On September 1, 1943 Nowotny’s best scoring day on Following D-Day on June 6, 1944 the allies were the Eastern Front, he downed 10 Soviet planes, five in successfully entrenched in Europe and owned the air the space of 12 minutes and another five in nine minutes space. Nowotny, now a , and still grounded was at noon. During the month of September he and his needed at the front. In September 1944 he transferred ‘lucky pants’ scored 45 aerial triumphs. to France and was put in charge of the first Me 262 jet squadron, . The unit not only had to In November 1943 Nowotny and his faithful wing man contend with the enemy, but also with working through Lieutenant Karl “Quax” Schnorrer were mixing it up the “teething” phase of the Me 262 and developing the with six Soviet planes. During the encounter Quax was tactics appropriate for a jet unit. His unit had 30 Me forced to make a low level escape from an adversary 262s, however only 26 were operational. when Nowotny notified him his plane was on fire. Quax couldn’t gain altitude and couldn’t risk crash landing in The turbine Me 262 ushered in an entirely new era in air the forest below so was forced to bail out. Bailing out warfare. When the Schwalbe (Swallow) first appeared at 70 meters didn’t sufficiently slow his descent and he in April 1944 the Allies were in control of the air war was seriously injured and hospitalized for six months. in Europe. The 262 threatened to change all that by attacking in a wide sweeping curve, so swift it could On October 19, 1943 Nowotny was summoned to climb through a formation of bombers faster than a the Fuhrer’s headquarters in Rastenburg to receive Mustang could fly at level flight. The Me 262 wasa the Diamonds for his 250th air victory. The award of highly versatile aircraft. It was a fighter, a reconnaissance Diamonds (Eichenlaub mit Scwertern und Brillanten plane, a bomber, a trainer, and night fighter heavily zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes) (Figure 2) made armed with four 30mm cannons and R4M rockets. him the eighth of 27 men to be so honored and he was declared a national hero. On November 8, 1944 General Adolph Galland ( General of Fighters) and General Keller made an inspection visit of Nowotny’s unit as it scrambled to counter a flight of enemy bombers. Radio reports signaled that enemy planes were being shot down as well as Me 262s. Nowotny, under direct orders from General Galland not to fly, told Quax, his wing man, who had returned to duty to man his plane and follow him aloft.

Once aloft Nowotny shot down a Liberator making it his 258th air victory. Was Nowotny feeling confident? He was not wearing his Abschußhose. This was the only mission he hadn’t worn them since shooting down Soviet planes over the Bay of Riga in 1941. Ground personnel could hear air combat above the clouds. The last words of Nowotny that were heard over the radio were “I’m burning! My god, my god! I’m burning!” He was in trouble, his plane was on fire, and he was losing control. The exact circumstances of Nowotny’s death Figure 2: Knight’s with Oakleaves remain uncertain. Was it engine failure? Was his plane Swords and Diamonds. hit during his approach to the bomber formation? Some claim he was shot down by 1st Lieutenant Ed “Buddy” In order to give the German people faith in the war he Haydon and Captain Ernest “Feeb” Fiebelkorn, was turned into a propaganda machine and for the next USAAF, both sharing a victory at 12:45 over Achmer year he traveled the country visiting factories, Luftwaffe on November 8, 1944. units, assisted in the presentation of awards, gave speeches, and attended cultural events. On January 18, General Galland and others witnessed Nowotny’s jet 1944 the city of presented him with the city’s “White 8” stream down out of the clouds, roll slightly, Ehrenring, a gold signet ring with Vienna’s coat of arms. and then crash into the ground. Other witnesses claimed they saw a falling plane suddenly explode into a burning

Vol. 64, No. 4 (July-August 2013) 41 mass as it fell to earth ending with a dull impact. “Quax” Schnorrer, Nowotny’s friend and faithful wing- Statements of witnesses were inconsistent. It will man survived the war with 46 air victories. Quax had remain an unanswered question. commandeered Nowotny’s scarred, scorched Knight’s Cross minus the Oak Leaf, Swords and Diamonds which “Quax” Schnorrer and his comrades drove frantically were melted in the searing heat of jet fuel fire from to the crash site. After sifting through the wreckage, Nowotny’s plane and his previous award of the Knight’s the only salvageable things found were his left hand Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords from his billets and pieces of his Iron Cross deformed and burnt. Gray (Figure 5), as well as his uniforms. In all probability, out ash filled the swastika and date of the cross (Figures 3 of desperation, he sold Nowotny’s medals and uniforms and 4). The victor of 258 confirmed air victories plus 50 to a tailor in Vienna. Later Nowotny’s belongings were unconfirmed found his death at Achmer on November purchased from that tailor by a Canadian collector and 8, 1944. Major Walter Nowotny a national hero was no owner of the Canadian Military Studies Museum outside more. of Ontario, Canada. Major Nowotny’s cross although scarred, deformed and missing the Oak Leaf, Swords and Diamonds was one of only 27 issued during World War II remains a treasured collectable even though in less than ideal condition.

