 1941 Consequently the decision remained in force 96 97 nbsp This street sign was removed from a German air base following the reversal of honours It is on display at the Aviation Museum Hannover Laatzen Other evidence has surfaced illustrating Molders ambiguous relationship with the Nazi regime Molders may have been in contact with bishop Clemens August Graf von Galen who was highly critical of the Nazi regime Von Galen publicly criticised the regime for the Gestapo s tactics and the deportation and euthanasia of the mentally ill According to the diary kept by Heinrich Portmann von Galen s secretary and chaplain Molders threatened to return his awards if von Galen s euthanasia accusation turned out to be true Furthermore Portmann stated that Hitler had asked Molders during the presentation of the Diamonds to the Knight s Cross if there was anything he wished for Molders reportedly responded Please leave the bishop of Munster alone Hitler assured him that Yes nothing will happen to the bishop of Munster The MGFA concluded in 2004 that this story was most likely false The MGFA revised its position again on 28 June 2007 concluding that there had been contact between Molders and von Galen 98 According to Viktor Molders his brother had saved Georg Kuch one of Werner Molders closest friends who had been classified as a half Jew by the Nuremberg Laws Kuch s mother Alice nee Siegel was of Jewish birth 99 Kuch s father Richard Kuch owned and operated a pharmacy in Brandenburg Georg himself a pharmacy student was expelled from university under the Nuremberg Laws In 1940 Richard Kuch fell ill and owning and operating the pharmacy became a bureaucratic problem for the family Georg Kuch contacted his friend Molders in mid February 1941 asking for help Werner Molders wrote back that he had taken care of the matter When Richard Kuch died in June 1941 his wife was able to sell the pharmacy for fair market value Normally since she was Jewish it would have been confiscated Friedel Kuch repeatedly claimed that Werner Molders had been responsible for protecting the family the mantle of his protection had persisted beyond his death 100 The MGFA ruled this assertion highly speculative and did not investigate further 101 In 2004 the MGFA concluded that the assumption Molders had distanced himself from the Nazi regime was not demonstrable by a concrete behavioral action pattern Additionally it was assumed that he had deliberately and repeatedly attacked civilian targets in Spain The MGFA expert had built his analysis on the provability of concrete actions or omissions According to Schmider these conclusions have now been negated by recent research In the light of these new findings Molders cannot be attributed with any personal wrongdoing or even associated with a war crime even during his engagement in the Spanish Civil War Schmider states that Molders campaigned for victims of Nazi persecution and in particular helped the Kuch family far beyond what most Germans were prepared to do 102 However Schmider recommends that future research should focus on Molders perception and interpretation of Operation Barbarossa in particular his view on the Commissar Order needs to be investigated Schmider speculates that Molders may have been informed about the Commissar Order During Operation Barbarossa JG 51 was subordinated to II Fliegerkorps under the command of General der Flieger Bruno Loerzer which was part of Luftflotte 2 commanded by Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring Schmider assumes that Molders was either informed of the Commissar Order at the headquarters of the Fliegerkorps in Otwock or by the Luftflotte in