Category World War I

More news articles on Hans Buddecke

The Indianapolis News, 12 April 1913:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Indianapolis News, 9 October 1913:

 

 

 

 

\The Indianapolis News, 31 January 1914: In the “Rooms, Houses, Flats Wanted” section:

 

 

Also see The Indianapolis Star, 22 February 1914 “Ring of Fencing Foils Soon May Resound in Homes of Indianapolis Society”. It is a longer article that is discussed in our book.

The Indianapolis News, 6 March 1914:

 

 

 

 

The Indianapolis News, 25 May 1914:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Also see The Indianapolis Star, 22 July 1914, “Amateurs in Weak Machines Principal Toll of Aviation, Declares German Flyng Here.” This is a longer article that is discussed in our book.

The Indianapolis Star, 23 July 1914:

 

 

 

The Indianapolis News, 4 August 1914:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Indianapolis Star, 4 August 1914:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Two paragraphs from that article:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

More AI on Kurt Vonnegut

Jay Karamales, the co-author of The Hunting Falcon, asked Copilot AI the same question. I pick up his narrative here:

“It replied (in its long-winded way, which I excerpt here):

“No—they could not have known each other.

Buddecke died in 1918, and Vonnegut wasn’t born until 1922.”

Fair enough. Then, with hopes soaring, I asked:
 
“So their lives were not contiguous and they didn’t know each other; but were they related?”
 
Sadly, its answer:
 
“No—they were not related.
They belonged to entirely different families, countries, and social contexts, with no known genealogical or historical connection.”
 
Oh well. I guess, like all but about 15 of the Earth’s population, it has not read our book. I will ask Grok the same questions when I get home tonight.”
 
Anyhow, he (Jay Karamales) posted his comments to the previous blog post, but I (Chris Lawrence) choose to report in a separate blog post, seeing how AI is supposed to replace us all and take over the world.
 
Part of its (Copilot) confusion is that it assumed Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Almost certainly Hans Buddecke knew Kurt Vonnegut, Sr. He was a regular visitor to the Albert Lieber household and came to the United States according to his account with the encouragement of tall beauty Edith Lieber. She married Kurt Vonnegut in November 1913 and had their first child (the famous scientist, but not as famous as his younger brother) Bernard Vonnegut on 29 August 1914. Hans Buddecke never met Bernard Vonnegut, having started in trip back to Germany in early August, but he certainly knew of him.
 
That is the problem. AI does not read books. Books are protected in the U.S. by a 70-year copyright law. So anything that has been written about in the last 70 years is not available to AI unless it has been reposted in some form on the internet. Most authors have other things to do with their time (other than service AI).
 
AI also does not go to the archives either. Apparently does not search the on-line newspaper files, which would show that Lieber and Buddecke are related and working together in 1914. In particular is the article in The Indianapolis News, Friday 31 July 1914 “Birdman Flies over Western Part of City”, which identified “Johann Buddecke” and “…his uncle, Albert Lieber.”
 
 

The Hunting Falcon and Kurt Vonnegut and AI

One of our discoveries in researching for the book The Hunting Falcon was that Hans Buddecke’s uncle-by-marriage that he was working with in Indianapolis in 1913/1914 was Indianapolis businessman and brewer Albert Lieber. Albert Lieber was the grandfather of Kurt Vonnegut Jr. (i.e. Slaughterhouse Five, Cat’s Cradle, etc.).

Now in a discussion with my co-author Jay Karamales over the 6.65 pounds in royalties we have made from the book from July 2025 – December 2025, I decided to check if AI had picked up on our findings. After all, while the financial reimbursement for writing is not overwhelming, the emotional rewards more than compensate, especially as our work on the Hunting Falcon was new and original research. We could make more money working at McDonalds (“would you like fries with that”) than we do from writing 

So I asked Yahoo AI: “Did Hans Buddecke know Kurt Vonnegut?” It’s  response:

“Hans Buddecke and Kurt Vonnegut are connected through family. Buddecke was the grandfather of Kurt Vonnegut Jr. This familial link suggests that while they did not know each other personally (as Buddecke died in 1918 and Vonnegut was born in 1922), their lives are intertwined through family history.”

No…. he was not Kurt Vonnegut’s grandfather. Do not know how AI determined that. They, of course, reference a blog post from this site: WWI Air – The Dupuy Institute

Now, suspect they had some problem with my wording, which was: 

“Hans-Joachim Buddecke’s story starts before the war in Indianapolis, working for his American uncle (later the grandfather of author Kurt Vonnegut Jr.)….”

Anyhow, one must cross-check everything you get from AI. I have not asked this question to other AI (probably should, but Yahoo AI is the one I used for data quieries).