Figure 3: Nowotny’s deformed and burnt Knight’s Cross.

Figure 4: A side view of the cross in Figure 3. Figure 5: Nowotny’s Knight’s Cross with Oakleaves and Swords. A few days after Nowotny’s death his unit was dissolved and moved to Lechfeld. After another five weeks of References: missions only four Me 262s remained from the original 30 planes. The war ended six months later on May Boyne, Walter J. Messerschmidt Me 262: Arrow to the Future. 8, 1945. Post-war Germany was in ruins. Millions of Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1980. soldiers were returning home, millions were unemployed Held, Werner. German Fighter Ace Walter Nowotny: An Illustrated and homeless with no money. Defeated German soldiers Biography. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer Publishing, 2006. http://stephenesherman.com/discussions/us_german_aces.html were selling their service awards to Allied occupation WW2museums.com/article/5341/Grave-Pilot-Walter-Nowotny troops as a matter of survival in dismal post-war conditions.

42 JOMSA SECRETARY’S REPORT

April-May 2013

Those listed as new members have applied for 2013 membership in the Orders and Medals Society of America. If no proper written objection to such membership is received from any member in good standing within sixty (60) days of publication, the applicant shall be admitted to membership (Article III, Section 3 of the OMSA Constitution, and Article III, Section 2 of the OMSA By-Laws). The collecting interests of each new member as provided on the membership application follow each new member’s address.

NEW MEMBERS

#8257 Earl Willoughby, (Internet), 628 Cherry St., Dyersburg, TN 38024 #8258 Frank A. Pearsall, (Internet), 102 College Station Dr., PMB 104, Brevard, NC 28712-3195 #8259 John Adams-Graft, (Gift), 901 Fourth St., Ste. 50, Hudson, WI 54016 #8260 Christopher Natwick, (Internet), 11048 Plum Tree Lane, Spring Valley, CA 91977 #8261 Goran Encminger, (Internet), Zeleni venac 7g, 21480 Srbobran, Serbia #8262 Jim Scott, (Internet), 713 S. Dickerson Rd., Goodlettsville, TN 37072 #8263 Sam Wilson, (Internet), 210 S. 10th Street, Manhattan, KS 665026 #8264 Lowell Matsuoka, (Internet), P.O. Box 1059, Kihei, HI 96753 #8265 Michael Rortvedt, (Internet), 6570 Winding Way, De Forest, WI 53532 #8266 Gary E. Schone, (Internet), 802 W. 5th St., Apt 1, Redfield, SD 57469

ADDRESS CHANGES & CORRECTIONS

DeGroote, Marvin, #4372, P.O. Box 1245, Arlington, TX 76004-1245 Lyman, Lynden, LM#67, P.O. Box 1455, Concord, MA 01742 Orders and Medals Society of Denmark, X4878, Gronnevang 17, 2970 Horsholm, Denmark Regnerus, Scott A. #6572, 530 N Street SW., Apt 306, Washington, DC 20024-4556 Rogers, R. C. Jr., #2518, P.O. Box 354, Clarkson, GA 30021-0354 Russell, Douglas S. #4167, 3178 Lower West Branch Rd., Iowa City, IA 52445-4105 Weaver, Barry, DM#19, 20 Bateau Rd., Hilton Head, SC 29928

End of Report Clyde L. Tinklepaugh, Jr. Secretary

PURCHASE OMSA BADGES AND MEDALS (FULL-SIZED OR MINIATURES)

CONTACT: CLYDE L. TINKLEPAUGH, JR., OMSA SECRETARY PO BOX 540 CLAYMONT, DE 19703-0540

Vol. 64, No. 4 (July-August 2013) 43