Warsaw just prior to the invasion of the Soviet Union 103 The street Moldersstrasse in Geilenkirchen and Ingolstadt were named after him 104 105 In 2005 the city council in Geilenkirchen rejected a request to rename the Moldersstrasse The request had been submitted by the Alliance 90 The Greens party while the majority in the city council was held by the Christian Democratic Union of Germany 106 Summary of career editAerial victory claims edit According to US historian David T Zabecki Molders was credited with 115 aerial victories 14 of which during the Spanish Civil War 107 Stockert lists him with 102 enemy aircraft shot down in 642 combat missions of which 63 were claimed over the Western Front 108 Mathews and Foreman authors of Luftwaffe Aces Biographies and Victory Claims researched the German Federal Archives and found documentation for 108 aerial victory claims plus ten further unconfirmed claims This number includes 14 claims during the Spanish Civil War 62 on the Western Front and 32 on the Eastern Front 109 Chronicle of aerial victories This and the Ace of spades indicates those aerial victories which made Molders an ace in a day a term which designates a fighter pilot who has shot down five or more airplanes in a single day This and the dash indicates unconfirmed aerial victory claims for which Molders did not receive credit This and the exclamation mark indicates those aerial victories listed by Forsyth or by Prien Stemmer Rodeike and Bock This and the hash mark indicates those aerial victories listed by Mathews and Foreman This and the question mark indicates information discrepancies listed by Prien Stemmer Rodeike Bock Mathews and Foreman Claim Claim Date Time Type Location Unit Claim Claim Date Time Type Location UnitSpanish Civil War Claims with Jagdgruppe 88 in Spain 110 16 1 1 15 July 1938 I 15 111 Algar de Palancia area 3 J 88 23 September 1938 I 16 3 J 882 2 17 July 1938 I 15 111 north of Lliria 3 J 88 9 9 10 October 1938 I 16 111 northeast of Flix 3 J 883 3 19 July 1938 I 16 111 west of Villar del Arzobispo 3 J 88 10 10 15 October 1938 I 16 111 west of La Figuera 3 J 884 4 19 August 1938 I 16 111 Flix area 3 J 88 11 11 15 October 1938 I 16 111 Serra de Montsant area 3 J 885 5 23 August 1938 SB 2 111 Albi area 3 J 88 12 12 31 October 1938 I 16 111 northwest of Flix 3 J 886 6 9 September 1938 I 16 111 Flix area 3 J 88 13 13 31 October 1938 I 16 111 south of Ribarroja 3 J 887 7 13 September 1938 I 16 111 Flix area 3 J 88 14 14 3 November 1938 I 16 111 Mola area 3 J 888 8 23 September 1938 I 16 111 southwest of Ginestar 3 J 88World War II Claims with Jagdgeschwader 53 on the Western Front 110 Phoney War 1 September 1939 9 May 19401 15 20 September 1939 14 30 Note 3 P 36 Sierck les Bains 112 1 JG 53 6 20 26 March 1940 15 00 M S 406 Wolkenfeld 113 Diedenhofen III JG 532 16 30 October 1939 11 12 Blenheim Klusserath northeast of Trier 113 III JG 53 7 21 2 April 1940 12 10 Hurricane south of Saargemund 113 III JG 533 17 22 December 1939 15 05 M S 406 15 km 9 3 mi northeast of Metz 113 III JG 53 8 22 20 April 1940 11 54 P 36 7 km 4 3 mi east of Saargemund 113 III JG 534 18 2 March 1940 12 20 Note 4 Hurricane south of Bitsch 113 Volklingen III JG 53 9 23 23 April 1940 11 14 Hurricane south of Diedenhofen 113 III JG 535 19 3 March 1940 13 55 M S 406 12 km 7 5 mi southeast of Diedenhofen 113 III JG 53 Claims with Jagdgeschwader 53 in France 110 Battle of France 10 May 25 June 194010 24 14 May 1940 16 30 Hurricane Sedan 114 Sedan Charleville III JG 53 18 31 25 May 1940 18 55 M S 406 Forest of Compiegne 115 Villers Cotterets forest III JG 5311 25 15 May 1940 13 05 Hurricane Charleville 114 Sedan III JG 