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Karl Plauth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Karl Plauth
Born27 August 1896
Munich, Germany
Died1 November 1927 (1927-12) (aged 31)
AllegianceGermany
Service / branchAviation
RankLeutnant
UnitFlieger-Abteilung 204;
Jagdstaffel 20
CommandsJagdstaffel 51
AwardsIron Cross

Leutnant Karl Plauth was a German World War I flying ace credited with 17 aerial victories. He would crash a Junkers A 32 to his death on a test flight.

Biography

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See also Aerial victory standards of World War I

Plauth crashed one Fokker D.VII, flew another to 16 victories.

Karl Plauth was born on 27 August 1896 in Munich, Germany.[1]

Plauth originally served in a pioneer battalion early in the First World War. After being wounded during the Battle of Verdun and earning a First Class Iron Cross,[2] he transferred to flying service. After a stint in Flieger-Abteilung 204 (Flier Detachment 204),[3] he was assigned to fly a Fokker D.VII[4] with Royal Prussian Jagdstaffel 20 (Fighter Squadron 20) on 14 June 1918. Plauth scored his first triumph on 9 July 1918.[1]

On 14 July, he was shot down, totaling his airplane, lacerating his head and blackening his eye. He was grounded for eight days because of the eye.[5] That did not deter him from scoring again on the 31st. By 28 September, his tally stood at 10. The following day, he became the Staffelführer of Royal Prussian Jagdstaffel 51. As their leader, he shot down seven more enemy aircraft during October, 1918, bringing his total to 17.[1][3] However, he was no killer; he preferred to see his opponents survive.[4]

A Junkers A 32, December, 1927. Probably not the one Plauth crashed.

He was piloting the Junkers A 32, which he helped design, on a test flight on 2 November 1927, when it failed to pull out of a loop. He died in the resultant crash.[4]

End notes

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  1. ^ a b c Above the Lines: The Aces and Fighter Units of the German Air Service, Naval Air Service and Flanders Marine Corps, 1914–1918, p. 181
  2. ^ Fokker D VII Aces of World War 1, Part 2, pp. 11-12
  3. ^ a b "Karl Plauth". The Aerodrome. Retrieved 4 January 2010..
  4. ^ a b c Fokker D VII Aces of World War 1, Part 2, pp. 11–13
  5. ^ Fokker D.VII Aces of World War I, Part 2, p. 13

References

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  • Fokker D.VII Aces of World War I, Part 2. Greg VanWyngarden, Harry Dempsey. Osprey Publishing, 2004. ISBN 978-1-84176-729-1

Further reading

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