Item: ONAC25SD1260

Original German WWII Luftwaffe BoUK2 Eight-Day Clock for Heinkel HE 111 by Kienzle Mounted in Named G.I. Souvenir Stand - Lt. L.D. Curley - Non-Functional

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Regular price $595.00

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  • Original Items: Only One Available. This is an actual BoUK2 Eight-Day Borduhr (Clock) from a German WWII Luftwaffe Heinkel HE-111! It is housed in a steel casing, which opens up so that the clock spring on the back can be wound, and the time adjusted. The entire clock is housed within a wooden stand put together by the veteran who brought it back, Lt. L.D. Curley. Because of this, we cannot check the back of the clock to retrieve the work and Luftwaffe number. The face is well marked with the maker KIENZLE. The clock is not currently functional, but it could possibly be fixed.


    The wooden case measures 5 x 3 ⅝ x 1 ¾” and is very well-made, with the insignia of the 3rd Army and the U.S. Artillery painted to the front. The bottom of the case is painted:


    LT. L.D. CURLEY


    We could not identify Lieutenant Curley, but it should be doable.


    A great piece of German Luftwaffe material, ready to add to your collection!


    More on the HE 111:


    The Heinkel He 111 was designed by Siegfried and Walter Günter for dual roles, as a high-speed transport and as a bomber for the still-secret Luftwaffe. In one form or another, the He 111’s service career extended more than thirty years, an outstanding tribute to the design, evolved by the Günter brothers.


    Design work began early in 1934, the machine owing much to the single-engined Heinkel He 70 which had captured several international records. The Heinkel He 111 was considerably larger than the He 70, but retained much of that aircraft’s beauty of line. Of the original four prototypes, the first was flown on 24 February 1935, and the second and fourth were completed ostensibly as civilian transports. Bomber production was heralded in the summer of 1935 by the He 111V4 and a pre-series batch of He 111A-0s, but their BMW engines provided insufficient power, and the first major type was the He 111B, with DB 600-series engines.


    Anxious to test the aircraft under operational conditions, the Luftwaffe sent a batch of thirty Heinkel He 111B-1s to Kampfgruppe 88 in Spain in February 1937. Forming the bomber component of the Condor Legion, K/88 undertook its first operational sortie on 9 March when it bombed the Republican airfields at Alcala and Madrid-Barajas.


    On 10 May, 1940, German forces invaded France and the Low Countries. Operations against the Netherlands began with an attack by the He 111s from KG 4 on Amsterdam and Rotterdam Airports and Ypenburg airfield. Following the Dutch refusal to surrender Rotterdam on 14 May, one hundred Heinkel He 111Ps from Kg 54, under Oberst Lackner, took-off from Delmenhost, Hoya-Wester and Quakenbrück to bomb the city. German sources have subsequently stated that an attempt was made to recall the aircraft, but 97 tons of bombs were in fact dropped on Rotterdam.


    Before the beginning of the Battle of Britain the Heinkel He 111H had almost entirely replaced the He 111P series (although most staff crews still flew the older aircraft, and it was in a He 111P that Oberst Alois Stoeckl, commanding KG 55, was shot down and killed near Middle Wallop on 14 August 1940). From the outset the He 111H, with its 435 km/h (270 mph) top speed, proved a difficult aircraft to shoot down (compared with the Dornier Do 17), and showed itself capable of weathering heavy battle damage.


    By the time the Stalingrad campaign ended on 2 February, 1943, the units of Lufttransportführer 1 (joined on 1 January by III./KG 55) had lost no less than one hundred and sixty-five Heinkel He 111s, more than half the aircraft committed. The Kampfgeschwader were never to recover from this blow.


    Total Heinkel He 111 production was about 7,000.


  • This product is available for international shipping. Shipping not available to: Australia, France, or Germany
  • Not eligible for payment with Paypal or Amazon

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