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WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE
WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE

WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE

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WW2 GERMAN NAZI UNIQUE HELMUT WICK LUFTWAFFE PILOT CAPTAIN TROPHEE PLAQUE PLATE COMMEMORATIVE

Helmut Paul Emil Wick (5 August 1915 – 28 November 1940) was a German flying ace of World War II. He was a wing commander in the Luftwaffe (air force) of Nazi Germany, and the fourth recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves, the nation's highest military decoration at the time.

Born in Mannheim, Wick joined the Luftwaffe in 1936 and was trained as a fighter pilot. He was assigned to Jagdgeschwader 2 "Richthofen" (JG 2—2nd Fighter Wing), and saw combat in the Battles of France and Britain. In October 1940, he was given the position of wing commander of JG 2—the youngest in the Luftwaffe to hold this position. Wick was shot down in the vicinity of the Isle of Wight on 28 November 1940, most likely by the British ace John Dundas, who was himself shot down by Wick's wingman. Wick was posted as missing in action, presumed dead. By then he had been credited with the destruction of 56 enemy aircraft in aerial combat, making him the leading German ace at the time. Flying the Messerschmitt Bf 109, he claimed all of his victories against the Western Allies.

On 31 August 1939 Wick was given orders to transfer to "Jagdgeschwader Richthofen Nr. I". At the time there was no such unit; the intention was to send him to Jagdgeschwader 1 (JG 1−1st Fighter Wing), based in Döberitz, near Berlin. During World War I the "Richthofen Geschwader" name had been attached to the World War I era Jagdgeschwader 1. The "Richthofen" name had been incorrectly put on Wick's order. Wick noticed the mistake, realizing that he could now choose between JG 1 or the famous Jagdgeschwader 2 (JG 2—2nd Fighter Wing) which currently bore the "Richthofen" name. He chose the Richthofen Geschwader, commanded by Oberst (Colonel) Gerd von Massow, the unit was equipped with the Bf 109 E-3 and used the tactical code Yellow 3.

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