As far as I know, we are the only source that connects German ace Hans Buddecke with Kurt Vonnegut. 

On the other hand, I did have fun asking Yahoo AI who was the leader in historical analysis. But it also makes a factual error in that response.

9 Books

Finally here is a picture of all nine of my published books. It includes two copies of The Battle for Kyiv, as one is the hardback and one is the paperback version. The paperback version does have some revisions and an expanded photo section.

We are looking to add two more books to that collection in the next six months. An additional book on the Russo-Ukrainian War should be out in the next 2 to 3 months, and The Battle of Tolstoye Woods should be out hopefully this spring. The editing process on all my books is slow, primarily because the large amount of charts, tables and tabular data in them that are a pain to edit and proof.

Four Books

Just got my author copies for a few of my books. Decided to post them all up.



1. Hunting Falcon – available U.S. April 3, 2025

2. Aces at Kursk – available U.S. September 30, 2024

3. Battle for Kyiv (paperback) – Hardback available U.S. January 18, 2024 – paperback available UK 4 December 2025. Will be available U.S. February 28, 2026.

4. Siege of Mariupol – Available UK 27 November 2025. Available U.S. January 30, 2026.

Can order directly from the publisher: Pen and Sword Books: The Siege of Mariupol – Hardback

Can order from UK Amazon.com: The Siege of Mariupol: The Azovstal Steel Plant and Ukraine’s Battle for Survival : Christopher A Lawrence, Stefan Korshak: Amazon.co.uk: Books


The piano in the background is an August Foerster. Made in Loebau, Germany since 1859. This one is from East Germany (1949-1990). Country dissolved, but the piano is just fine.

A Friendly Fire Discussion

I have decided to turn one of my email discussions I was having with several people into a blog post. As they got into a discussion of friendly fire (I gather based upon one addressee’s personal experience), I ended up making the following statement:

Friendly fire (FF):

1. The original figure that came out of WWII was 2% of the casualties were due to friendly fire (Beebe and Debakey?).

2. This was probably low.

3. Since WWII there has been no definitive studies on FF casualties that I am aware of.

4. It was much higher than 2% in the 1991 Gulf War.

5. In the 1990s Chuck Hawkins (Vietnam company commander) and Gene Visco (DUSA OR) did some preliminary work looking at FF casualties. They were attempting to get a contract to do an actual proper survey of the subject. That did not happen.

6. By default, the preliminary work by Hawkins and Visco (both deceased) is the only significant work on FF casualties that has been done since WWII. I may have a copy somewhere in my files. Not sure anything has been published or is on the internet. I think they presented their findings at ISMOR.

Dermot, you are welcome to discuss what the UK has done.


Dermot Rooney, the author of Slog or Swan (see: Slog or Swan – The Dupuy Institute) came back with the following response:

Here’s the Slog or Swan quote:

Meanwhile, fragile radio communications separated infantry and artillery, contributing to a high rate of fratricide. A Canadian study conducted during Veritable put the number of Allied casualties to friendly artillery at between seven and 21 percent of the total. The actions examined for the current assessment support splitting the difference at around 15 percent.11 This figure is alarmingly close to the 19 percent attributed to German small arms, and considerably greater than the six percent benchmark for friendly fire casualties in a First World War barrage. Artillery fratricide was also a major factor in five of the failed attacks in the current assessment and, considering the tendency to underreport such events, was likely a factor in as many more. The high chance of fratricide very probably undermined the essential trust between infantryman and gunner, the coordination of fire and assault, and therefore the value of suppression.12

 

[11] This is another of those tantalising glimpses mentioned earlier. The figures are the extremes presented in Brigadier E. C. Plow’s study of munition fragments removed from casualties and could only be found in Appendix L of Copp’s Cinderella Army. Copp and Buckley opt for ‘as high as 19 percent’. Copp, Cinderella Army, pp.291, 338–340; Buckley, Monty’s Men, p.272.

[12] Contrary to the mines and mud narrative, the Canadian wounds study also found 4 percent of casualties were caused by the combination of mines and grenades, way behind German artillery, German small arms, and Allied artillery. J. B. Coates and J. C. Beyer (eds), Wound Ballistics in World War II: Supplemented by experiences in the Korean War (Washington: Office of the Surgeon General, 1962) has mines accounting for 0 to 10 percent of total casualties depending on the sampling method. The battle descriptions for this assessment suggest the effect of mines on advance rates was marginal and appears no greater than in other operations.


If anyone has a copy of any presentations made or write-ups done by Charles Hawkins or Gene Visco on fratricide, please forward them to me (LawrenceTDI@aol.com).