53 19 32 27 May 1940 09 10 P 36 15 km 9 3 mi southwest of Amiens 115 III JG 5312 26 19 May 1940 09 35 MB 152 northeast of Reims 114 III JG 53 20 33 27 May 1940 09 11 P 36 15 km 9 3 mi southwest of Amiens 115 III JG 5313 27 20 May 1940 19 15 Wellesley Compiegne 114 III JG 53 21 34 31 May 1940 19 00 Note 5 LeO 451 30 km 19 mi south of Abbeville 115 III JG 5314 28 21 May 1940 17 30 M S 406 southwest of Compiegne 115 III JG 53 22 35 3 June 1940 14 30 Note 6 P 36 Paris 115 III JG 5315 21 May 1940 17 50 M S 406 southwest of Compiegne 115 III JG 53 23 36 3 June 1940 14 40 Spitfire southeast of Paris 115 III JG 5316 29 21 May 1940 19 18 M S 406 southwest of Compiegne 115 III JG 53 24 37 5 June 1940 11 20 Bloch west of Compiegne 116 III JG 5317 30 22 May 1940 17 50 Potez 63 southwest of Mourmelon airfield 115 III JG 53 25 38 5 June 1940 11 23 Potez 63 northwest of Pont Sainte Maxence 116 Beauvais Compiegne III JG 53 Claims with Jagdgeschwader 51 during the Battle of Britain and on the English Channel 117 26 28 July 1940 15 30 Spitfire Dover 118 Stab JG 51 48 59 17 October 1940 16 22 Spitfire London 119 Stab JG 5127 26 August 1940 12 55 Spitfire Folkestone 118 Stab JG 51 49 60 22 October 1940 15 40 Hurricane northwest of Maidstone 119 Stab JG 5128 39 28 August 1940 10 05 P 36 northeast of Dover 118 Stab JG 51 50 61 22 October 1940 15 41 Hurricane northwest of Maidstone 119 Stab JG 5129 40 28 August 1940 18 25 Hurricane Canterbury 118 Stab JG 51 51 62 22 October 1940 15 42 Hurricane northwest of Maidstone 119 Stab JG 5130 41 31 August 1940 10 00 Hurricane northeast of Folkestone 118 Stab JG 51 52 63 25 October 1940 10 45 Spitfire northwest of Dover 119 Stab JG 5131 42 31 August 1940 10 01 Hurricane northeast of Folkestone 118 Stab JG 51 53 64 25 October 1940 13 20 Spitfire Margate 119 Stab JG 5132 43 31 August 1940 10 10 Hurricane northeast of Folkestone 118 Stab JG 51 54 65 29 October 1940 13 55 Hurricane Dungeness 119 Stab JG 5133 44 6 September 1940 14 45 Spitfire Folkestone 118 Stab JG 51 55 66 1 December 1940 15 15 Hurricane Ashford 119 Stab JG 5134 45 7 September 1940 18 32 Spitfire London 118 Stab JG 51 56 67 10 February 1941 17 29 Spitfire 5 km 3 1 mi northeast of Calais 119 5 km 3 1 mi nort northwest of Calais Stab JG 5135 46 9 September 1940 18 45 Spitfire London 118 Stab JG 51 57 20 February 1941 16 56 Spitfire Dover 119 Stab JG 5136 47 11 September 1940 17 10 Hurricane southeast of London 118 Stab JG 51 58 68 20 February 1941 16 57 Spitfire Dover 119 Stab JG 5137 48 14 September 1940 17 30 Spitfire southwest of London 118 Stab JG 51 59 25 February 1941 15 20 Spitfire north of Gravelines 119 Stab JG 5138 49 16 September 1940 09 24 Hurricane south of London 118 Stab JG 51 60 69 26 February 1941 18 37 Spitfire southeast of Dungeness 119 Stab JG 5139 50 20 September 1940 12 34 Spitfire Dungeness 118 Stab JG 51 61 12 March 1941 19 15 Spitfire Dungeness 119 Stab JG 5140 51 20 September 1940 12 35 Spitfire Dungeness 118 Stab JG 51 62 70 13 March 1941 15 22 Spitfire 20 km 12 mi west of Cap Gris Nez 120 southwest of Boulogne Stab JG 5141 52 27 September 1940 17 03 Spitfire Maidstone 119 Stab JG 51 63 15 April 1941 18 00 Spitfire southwest of Boulogne 120 Stab JG 5142 53 28 September 1940 15 01 Spitfire Littlestone 119 Stab JG 51 64 71 16 April 1941 18 32 Spitfire 5 km 3 1 mi west of Berck 120 Stab JG 5143 54 11 October 1940 12 30 Spitfire Folkestone 119 Stab JG 51 65 72 16 April 1941 18 42 Hurricane southwest of Dungeness 120 Stab JG 5144 55 12 October 1940 10 40 Hurricane Lympne 119 Lympne Canterbury Stab JG 51 73 28 April 1941 13 10 Hurricane Dungeness 120 Stab JG 5145 56 12 October 1940 10 43 Hurricane Canterbury 