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Military artists tend to paint the two extremes of the soldiers
life; at one end the subject is rendered in his parade best
uniform, pressed and spotlessly clean, and at the other extreme
locked in heroic combat defeating his enemy. Friedrich Ludwig
Scharf took the middle road, painting the troops as they looked
going about their daily duties. Scharf, on one hand an artist, had
also been a career Jager enlisted man, rising to the rank of
Offizierstellvertrater in 1918. He spent most of his wartime
service on the Eastern front where he observed and fought with the
Cavalry regiments, as well as the Reserve and Landsturm troops
assigned to that front. In his paintings the uniform historian and
military modeler will find accurate and sometimes amusing
representations of what Scharf actually saw. The ill-equipped
Landsturmers with outdated uniforms, the Cavalry still mounted
dashing about the Russian front, Flamethrower troops, ski troops
and even a Franciscan monk in military service were captured in his
watercolors and linoleum block hand-colored prints. This book is a
must for the serious student of the uniforms of the German forces
from 1910-1939, portrayed in the unique style of Friedrich Ludwig
Scharf, 1884-1965.
For the first time in eighty-five years, the famous Sanke postcards
of World War I Imperial German Aviators have been reproduced.
Clear, large scale copies of all known and highly collectible Sanke
personality photo postcards produced during World War I are now
available, carefully replicated, and included all under one cover
in this deluxe volume. Over 270 different cards of 132 individual
aviators are included in this ground-breaking edition. Boelcke,
Immelmann, the Richthofen brothers, Udet, and GAring are just a few
of the famed aces and Pour le MA (c)rite flyers photographed by
Postkarten-Vertrieb Willi Sanke. Each postcard is given full page
coverage, accompanied by a brief history of each man, together with
his victories and highest attained award. A bibliography is
included for the reader desiring to further research the lives of
Germany's unusual, heralded, and greatest heroes of the First War.
This book is a must for the student of uniforms as it depicts the
amazing variety worn by the flyers of the LuftstreitkrAfte
1914-1918, and also shows them wearing the multitude of awards and
decorations presented to Germany's airborne heroes. Both private
and museum collections have been combed to provide this book with
the finest possible coverage ever compiled on the work of Willi
Sanke and his talented photographers. This is an excellent
companion volume to Schiffer's recently published Aviation Awards
of Imperial Germany, Volume VII by the late Neal O'Connor.
The 95th Aero Squadron was the first American pursuit squadron to
fly over the front in March 1918 and 1st Lt. Waldo Heinrichs was
one of its original members. The history of the Squadron is told
through the words of those who served, Heinrichs' richly written
diary forms the nucleus of the story supported by contemporary
letters, anecdotes, and combat reports from many of the other
flyers. Entries from the official Squadron history as contained in
the History of the American Air Services A.E.F. (the Gorrell
History) round out the narrative. Over 280 photos, most unpublished
from the personal albums of the participants, show planes, places
and personnel which surrounded this happy band of warriors.
The Schutztruppen, the Expedition Korps, and III. See-Bataillon of
the Imperial German Marines were the forces assigned to protect
Germany's far-flung Colonial possessions in Africa and China.
Uniform students and modelers have found scant published references
to the varied and unique uniforms of these forces. This highly
illustrated book fills that gap. Color illustrations by Germany's
leading 19th and 20th century artists, black and white drawings
taken from rare period books, plus over sixty unpublished quality
photographs from the album of a III. See-Bataillon Marine stationed
at the great German Naval base at Tsingtau, China, cover in detail
the unusual uniforms of the Kaiser's Colonial forces. A must for
the Imperial German bookself.
The names Raoul Lufbery, Doug Campbell, Reed Chambers, Ham
Coolidge, and the greatest American fighter ace of World War I,
Eddie Rickenbacker, are those most closely associated with Uncle
Sam's "Hat in the Ring" squadron, the 94th Aero Squadron, U.S. Air
Service, 1917-1919. This all new book, "The Hat in the Ring Gang,"
contains a rich mixture of official as well as personal
contemporarily written accounts of the 94th Aero Squadron, the most
successful pursuit squadron in the United States Air Service.
Combat reports, letters of the aces, and diary entries of other
pilots are woven together to tell the story. Over 375 photographs,
color profiles on Nieuports and Spads, rosters of pilots, aircraft,
and citations for bravery awards round out this lively history of
war in the air American style, spotlighting the gallant 94th.
