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Julius & Max Weinburg - Jewish Soldiers in the German Army

Transcript of interview with Kurt Weinburg

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CONTRIBUTOR

Kurt Weinberg

DATE

1908 - 1939

LANGUAGE

eng

ITEMS

10

INSTITUTION

Europeana 1914-1918

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

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METADATA

Source

UGC

Contributor

europeana19141918:agent/c342ba1e1058a278fb6699fdef2b3445

Date

1939
1908

Type

Story

Language

eng
English

Country

Europe

DataProvider

Europeana 1914-1918

Provider

Europeana 1914-1918

Year

1908
1939

DatasetName

2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU

Begin

1908

End

1939

Language

mul

Agent

Julius Weinberg | europeana19141918:agent/758e8c21aa8f61bb4ceee50cc5d08867
Max Weinberg | europeana19141918:agent/82dc872268e2bb2572a8398b593a23ac
Kurt Weinberg | europeana19141918:agent/c342ba1e1058a278fb6699fdef2b3445

Created

2019-09-11T08:24:30.579Z
2020-02-25T08:19:57.366Z
2014-04-14 12:31:46 UTC
2014-06-19 09:27:29 UTC
2014-06-19 09:27:31 UTC
2014-06-19 09:27:32 UTC
2014-06-19 09:27:34 UTC
2014-06-19 09:27:35 UTC
2014-06-19 09:27:36 UTC
2014-06-19 09:27:48 UTC

Provenance

COTGW_RAF

Record ID

/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_15077

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Joseph Doerflinger | Alsatian in the German Army 1914-1918

5 Items

Pictures || This is a short account of the life of Joseph Doerflinger, pilot in the German air force during World War I. As an orphan and Alsatian, he had volunteered at 16 for the flying service in the German Air Force, but he was too young, so he became a machine gunner in the army. He spent three years at the front, three years of mudding, trenching, killing, blood, devastation, filth and disease, and foul smells. He fought on both the Western and the Eastern fronts. He survived the murderous battles of the Schratzmannele an Hartmansweilerkopf in the Vosges mountains, and the hell-fire of the Verdun sector. He had witnessed the defeat of the Russians at Gorlice. He had campaigned against the Russians in Galicia. Finally 19 years old, at the end of 1917, he was accepted to the training school for aviators at Hannover, Germany. His first flight was on January 7, 1918. After training, he was transferred to the Von Richthofen Jagdstaffel 10 (the red Baron ). In April 1918 Manfred von Richthofen was shot down by the Royal Air Force and the new Staffelführer became Herman Göring (the later Reichmarschall der Luftwaffe), in the same squadron were famous aces like Ernst Udet and Loewenhardt. After months of fighting in different parts of the front in the Jasta 10, Doerflinger and other members of the squad were transferred to the Jasta 64 until the end of the war. Doerflinger was a non commissioned officer, a Feldwebel in the German air force. He was shot down twice and had 14 air victories. After the armistice, he joined the French air force and became a flight instructor in Istres. Some of his flying students also became famous pilots, like Jean Mermoz. In the 1920s he started to work for the French air company Latécoère and Aeropostale, with Jean Mermoz and Antoine de Saint-exupéry. In the late 1920th he emmigrated with his family to the United States of America, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. There he worked as a pilot and for aviation companies. He married Marie Hodapp in 1924 and had 8 children and many grandchildren. He was my Great-uncle. Information from his book Stepchild Pilot written in 1959 and from the Magazine Diligence d'alsace || || This Pictures was made in 1918 , and was a present to a Person who bought Joseph book Stepchild Pilot 1959 || Joseph Doerflinger as Pilot 1918 || Germany || Joseph Doerflinger 1918 || Photograph || || Aviator training school Hannover , Germany 1918 || Hannover Germany || Photograph || Picture in the aviator Training scholl in Hannover Germany . Joseph Doerflinger third from right and his Trainer Heinrich Heinze ( civilian clothes) || || Joseph Doerflinger in his plane Fokker D-VII 1918 || Joseph in a Fokker D-VII before a combat patrol 1918 || || Photograph || Joseph Doerflinger and his brother in law Denis Hodapp as French pilots in the French air force 1921 in Istres. || Istres, France || Joseph Doerflinger and Denis Hodapp 1921 in Istres || || Postcard with Joseph Doerflinger as an Aviation pioneer for Aeropostale and Latécère . || Postcard

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German soldiers at the railroad works KORTRIJK (Belgium)

1 Item

My grandfather worked for The Belgian Railroad . Maintenance of steam locomotives. During the war the plant was guarded by German soldiers.

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German soldiers with Irish connection

7 Items

Copy of death notice of Herbert Engel ; Extract from German Army on the Somme ; Correspondence with German War Graves Commission ; Field glasses and olive coloured knapsack || My granduncle, Herbert Engel, was killed in action fighting for the German army at Delville Wood at the Somme on 27th August 1916. He was a member of the 6th Company, 1st Regiment of the Kaiser's Grenadier Guards. My father (Herbert Engel's nephew) came to Ireland in 1939. My grandfather (Georg Unger) also fought for the German army on the Eastern front and died within a couple of years of the ending of the war from shrapnel wounds sustained at the front. || || This is the Death Notice of my grand uncle, Herbert Engel, a member of the 6th Company, 1st Regiment of the Kaiser's Grenadier Guards, who was killed fighting for the German army at the Somme on 27th August, 1916. || Deutsch || Death Notice, with illustration, of Herbert Engel || Official document || Herbert Engel || Western Front || || Front cover of The German Army on the Somme by Jack Sheldon, an account of the actions of the German army at this location of the war and which I believe contains a description of the action in which my grand uncle, Herbert Engel, died. || Cover of The German Army on the Somme by Jack Sheldon || Western Front || || Western Front || Extract from The German Army on the Somme || Extract from The German Army on the Somme containing a description of the opening of the action in which I believe my grand uncle, Herbert Engel, died on 27th August 1916. || || Extract from The German Army on the Somme describing what I believe is the death of my grand uncle, Herbert Engel, on the Somme on 27th August 1916 in an action against French forces. || Extract of The German Army on the Somme || Western Front || || Binocular case believed to have belonged to Georg Unger || Western Front || || Western Front || Binoculars believed to have belonged to Georg Unger || || Deutsch || Red Cross badge belonging to sister of Herbert Engel and associated with the town of Schwiebus, according to the inscription on the badge. A penknife is also pictured. || Western Front || Medical || Women || Red Cross badge belonging to sister of Herbert Engel

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