119 Lympne Canterbury Stab JG 51 66 74 4 May 1941 12 17 Hurricane east of Deal 120 Stab JG 5146 57 12 October 1940 14 12 Hurricane Dungeness 119 Stab JG 51 67 75 6 May 1941 12 00 Hurricane Dover 120 Stab JG 5147 58 15 October 1940 09 15 Hurricane south of London 119 Kenley Stab JG 51 68 76 8 May 1941 12 20 Spitfire off Dover 120 Stab JG 51 Claims with Jagdgeschwader 51 on the Eastern Front 121 Operation Barbarossa 22 June 5 December 194169 77 22 June 1941 05 00 I 153 122 Stab JG 51 86 94 5 July 1941 12 10 I 18 MiG 1 122 Stab JG 5170 78 22 June 1941 12 35 SB 2 122 Stab JG 51 87 95 9 July 1941 09 25 I 153 122 Stab JG 5171 79 22 June 1941 12 36 SB 2 122 Stab JG 51 88 96 9 July 1941 09 35 I 153 122 Stab JG 5172 80 22 June 1941 12 38 SB 2 122 Stab JG 51 89 97 9 July 1941 09 55 I 16 122 Stab JG 5173 81 24 June 1941 17 50 SB 2 122 Stab JG 51 90 98 10 July 1941 07 45 R Z 122 Note 7 Stab JG 5174 82 25 June 1941 12 30 SB 2 122 Stab JG 51 91 99 10 July 1941 07 50 R Z 122 Note 7 Stab JG 5175 83 25 June 1941 12 31 SB 2 122 Stab JG 51 92 100 11 July 1941 10 35 I 153 122 Stab JG 5176 84 29 June 1941 15 30 Pe 2 122 Stab JG 51 93 101 11 July 1941 15 15 I 153 122 Stab JG 5177 85 29 June 1941 19 50 I 16 122 Stab JG 51 94 102 12 July 1941 18 50 DB 3 122 Stab JG 5178 86 30 June 1941 11 40 DB 3 122 Stab JG 51 95 103 13 July 1941 19 25 DB 3 122 Stab JG 5179 87 30 June 1941 11 45 DB 3 122 Stab JG 51 96 104 13 July 1941 19 30 DB 3 122 Stab JG 5180 88 30 June 1941 11 50 DB 3 122 Stab JG 51 97 105 14 July 1941 11 50 Pe 2 122 Stab JG 5181 89 30 June 1941 15 45 DB 3 122 Stab JG 51 98 106 14 July 1941 11 55 Pe 2 122 Stab JG 5182 90 30 June 1941 15 50 DB 3 122 Stab JG 51 99 107 14 July 1941 12 00 Pe 2 122 Stab JG 5183 91 5 July 1941 12 00 SB 2 122 Stab JG 51 100 108 15 July 1941 18 40 Pe 2 122 Stab JG 5184 92 5 July 1941 12 05 SB 2 122 Stab JG 51 101 15 July 1941 Pe 2 122 Stab JG 5185 93 5 July 1941 12 10 I 18 MiG 1 122 Stab JG 51 Claims with Jagdgeschwader 77 on the Eastern Front Operation Barbarossa 22 June 5 December 1941 8 November 1941 Il 2 124 III JG 77Awards edit Wehrmacht Long Service Award 4th Class 2 October 1936 125 Medal for the Campaign of 1936 1939 Medalla de la Campana 1936 1939 or Medalla de la Campana Spain 4 May 1939 21 Military Medal Medalla Militar Spain 4 May 1939 21 Spanish Cross in Gold with Swords and Diamonds 6 June 1939 21 Front Flying Clasp of the Luftwaffe for Fighter Pilots in Gold and Diamonds 126 Wound Badge in Black 126 Pilot Observer Badge in Gold with Diamonds August 1940 58 Iron Cross 1939 2nd Class 20 September 1939 21 Note 8 1st Class 2 April 1940 21 Note 9 Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves Swords and Diamonds Knight s Cross 29 May 1940 as Hauptmann and Gruppenkommandeur of III Jagdgeschwader 53 128 129 2nd Oak Leaves 21 September 1940 as Major and Geschwaderkommodore of Jagdgeschwader 51 128 130 2nd Swords 22 June 1941 as Oberstleutnant and Geschwaderkommodore of Jagdgeschwader 51 128 131 1st Diamonds 15 July 1941 as Oberst and Geschwaderkommodore of Jagdgeschwader 51 132 Note 10 Eleven named references in the Wehrmachtbericht 29 May 1940 6 September 1940 25 September 1940 23 October 1940 26 October 1940 11 February 1941 27 February 1941 18 April 1941 24 June 1941 1 July 1941 16 July 1941 133 Promotions edit 1 October 1931 Fahnenjunker Gefreiter 9 1 April 1932 Fahnenjunker Unteroffizier 9 1 June 1933 Fahnrich 9 1 February 1934 Oberfahnrich 9 1 March 1934 Leutnant Second Lieutenant 134 20 April 1936 Oberleutnant First Lieutenant effective as of 1 April 1936 134 18 October 1938 Hauptmann Captain effective as of 1 October 1938 134 19 July 1940 Major Major 58 25 October 1940 