'Father' of German Air Force FallsOswald Boelcke's name again spans multiple headlines this month as news of his demise over the Western Front immediately spread. The 25-year-old died ironically not from enemy gunfire but from a mid-air collision with his best friend- fellow ace Erwin Böhme (who survived). Boelcke's fate reminded me of our recent article announcing Fritz Rumey's death, which was also caused by collision (with British ace G.E.B. Lawson) rather than gunfire. This got me wondering how many of the Deutsche Luftstreitkräfte's top flyers were actually killed by enemy guns during the Great War. A quick survey of wikipedia's 'List of World War I flying aces from Germany', suggests that this happened to only three of Germany's top twenty (Richtofen, Voss and Müller)... a remarkable statistic. Oswald Boelcke's influence on the history of aerial combat is epic (despite the last article's headline erroneously dubbing him as merely a 'one-time elevator man'). Many of the tactics enshrined in his 'Dicta Boelcke' endure today.
(respectively from the Lakeland Evening Telegram, the Tonopah Daily Bonanza, the Daily Gate City, Constitution, and the New York Sun; 30 October 1916):


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Check out forum member Kreston's 1/32-scale vignette depicting Boelcke (by Model Cellar):
https://forum.ww1aircraftmodels.com/index.php?topic=7707.msg141784#msg141784