Background
Friedrich Altemeier was born in Niederbecksen on 4 June 1886.
Friedrich Altemeier was born in Niederbecksen on 4 June 1886.
Due to his distinguished faithful military service and piloting skills, he became one of the test pilots for Germany"s last and best fighter airplane of the war, the Fokker Doctorate.VIII. He went to military school from 1906 until 1908. He worked for Krupp before World War I began. He was called up for military duty on 2 August 1914.
Altemeier originally served in the infantry in a machine gun company.
He was wounded in action on 15 January 1915. On 11 August 1915, he transferred to aerial service.
After training at Posen, he served first with FA 67, then with Royal Prussian Jasta 14. He then transferred to Royal Saxon Jasta 24 on the Western Front on 1 December 1916.
Altermeier was promoted to Vizfeldwebel on 13 February 1917.
He opened his score with his new squadron on 3 March 1917. He used twin-gunned Albatros Doctorate.III fighters, often emblazoned with the triple rings of the Krupp Works, to down a Nieuport 17. Four months later, he began to score again, downing a Royal Naval Air Service Sopwith Triplane on 7 July and a Spad VII five days later.
Then, on 17 August, he shot a double and became an ace.
He triumphed four more times in September, with his last in this string coming on the 26th. He was then wounded, and did not score again that year.
On 19 February 1918, he shot down a Royal Air Force Southeast.5a to again begin his winning ways. This was his tenth victory.
He then went on hiatus until August, when he scored twice.
He had two confirmed victories and one unconfirmed in both September and October. His final victory, on 10 November, the day before the armistice, was his 21st and the jasta"s 91st and final one. He and his Staffelfuehrer, Heinrich Kroll, had accounted for half the wins scored by their squadron.
He was awarded the enlisted man"s equivalent to the Blue Max, the Military Merit Cross, on 11 April 1918.
He also received the Iron Cross. Altemeier was one of the few pilots entrusted with the most modern German fighter of World War I, the Fokker East.V (sometimes called the Fokker DVIII).
Friedrich Altemeier survived World War I. He died on 18 September 1968.