Dave Danner Posted July 8, 2023 Posted July 8, 2023 Looks like "M. Schildknecht" Second line might be "Stolp i.P.{ommern", but that's a guess.
lew Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 20 hours ago, Dave Danner said: Looks like "M. Schildknecht" Second line might be "Stolp i.P.{ommern", but that's a guess. Sweet! thank you Dave. One more please.
GreyC Posted July 29, 2023 Posted July 29, 2023 It is always better to show both sides. 1) Stationsleiter Oberleutnant Schiller vor seiner Felsenwohnung Xanthi 1917. 2) ??? Flugboot als Gleitboot und Rettungsboot in Putzig. GreyC
speedytop Posted July 30, 2023 Posted July 30, 2023 Oertz Flugboot als Gleitboot und Rettungsboot in Putzig. (Oertz W 6) Uwe
lew Posted July 30, 2023 Posted July 30, 2023 19 hours ago, GreyC said: It is always better to show both sides. Yepp, here is the compete photo. Thank you CreyC, thank you Uwe for help.
jaba1914 Posted August 2, 2023 Posted August 2, 2023 Definetely not an W6. Likely W4 or W5. Very nice picture. KR Alex
speedytop Posted August 3, 2023 Posted August 3, 2023 "Definetely not an W6. Likely W4 or W5" I have no problem with that. Uwe
GreyC Posted August 10, 2023 Posted August 10, 2023 (edited) Premier Lieutnant Carl Muskewitz, Kommandeur des Pferde-Depots der 8. Armee-Korps Signed by the Comander of the 8th Army-Corps. It´s the award certificate for participants of the war of 1866. GreyC Edited August 11, 2023 by GreyC
The Prussian Posted August 11, 2023 Posted August 11, 2023 (edited) Hello! The man was Pr.Lt. Carl Muskewitz. Ranklist 1866/67: 4. Rheinisches Landwehr-Regiment Nr.30, 1. Bataillon in Trier, Train. The commanding General of VIII. Corps was General d.Inf. Herwarth v. Bittenfeld Probably he did a good job in 1866, because four years later, in the Iron Cross list of 1870/71, he received the Iron Cross 2nd class in the same duty! Here his rank was already Rittmeister: In ranklist 1870/71 he was listed as Rittmeister in 8. Landwehr-Regiment Nr.70, 1.Bataillon in Trier. In 1872 he left the army. His first ranklist-entry was 1860, he used to be Sec.Lt. in 1. Rheinisches Landwehr-Regiment, 1. Bataillon, Aachen, Train. That means he never was an active officer. He served as a one-year-volunteer in 1859, promoted to Sec.Lt. and then he served as an officer of the Reserve, later officer of the Landwehr. Edited August 11, 2023 by The Prussian
The Prussian Posted January 1 Posted January 1 Hello! Please show us the entire page. Another links like numbers and abbreviations could help to find the man more quickly.
The Prussian Posted January 1 Posted January 1 Thank you! That´s hard... Above is "Zum freundlichen Gedenken" (in friendly remembrance), then it could be "Falkenau" (a small town in Saxony), But unfortunately I can´t read the name. Is it military?
arb Posted January 1 Posted January 1 I believe the name in "von Ohnesorge." If the photo has anything to do with artillery, it would most likely be Feodor von Ohnesorge. 1914 a captain and "Lehrer an d. Feldart. Schießschule."
lew Posted January 1 Posted January 1 Thank you so much! Guess our guy is Fl.Ob.Mt. Anesorge. What about the first name?
The Prussian Posted January 1 Posted January 1 (edited) Hello! Bruno is possible. To me it could be Bruno Anesorg. But he is unknown to me. Do we have any more infos indicating him as a soldier? The Flieger-Obermaat could be Max Anesorge, missing in 1918: http://des.genealogy.net/search/show/4459952 Edited January 1 by The Prussian
jaba1914 Posted January 1 Posted January 1 5 minutes ago, The Prussian said: Hello! Bruno is possible. To me it could be Bruno Anesorg. But he is unknown to me. Do we have any more infos indicating him as a soldier? The Flieger-Obermaat could be Max Anesorge, missing in 1918: http://des.genealogy.net/search/show/4459952 Max Anesorge died with UC 57. He is not the navy flyer. @lew Don't make it to complicated. Can we see the avers? KR Alex
lew Posted January 1 Posted January 1 48 minutes ago, jaba1914 said: @lewCan we see the avers? KR Alex Sure, let’s meet Fl.Ob.Mt Anesorge, wearing his old artillery unit outfit with a seefliegerabzeichen and two award ribbons, the 2nd ribbon behind EK2 is unclear to me. 1
jaba1914 Posted January 1 Posted January 1 (edited) Great pic Lew. Congratulation. It seems he was a Army soldier before he came to the Navy aviation. I have him as an Artillerie Matrose but didnt' know that he was an Army man. I miss the award for the EK2 for many persons on my database. I'm sure the most of them got the cross but I want a confirmation before I enter the information. Please send me a copy of the picture for my database without copyright. Regarding the second ribbon it is important to know where he came from. Unfortunately I don't have the place of birth for Anesorge. If he was a Saxon (Falkenau) than Friedrich-August-Medaille is likely. 5 hours ago, lew said: Sure here is the full content. I belive that the location is "Holtenau" not "Falkenau". Anesorge was at the Stamm of I. SFA at Holtenau from Mar. - May 1918. But the picture was done later. KR Alex Edited January 1 by jaba1914 2
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