This highly illustrated volume covers the uniforms and insignia of
Germany's military in transition from the trenches of the Western
front, to street fighting in Berlin, Munich, and other cities, the
bitter contests with the Poles and Communists in the Baltic, the
Kapp.Luttwitz Putsch, and finally the campaign in the Ruhr. The
Quasi-uniformed look of the Communist revolutionaries, as well as
images of the tanks and armored cars operated by the Kokampf of the
Provisional Reishswehr, are also examined in detail. The
photographs and many color illustrations pained and drawn during
this violent time, make this a unique volume for uniform and
equipment researchers, historians, and modelers. A companion volume
will cover the period 1924-1935 and will include uniforms of the:
Reichswehr, Stahlhelm, SA, SS, Erhardt Brigade and other
para-military units.
During the period 1890-1910 the German Army of Kaiser Wilhelm II
was ablaze in color, particularly the Garde and Cavalry regiments.
In this superb new volume the author brings to the student of
uniforms, as well as the art and military historian, the true glory
of this brief, but most colorful time. Carl Becker was a skillful
and talented artist of the late 19th and early 20th centuries,
whose treatment of German uniforms, the military pomp and ceremony,
as well as the work-a-day activities of the Kaiser's army, are both
realistically and artistically among the very best. The 104 never
before published uniform plates are a treasure trove of color,
action, and rarity which have only been viewed by a select few
before this publication. The additional illustrations from books
and the postcard art reproduced here well display the scope and
depth of Becker's work. Technically correct, and artistically
rendered on the subject of Kaiser Wilhelm II's flamboyant army of
1890-1910, this book will be a welcome addition to the library of
the collector, the student of military costume, modelers and the
appreciator of well executed military art.
This second volume in the Uniforms and Equipment of the Imperial
German Army 1900-1918: A Study in Period Photographs series,
contains over 500 never before published photographic images of the
Imperial German military forces. Contained in this volume are
photographs of: machine gun troops and their equipment; assault
troops with grenades and their specialized equipment; the M1895
blue uniform; minenwerfers and crews; steel combat helmets;
decorative steins, pipes and patriotic items; telegraph and signal
troops; field artillery troops and their personal equipment;
kraftfahrer and vehicles; Model 1915 ersatz pickelhauben; cavalry,
including Dragoons, Bavarian Chavauleger, Jager zu Pferde, Ulans,
Kurassiere, and Husaren; eisenbahn troops; flak anti-Aircraft
artillery; Imperial Air Service; commissary; heavy artillery guns;
horses and pets; and, finally, pickelhauben in detail. The color
section features the M1915 uniform illustrations by Paul Casberg,
which originally appeared in the 1916 volume by Moritz Ruhl Verlag,
Die Deutsche Armee in ihren neuen Feld-und Friedens-Uniformen. Each
photograph and caption has been carefully researched affording the
reader much information not to be found elsewhere, plus the
inclusion of a glossary and an annotated bibliography which make
this volume essential for the serious military historian, collector
and World War I re-enactor.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
This second volume in the Uniforms and Equipment of the Imperial
German Army 1900-1918: A Study in Period Photographs series,
contains over 500 never before published photographic images of the
Imperial German military forces. Contained in this volume are
photographs of: machine gun troops and their equipment; assault
troops with grenades and their specialized equipment; the M1895
blue uniform; minenwerfers and crews; steel combat helmets;
decorative steins, pipes and patriotic items; telegraph and signal
troops; field artillery troops and their personal equipment;
kraftfahrer and vehicles; Model 1915 ersatz pickelhauben; cavalry,
including Dragoons, Bavarian Chavauleger, Jager zu Pferde, Ulans,
Kurassiere, and Husaren; eisenbahn troops; flak anti-Aircraft
artillery; Imperial Air Service; commissary; heavy artillery guns;
horses and pets; and, finally, pickelhauben in detail. The color
section features the M1915 uniform illustrations by Paul Casberg,
which originally appeared in the 1916 volume by Moritz Ruhl Verlag,
Die Deutsche Armee in ihren neuen Feld-und Friedens-Uniformen. Each
photograph and caption has been carefully researched affording the
reader much information not to be found elsewhere, plus the
inclusion of a glossary and an annotated bibliography which make
this volume essential for the serious military historian, collector
and World War I re-enactor.
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