Oberstleutnant Lieutenant Colonel 58 20 July 1941 Oberst Colonel 75 References editNotes edit The Condor Legion used the Bf 109B through D variants during the conflict This provided valuable combat experience for both the Luftwaffe and Messerschmitt leading up to the start of World War II The He 51s were turned over to the 4th squadron commanded by Hauptmann Eberhard d Elsa and continued in service until the end of the Spanish Civil War For an explanation of Luftwaffe unit designations see Organisation of the Luftwaffe during World War II According to Mathews and Foreman claimed at 14 50 110 According to Mathews and Foreman claimed at 12 15 110 According to Mathews and Foreman claimed at 19 55 110 According to Mathews and Foreman claimed at 15 00 110 a b According to Mathews and Foreman claimed as a Polikarpov R 5 123 According to Thomas on 27 September 1939 127 According to Thomas on 3 April 1940 127 According to Scherzer 1st Diamonds on 16 July 1941 128 Citations edit Braatz 2009 pp 18 19 Braatz 2009 p 19 Braatz 2009 p 22 Braatz 2009 p 33 a b Braatz 2009 p 28 Braatz 2009 p 27 Braatz 2009 p 44 Braatz 2009 pp 45 378 a b c d e Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 31 Braatz 2009 p 378 Braatz 2009 pp 72 73 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 11 32 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 11 32 66 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 11 12 32 Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 12 a b c Braatz 2009 p 380 Braatz 2009 pp 152 380 Spick 1996 p 18 Braatz 2009 p 148 Braatz 2009 p 153 a b c d e f g h Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 33 Prien 1997 p 30 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 33 89 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 88 92 a b c d Spick 1996 p 15 Braatz 2009 p 191 Prien 1997 p 40 a b c Weal 2007a p 13 Prien 1997 p 44 Prien 1997 pp 50 51 Weal 1999 p 44 Weal 1999 p 46 Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 40 a b Hooton 2007 p 65 Braatz 2009 pp 210 381 Prien et al 2000 p 358 Kershaw 2008 chpt 2 Prien 1997 p 119 Goss 2017 p 30 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 16 18 33 Braatz 2009 p 218 Schmider 2016 IV Neue Forschungen Braatz 2009 p 287 Aders amp Held 1993 p 62 Braatz 2009 p 232 Braatz 2009 p 233 Shores amp Williams 1994 p 406 Braatz 2009 p 234 a b Aders amp Held 1993 p 63 Kaplan 2007 p 56 Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 19 Shores amp Williams 1994 p 622 Aders amp Held 1993 p 67 Braatz 2009 p 247 Aders amp Held 1993 pp 69 71 Braatz 2009 p 256 Weal 1999 p 7 a b c d Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 34 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 20 124 125 Braatz 2009 pp 273 274 Braatz 2009 pp 277 380 381 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 21 137 141 Braatz 2009 p 288 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 21 40 41 Prien et al 2003 p 206 Braatz 2009 pp 312 315 Bergstrom 2007 p 27 Weal 2001 p 22 Aders amp Held 1993 p 91 Weal 2001 p 18 Obermaier 1989 p 243 Spick 1996 p 83 Kaplan 2007 p 57 Braatz 2009 p 317 a b c d Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 35 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 188 189 a b Weal 2001 p 29 Weal 2007b p 11 Braatz 2009 pp 350 351 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 200 206 Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 14 a b Weal 2006 p 120 MacLean 2007 p 6 Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 22 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 35 180 182 209 Hagena 2008 p 54 Hagena 2008 pp 67 68 Hagena 2008 p 67 Hagena 2008 p 119 German Navy Museum Wilhelmshaven 