I do note that the links to Cornwallis Group, founded in 1996 by Gene Visco, is no longer connected to the ISMOR site. It does seem like we are losing knowledge. The earliest ISMOR link I can find is ISMOR 39 (with the Eugene Visco prize): ISMOR – ISMOR 39 | ORS. There were links to earlier ISMOR conferences and papers, and links in ISMOR to the Cornwallis Group, but I cannot find these. 

The Hunting Falcon is now on sale in the U.S.

According to Amazon.com (U.S.), The Hunting Falcon: The story of WWI German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke has been available since 3 April. It was first offered for sale in the UK on 6 March 2025.

The list price is $39.95 and it is available from Amazon.com right now for $37.26. See: Amazon.com: The Hunting Falcon: The Story of WW1 German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke: 9781399085014: Lawrence, Christopher A, Karamales, Jay: Books

It is available in the UK via Amazon.com (UK) for £25.00 at: The Hunting Falcon: The Story of WW1 German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke: Amazon.co.uk: Lawrence, Christopher A, Karamales, Jay: 9781399085014: Books and directly from the publisher discounted to £25.00 at Pen and Sword Books: The Hunting Falcon – Hardback.

Hans-Joachim Buddecke’s story starts before the war in Indianapolis, working for his American uncle (later the grandfather of author Kurt Vonnegut Jr.). He became the third German ace to be awarded the Blue Max (after Immelmann and Boelcke) after clearing the skies over Gallipoli. See: Award Dates for the Blue Max (1916) – The Dupuy Institute. He was the pilot who shot down Lawrence of Arabia’s younger brother (no relationship to me).

The Hunting Falcon is available in the UK

Hunting Falcon, as of today, is now available on Amazon.com UK. The site has the release date of 6 March 2025. It has a list price of £25 and they are selling it right now at a 25% discount for £18.71:  The Hunting Falcon: The Story of WW1 German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke: Amazon.co.uk: Lawrence, Christopher A, Karamales, Jay: 9781399085014: Books

It is available for £17.50 directly from Pen & Sword: Pen and Sword Books: The Hunting Falcon – Hardback

Amazon.com U.S. is listing its available date of April 3, 2025. It is available for pre-order at $42.95: Amazon.com: The Hunting Falcon: The Story of WW1 German Ace Hans-Joachim Buddecke: 9781399085014: Lawrence, Christopher A, Karamales, Jay: Books

 

Proposed book cover for The Hunting Falcon

A commentator on our last post on The Hunting Falcon stated that “Chris, you have very good book cover designers.” See: The Hunting Falcon to be released in the UK on Friday, 14 February – The Dupuy Institute

Now, our original cover recommendation to Pen & Sword was this:

This was kind of my recommendation, as I wanted to emphasis Hans Buddecke’s tie-in with Gallipoli. I figured that had marketing value. Jay Karamales actually did all the work.

Pen & Sword came back with this:

Now, I suspect part of the reason for this cover is that it matched up with the covers of their other World War I air books, for which they have quite a collection. See: Pen and Sword Books: WWI. Our book is on page 4, still listed as pre-order.

My understanding is that Pen & Sword does have the book in stock. Right now Amazon.com (UK) is saying it is “currently unavailable” while the Amazon.com (U.S.) is giving their U.S. release date as 31 March 2025.  I gather it takes a few days for the books to be shipped through the system.

 

The Hunting Falcon to be released in the UK on Friday, 14 February

The Hunting Falcon is being released in the UK the Friday, 14 February.

According to Amazon.com it will be released in the U.S. March 31, 2025.


The Hunting Falcon covers the story of the third German ace to be awarded the Blue Max, after Immelmann and Boelcke. Hans-Joachim Buddecke was the fighter pilot and squadron leader who established German air dominance over Gallipoli in late 1915 – early 1916. A book of his story was published in German in 1918 but was never translated until recently. We (meaning Jay Karamales) translated it, and then we researched the background behind some of his stories. So the book alternates between several translated chapters from his book then a chapter explaining in more depth the people and events behind his story. For example, it includes a detailed description of the air operations around Gallipoli.

Hans-Joachim Buddecke story starts in Indianapolis before the Great War. He talks about his American cousin and uncle who had recently encouraged him to move from Germany to the United States. We have been able to research and identify that uncle as Albert Lieber, a very successful brewer and businessman in Indianapolis, who he went into the airplane business with. His cousin was Edith Lieber Vonnegut, the tall and attractive socialite mother of the famous atmospheric scientist Dr. Bernand Vonnegut (1914-1997) and the even more famous writer Kurt Vonnegut Jr. (1922-2007).

Leaving his airplane at the infield of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Hans Buddecke snuck past the British blockade into Germany and became third ace in the German air force. This book details for the first time his complete story, including the unsavory aspects of it.