Ehrenfried Günther Freiherr von Hünefeld | |
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Freiherr von Hünefeld |
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Born | 1 May 1892 Königsberg, East Prussia |
Died | 5 February 1929 Berlin, Germany |
(aged 36)
Resting place | Landeseigener Friedhof Berlin-Steglitz |
Nationality | German |
Occupation | Aviator |
Known for | First transatlantic flight from East to West |
Ehrenfried Günther Freiherr[1] von Hünefeld (1 May 1892–5 February 1929) was a German aviation pioneer and initiator of the first transatlantic flight from East to West.
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Hünefeld was born in Königsberg, East Prussia, the son of the owner of Braxeinswalde near Preußisch Eylau, where he grew up. He was blind on his left eye and near-sighted on his right, and his childhood was characterized by several serious diseases. After attending school at Berlin, he studied at Berlin University and came in contact to the first flight pioneers at Berlin's Johannisthal Air Field. At the beginning of World War I he volunteered to the German Air Service, but was rejected due to his poor health. After that he volunteered again as a motorcyclist, and was wounded in September 1914 in Flanders, which led to a shortened left leg. Due to his handicaps he could not return to service and joined the German Diplomatic Service, serving at Sofia, Constantinople, and as an Imperial Vice Consul in the Netherlands. After the end of World War I he stayed in the Netherlands for one and a half years with the German Crown Prince Wilhelm, before returning to Germany, where he worked as spokesman for the Norddeutscher Lloyd shipping company in Bremen.
After Charles Lindbergh crossed the Atlantic from West to East in May 1927, the idea of flying in the opposite direction, which is more difficult because of the prevailing winds, became more and more popular. In 1927 Hünefeld bought two Junkers W 33 aircraft from the Junkers company in Dessau, naming them after the two Norddeutscher Lloyd flagships SS Bremen and SS Europa. His plans were supported by Hugo Junkers and Hermann Köhl, a World War I pilot and head of the Deutsche Luft Hansa Nightflight Branch. After some test flights, and breaking the record for flight duration, Hünefeld and Köhl flew to Baldonnel, Ireland, where they met James C. Fitzmaurice, the Irish Air Corps Commandant of the Baldonnel Airodrome. On 12 April 1928 these three left Baldonnel in the Bremen and crossed the Atlantic Ocean, landing at Greenly Island at the south coast of Labrador, Canada. Even though they missed their initial aim, New York, they were the first to cross the Atlantic from Europe to America.
On 18 September 1928 von Huenefeld and Swedish pilot Karl Gunnar Lindner took off from Berlin in the Europa in an attempt to fly around the world. After arriving in Tokyo on 20 October, the flight was abandoned because of poor weather conditions and Hünefeld's declining health.[2]
Hünefeld died in February 1929 in Berlin from stomach cancer and is buried on the Landeseigener Friedhof Berlin-Steglitz cemetery.[3]