Background
Joachim-Friedrich Huth was born on 31 July 1896 in Neuhof and entered military service in the Imperial German Army shortly before the outbreak of World War I, on 13 July 1914.
Joachim-Friedrich Huth was born on 31 July 1896 in Neuhof and entered military service in the Imperial German Army shortly before the outbreak of World War I, on 13 July 1914.
Huth retired from the military service in 1961 holding the rank of Generalleutnant. He was promoted to Leutnant on 4 January 1915 and served as Zugführer (platoon leader) and company chief in the Infanterie-Regiment Near 58 (58th infantry regiment).
He was injured three times.
He transferred to the Luftstreitkräfte in June 1917 and claimed his first aerial victory on 28 January 1918. He was severely injured on 23 February 1918, losing his right lower legal
Oberleutnant Huth left the military service after the war. The treaty of Versailles had imposed severe restrictions on Germany"s military strength and had denied Germany an air force.
With Adolf Hitler"s rise to power and the remilitarisation of Germany, Huth reentered the military service of the Luftwaffe on 1 March 1934, holding the rank of Hauptmann.
In August, 1940, a military dispatch mentioned him by name for his wing"s success in shooting down 51 enemy aircraft. Generalleutnant Huth commanded various fighter divisions from 1942 until 1944 before taking command of the 1. Jagdkorps (1st Fighter Corps) on 26 January 1945.
He held this position until the end of the war, when he was taken prisoner by the British forces.
He was released in 1946. In 1956 Huth joined the Bundeswehr after the remilitarisation of the Federal Republic of Germany, holding the rank of Generalmajor.
He led the Luftwaffe school at Fürstenfeldbruck and, until his retirement, the Luftwaffengruppe Süd (Air Force Group South) in Karlsruhe. Huth retired on 30 September 1961 with a Großer Zapfenstreich (Grand Tattoo) holding the rank of Generalleutnant.
Huth died half a year later on 27 March 1962 in Koblenz.
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