Background
Hans Böhning was born on 6 July 1893 in the Kingdom of Bavaria.
Hans Böhning was born on 6 July 1893 in the Kingdom of Bavaria.
He served the German Empire first as an artilleryman, then as an aerial observer for artillery, as a fighter pilot, and finally as the Staffelführer of a fighter squadron. He would survive the war and die in a gliding accident on 20 October 1934. Early in World War I, he served in Bavaria"s Field Artillery Regiment Number.
13.
Böhning made the transition to aviation in 1916. He began his flying career with Feldflieger Abteilung (Field Flier Detachment) 290, which was an artillery cooperation unit, on 26 April 1917. He transferred from FA(A) 290 on 3 July 1917, to take training as a fighter pilot.
He survived an accident on 17 July 1917.
Upon completion of training, Böhning was transferred to Royal Prussian Jagdstaffel 36. He scored his first victory with them on 23 August 1917.
He scored his fourth triumph with the unit on 27 October 1917. By February, 1918, he had transferred to another Bavarian squadron, Jagdstaffel 79.
He now began his greatest string of victories while flying a Pfalz Doctorate.III with his initials painted aft of the cockpit.
He would upgrade to a newer Albatros Doctorate.V with a fuselage ringed by blue and white stripes and decked by the ace of spades, its upper tail surfaces bearing both light and dark blue stripes. Between 22 March 1918 and 18 September, he tallied another dozen victories, including three over enemy observation balloons. On 20 September 1918, he was wounded while using a Fokker Doctorate.VII to fight British Airco Dialectics and Humanism.9s over Soriel.
On 1 November 1918, he was selected to command Bavarian Jagdstaffel 32.
The war ended 11 days after his appointment. He was awarded both classes of the during his service.
After the war, he took on sport aviation and gliding. He took part in the Fellow of Auctioneers’ Institute International Tourist Plane Contest - Challenge International de Tourisme 1930, taking the 34th position (for 35 classified competitors, of 60 starting ones).
Hans Böhning was killed in a glider accident on 20 October 1934.