SIMON BRUNNHUBER
 
 
Simon Brunnhuber
 
 
Simon Brunnhuber
Collection of Rene Hackstetter, 1-5-08
 
 
GERMAN AVIATOR'S FLIGHT
Daily Journal and Tribune,
Knoxville, Tennessee: December 8, 1910,
Transcribed by Bob Davis - 11-19-03
"Johannisthal, Germany, December 7. - Aviator Brunnhuber circled the field here twice today carrying four passengers with him in a Farnum bi-plane."
Bob Davis
 
 
Simon Brunnhuber
 
 
Simon Brunnhuber
Carries four passengers for world record, 1910
Collection of Rene Hackstetter, 1-5-08
 

 
 
Simon Brunnhuber
 
 
Brunnhuber and the first student officers
from Peter Supf, " Das Buch der Deutschen Fluggesichte" page 310.
Courtesy of Rene Hackstetter, 1-5-08
 

 
 
Simon Brunnhuber
 
 
Lts. Victor Carganico (middle), W. Coerper, Simon Brunnhuber
from Peter Supf, " Das Buch der Deutschen Fluggesichte" page 310.
Courtesy of Rene Hackstetter, 1-5-08
 

 
 
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Courtesy of Greg Powers, 1-6-08
     "In the autumn 1910 the military flying school in Doeberitz was created. The unit consisted of flight instructor of the Albatros works, Simon Brunnhuber, four flying students, one NCO and 6 men."
from
www.guns-n-more.de/36101/89774.html?*session*id*key*=*session*id*val*
 

 
 
ONLINE RESOURCES
     If you search for "Simon Brunnhuber", using the Google search engine, (1-6-08), you will find about 10 of 14 links, most of them in German. However, machine-translations are available on the page. Two of them are in English and although brief, are worth visiting. The one cited immediately below enabled me to understand the two photographs seen above.
 
 
Walther-Huth-Straße
     From the machine-translation of this site, I was able to extract the following paragraph:

" Simon began in 1910 Brunnhuber in the Provisional Army Aviation School of Management under the cover name of Dr. Brueck troops on the training ground Döberitz Spandau as a commissioner at the Albatros works on a bought in France Farman monoplane with the training of the first German military flight instructor."

     The translation is still a bit cryptic for me, but at least I can understand that Brunnhuber had been an instructor in a school. You can access the webpage in the original German by clicking on the title above. If you can offer a more reliable translation of the text, I would very much like to hear from you.
 

 
 
 
 
I have no information as to the dates of his birth or death.
 

 
 
Editor's Note:
If you have any more information on this pioneer aviator
please contact me.
E-mail to Ralph Cooper
 

 
 
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