Hugo Junkers
Hugo Junkers (
3 February 1859 -
3 February 1935) was an innovative German
engineer, as his many
patents in varied areas (gas engines, aeroplanes) show.
The name
Junkers is mainly known in connection with aircraft, which were produced under this name for the
Luftwaffe during
World War II. By then, however, the
Nazi government was running his businesses, and Hugo Junkers himself was gone.
Working as an engineer, Junkers devised, patented, and exploited gas engines, heaters, a calorie meter and other inventions. His aeronautical work began in earnest only at the age of fifty. He had far-seeing ideas of metal aeroplanes and
flying wings, but always realities of war dragged him back.
World War I meant the government forced him to focus on production. Several business ventures failed from wider economic or political problems that scuppered sound engineering plans. He always had more ideas; the G38 delivered to
Lufthansa made no commercial trips for many months as he repeatedly recalled it to the factory for improvements.
During the 1920s Junkers' employees represented a wide spectrum of views. There were
left wing cultural revolutionaries and National Socialists. There were pacifists and
World War I veterans who wereconvinced
Germany would remilitarise following the ideas of such as
Ernst Jünger. Some preferred pure scientificresearch, others focused on
mass production. About every aspect of the business, and of its environment, there werediffering opinions.
For members of all the many groups represented in Junkers, aviation offered hope for national renewal. Their varied views ledto lively internal corporate politics until the
Nazi government interfered. Junkers claimed affinity with
Hitler's
nationalist commitment, but ultimately had little sympathy with the requirements of mobilization for
total war.
Junkers was a
socialist and a
pacifist; perhaps for these reasons, he had several occasions tocross swords with German leaderships. In
1917 the government forced him into partnership with
Anthony Fokker toensure wartime production targets would be met. In
1926, unable to make government loan repayments after a failedventure to build planes for the
USSR, he lost control of most of his businesses. In
1933, the
Nazigovernment, on taking power, immediately demanded ownership of Junkers' patents and control of his remainingcompanies. Under threat of imprisonment he eventually acquiesced, to little avail; a year later he was under house arrest; ayear after that he was dead.
*1878 Studies at technical high schools
Charlottenburg,
Karlsruhe and
Aachen *1888-1893 work with Dessauer Continental-Gasgesellschaft
*1892 Patents
calorie meter *1895 Founds Junkers & Co in
Dessau to build gas engines & heaters
*1897-1912 Professor at the
RWTH Aachen University in
Aachen *1908 Hans Reissner with Junkers' help starts work on all-metal aircraft
*1910 Patents
Nurflügel concept
*1913/14 uses
wind tunnel *1915 J1 metal
monoplane aircraft flies
*1917-1919 Partnership Junkers-
Fokkerwerke AG; mass production of 227 J4 aircraft
*1919 Junkers and Fokker part ways, company renamed Junkers Flugzeugwerke AG
*1919 First civilian all-metal aircraft F13 flies
*1919 Starts work on "Giant" JG1, to seat passengers within thick wings
*1921 Allied Aeronautical Commission of Control orders JG1 destroyed (exceeds post-war size limit)
*1921 Founds "Abteilung Luftverkehr der Junkerswerke" (later part of
Lufthansa)
*1922 Starts military aircraft production near
Moscow, financed by German government loans
*1922 Proposes 100-passenger J-1000 aircraft - never built
*1925 Russian project fails, German government demands repayments
*1926 Legal battles end with Junkers losing several companies
*1928 First East-west transatlantic flight by
Köhl, Hünefeld and Fitzmaurice in Junkers W33
*1931 Junkers G38 34-passenger
airliner delivered - largest in world - only two built
*1932 After great crash, saves Junkers Flugzeugbau and Motorenbau from
bankruptcy, by selling virtually all his other assets
*1933
Nazi Government demands control of Junkers patents and companies
*1934 Junkers placed under
house arrest *1935 Dies under house arrest
*1995
Junkers Thermotechnik, sold to
Robert Bosch in 1932, celebrates 100 years of business
*
www.junkers.de.vuDetlef Siegfried. Der Fliegerblick: Intellektuelle Radikalismus und Flugzeugproduktion bei Junkers 1914 bis 1934. (Historisches Forschungszentrum der Feridrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Reihe Politik- und Gesell- schaftsgeschichte, nr. 58) Bonn:J.H.W. Dietz 2001 ISBN
3801241181 335pp.