2018 a b Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 36 Obermaier amp Held 1996 pp 214 218 Hagena 2008 p 8 Hagena 2008 p 132 Hagena 2008 p 56 Hagena 2008 p 138 Kaplan 2007 p 51 Hagena 2008 pp 60 64 Hagena 2008 p 73 Hagena 2008 pp 74 83 Hagena 2008 p 72 Schmider 2016 p 22 Schmider 2016 pp 21 22 Moldersstrasse in Geilenkirchen strassenkatalog de in German Retrieved 7 January 2019 Moldersstrasse in Ingolstadt strassenkatalog de in German Retrieved 7 January 2019 Stusser 2005 Zabecki 2019 p 328 Stockert 2012 p 2 Mathews amp Foreman 2015 pp 865 867 a b c d e f g Mathews amp Foreman 2015 p 865 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Forsyth 2011 p 102 Prien et al 2001 p 368 a b c d e f g h Prien et al 2001 p 406 a b c d Prien et al 2000 p 353 a b c d e f g h i j Prien et al 2000 p 355 a b Prien et al 2000 p 356 Mathews amp Foreman 2015 pp 865 866 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Prien et al 2002 p 11 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Prien et al 2002 p 12 a b c d e f g h Prien et al 2002 p 13 Mathews amp Foreman 2015 pp 866 867 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Prien et al 2003 p 220 Mathews amp Foreman 2015 p 867 Prien 1995 p 2397 Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 75 a b Berger 1999 p 228 a b Thomas 1998 p 91 a b c d Scherzer 2007 p 548 Fellgiebel 2000 p 313 Fellgiebel 2000 p 53 Fellgiebel 2000 p 39 Fellgiebel 2000 p 36 Die Wehrmachtberichte 1939 1945 Band 1 pp 174 296 311 339 341 420 433 494 587 598 617 a b c Obermaier amp Held 1996 p 32 Bibliography edit Aders Gebhard Held Werner 1993 Jagdgeschwader 51 Molders Eine Chronik Berichte Erlebnisse Dokumente Fighter Wing 51 Molders A Chronicle Reports Experiences Documents in German Stuttgart Germany Motorbuch Verlag ISBN 978 3 613 01045 1 Berger Florian 1999 Mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern Die hochstdekorierten Soldaten des Zweiten Weltkrieges With Oak Leaves and Swords The Highest Decorated Soldiers of the Second World War in German Vienna Austria Selbstverlag Florian Berger ISBN 978 3 9501307 0 6 Bergstrom Christer in Swedish Mikhailov Andrey 2000 Black Cross Red Star Air War Over the Eastern Front Volume I Operation Barbarossa 1941 Pacifica California Pacifica Military History ISBN 978 0 935553 48 2 Bergstrom Christer in Swedish 2007 Barbarossa The Air Battle July December 1941 London Chevron Ian Allan ISBN 978 1 85780 270 2 Braatz Kurt in German 2009 Werner Molders Die Biographie Werner Molders The Biography in German Moosburg Germany NeunundzwanzigSechs Verlag ISBN 978 3 9811615 3 3 Cony Christophe amp Martin Pierre April 1999 As allemands 39 45 Werner Molders German Ace Werner Molders Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French 73 30 37 ISSN 1243 8650 Die Wehrmachtberichte 1939 1945 Band 1 1 September 1939 bis 31 Dezember 1941 The Wehrmacht Reports 1939 1945 Volume 1 1 September 1939 to 31 December 1941 in German Munchen Germany Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag GmbH amp Co KG 1985 ISBN 978 3 423 05944 2 Fellgiebel Walther Peer in German 2000 1986 Die Trager des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939 1945 Die Inhaber der hochsten Auszeichnung des Zweiten Weltkrieges aller Wehrmachtteile The Bearers of the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross 1939 1945 The Owners of the Highest Award of the Second World War of all Wehrmacht Branches in German Friedberg Germany Podzun Pallas ISBN 978 3 7909 0284 6 Forsyth Robert 2011 Aces of the Legion Condor Aircraft of the Aces Vol 99 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84908 347 8 German Navy Museum Wilhelmshaven