Jump to content
News Ticker
  • I am now accepting the following payment methods: Card Payments, Apple Pay, Google Pay and PayPal
  • Latest News

    Freiwillige

    Past Contributor
    • Posts

      621
    • Joined

    • Last visited

    • Days Won

      1

    Posts posted by Freiwillige

    1. Please help to identify these two photos of artillerymen (?). The strange thing is the flaming grenade cockade that is pinned instead of the Reichskokarde. As far as Vorläufige Reichswehr was formed only on March 6, 1919 it's not the Provisional Defense Force.

      No.1. This portrait of EKII winner is dated January 26, 1919 on the back. The photo was made in the atelier of the Saxonian town Plauen.  

       

    2. Thank you for the useful remarks, Jens! :beer:

      But as for the identification of the Portrait No.4 as a Bavarian Jäger - all battalions wore a green Waffenrock with red-piped Swedish cuffs except for Saxonians who wore a dark green Waffenrock with Saxonian pattern cuffs. But on this CDV one can clearly see Dunkelblau Waffenrock.

      How could you explain this mismatching? Thanks in advance!

    3. Thank you for the info, Andy! But it seems stripes on your photo and those on mine are different (note their length). Anyway your hint on Forstbeamte is a avluable one, many thanks!

      As for that mysterious "Z" patch do you have any idea where I could get a photographic evidence of such patches worn by Zeughaus / Zeppelin personnel during the last phase of the Great War?

    4. No.4 Here's a real rarity - a good portrait of a member of Luftwaffe General Luftzeugmeister. Photo was made in 1942 somewhere in the occupied territory of the USSR.

      This branch was established in May 1941. The Luftwaffe General Luftzeugmeister consisted of civilian personnel who acted as comptrollers of the weapon factories in Germany as well as in the temporarily occupied territories.

      Please note one of three types of collar patches used by this organization. In general cloth collar tabs were gray-blue rectangular shaped patches with an outer red piping and the letters "GL" embroidered in red thread. There would be one tab per collar. Other varieties have been metallic letters "GL" punched through each collar and even patches with "G" and "L" (the variant we can see on this photo). 

    ×
    ×
    • Create New...

    Important Information

    We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.