www niedersachsen tourism com TourismusMarketing Niedersachsen GmbH 6 August 2018 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Goss Chris 2017 Jagdgeschwader 53 Pik As Bf 109 Aces of 1940 Aircraft of the Aces Vol 132 London UK Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4728 1873 7 Hagena Hermann 2008 Jagdflieger Werner Molders Die Wurde des Menschen reicht uber den Tod hinaus Fighter Pilot Werner Molders The Dignity of Man goes beyond Death in German Aachen Germany Helios Verlag ISBN 978 3 938208 66 3 Holmes Tom 1999 Hurricanes to the Fore The First Aces Aircraft of the Aces Men and Legends Series 7 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 84 8372 221 3 Hooton E R 2007 Luftwaffe at War Gathering Storm 1933 39 Volume 1 London Chevron Ian Allan ISBN 978 1 903223 71 0 Kaplan Philip 2007 Fighter Aces of the Luftwaffe in World War II Barnsley Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1 4738 1407 3 Kershaw Alex 2008 The Few July October 1940 London UK Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 101850 8 MacLean French L 2007 Luftwaffe Efficiency amp Promotion Reports For the Knight s Cross Winners Vol 1 Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Publishing ISBN 978 0 7643 2657 8 Mathews Andrew Johannes Foreman John 2015 Luftwaffe Aces Biographies and Victory Claims Volume 3 M R Walton on Thames Red Kite ISBN 978 1 906592 20 2 Michulec Robert 2002 Luftwaffe at War Luftwaffe Aces of the Western Front London Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1 85367 486 0 Obermaier Ernst 1989 Die Ritterkreuztrager der Luftwaffe Jagdflieger 1939 1945 The Knight s Cross Bearers of the Luftwaffe Fighter Force 1939 1945 in German Mainz Germany Verlag Dieter Hoffmann ISBN 978 3 87341 065 7 Obermaier Ernst Held Werner 1996 Jagdflieger Oberst Werner Molders Bilder und Dokumente Fighter Pilot Colonel Werner Molders Images and Documents in German 4 ed Stuttgart Germany Motorbuch Verlag ISBN 978 3 87943 869 3 Prien Jochen 1995 Geschichte des Jagdgeschwaders 77 Teil 4 1944 1945 History of Jagdgeschwader 77 Volume 4 1944 1945 in German Eutin Germany Struve Druck ISBN 978 3 923457 29 8 Prien Jochen 1997 Jagdgeschwader 53 A History of the Pik As Geschwader March 1937 May 1942 Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Military History ISBN 978 0 7643 0175 9 Prien Jochen Stemmer Gerhard Rodeike Peter Bock Winfried 2001 Die Jagdfliegerverbande der Deutschen Luftwaffe 1934 bis 1945 Teil 2 Der Sitzkrieg 1 9 1939 bis 9 5 1941 The Fighter Units of the German Air Force 1934 to 1945 Part 2 The Phoney War 1 September 1939 to 9 May 1940 in German Eutin Germany Struve Druck ISBN 978 3 923457 59 5 Prien Jochen Stemmer Gerhard Rodeike Peter Bock Winfried 2000 Die Jagdfliegerverbande der deutschen Luftwaffe 1934 bis 1945 Teil 3 Einsatz in Danemark und Norwegen 9 4 bis 30 11 1940 Der Feldzug im Westen 10 5 bis 25 6 1940 Fighter Pilot Association of the German Luftwaffe 1934 to 1945 Part 3 Assignments in Denmark and Norway 9 April to 30 November 1940 The campaign in the West 10 May to 25 June 1940 in German Struve Druck ISBN 978 3 923457 61 8 Prien Jochen Stemmer Gerhard Rodeike Peter Bock Winfried 2002 Die Jagdfliegerverbande der Deutschen Luftwaffe 1934 bis 1945 Teil 4 II Einsatz am Kanal und uber England 26 6 1940 bis 21 6 1941 The Fighter Units of the German Air Force 1934 to 1945 Part 4 II Action at the Channel and over England 26 June 1940 to 21 June 1941 in German Eutin Germany Struve Druck ISBN 978 3 923457 64 9 Prien Jochen Stemmer Gerhard Rodeike Peter Bock Winfried 2003 Die Jagdfliegerverbande der Deutschen Luftwaffe 1934 bis 1945 Teil 6 I Unternehmen BARBAROSSA Einsatz im Osten 22 6 bis 5 12 1941 The Fighter Units of the German Air Force 1934 to 1945 Part 6 I Operation BARBAROSSA Action in the East 22 June to 5 December 1941 in German Eutin Germany Struve Druck ISBN 978 3 923457 69 4 Scherzer Veit 2007 Die Ritterkreuztrager 1939 1945 Die Inhaber des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939 von Heer Luftwaffe Kriegsmarine Waffen SS Volkssturm sowie mit Deutschland verbundeter Streitkrafte nach den Unterlagen des Bundesarchives The Knight s Cross Bearers 1939 1945 The Holders of the Knight s Cross of the Iron Cross 1939 by Army Air Force Navy Waffen SS Volkssturm and Allied Forces with Germany According to the Documents of the Federal Archives in German Jena Germany Scherzers Militaer Verlag ISBN 978 3 938845 17 2 Schmider Klaus 6 June 2016 Werner Molders und die Bundeswehr Werner Molders and the Bundeswehr PDF Portal Militargeschichte in German Arbeitskreis Militargeschichte e V Retrieved 8 August 2018 Shores Christopher Williams Clive 1994 Aces High London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 898697 00 8 Shores Christopher F Foreman John Ehrengardt Chris 1992 Fledgling eagles London UK Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 42 7 Sims Edward H 1982 Jagdflieger Die grossen Gegner von einst Fighter Pilots The great Enemies of the Past in German Stuttgart UK Motorbuch Verlag ISBN 978 3 87943 115 1 Spick Mike 1996 Luftwaffe Fighter Aces New York Ivy Books ISBN 978 0 8041 1696 1 Stockert Peter 2012 1996 Die Eichenlaubtrager 1939 1945 Band 1 The Oak Leaves Bearers 1939 1945 Volume 1 in German Bad Friedrichshall Germany Friedrichshaller Rundblick ISBN 978 3 9802222 7 3 Stusser Udo 7 April 2005 Molders Soldat und kein Kriegsverbrecher Molders Soldier and no War Criminal Aachener Zeitung in German OCLC 724442708 Thomas Franz 1998 Die Eichenlaubtrager 1939 1945 Band 2 L Z The Oak Leaves Bearers 1939 1945 Volume 2 L Z in German Osnabruck Germany Biblio Verlag ISBN 978 3 7648 2300 9 Weal John 1999 Bf 109 F G K Aces of the Western Front Aircraft of the Aces Vol 29 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 905 8 Weal John 2001 Bf 109 Aces of the Russian Front Aircraft of the Aces Vol 37 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 084 1 Weal John 2006 Jagdgeschwader 51 Molders Aviation Elite Units Vol 22 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 045 1 Weal John 2007a Jagdgeschwader 53 Pik As Aviation Elite Units Vol 25 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 204 2 Weal John 2007b More Bf 109 Aces of the Russian Front Aircraft of the Aces Vol 76 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 177 9 Williamson Gordon 2006 Knight s Cross with Diamonds Recipients 1941 45 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 644 7 Zabecki David T ed 2019 The German War Machine in World War II Santa Barbara California ABC Clio ISBN 978 1 44 086918 1 External links editWerner Molders in the German National Library catalogue Boog Horst 1994 Molders Werner Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 17 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 625 626 full text online Newspaper clippings about Werner Molders in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWMilitary officesPreceded byOberst Theo Osterkamp Commander of Jagdgeschwader 5127 July 1940 19 July 1941 Succeeded byOberstleutnant Friedrich BeckhPreceded byGeneralmajor Kurt Bertram von Doring Inspekteur der Jagdflieger7 August 1941 22 November 1941 Succeeded byGeneralleutnant Adolf Galland Portals nbsp Aviation nbsp BiographyWerner Molders at Wikipedia 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