Jump to content

Friedrich Karl von Koenig-Warthausen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by JimBo4212 (talk | contribs) at 20:33, 8 October 2006. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Baron F. M. Koenig Warthausen, born about 1908, was a German Baron and adventurer from the city of Berlin.


Flight around the World

Warthausen left his home city of Berlin around September of 1928. When he left, he only had 17 hours of solo flights under his belt. He took a leisurely pace, completing his adventure in less than two years.

The airplane he used was a open-cockpit 560 pound plane that ran on a Mercedes-Benz 20 horsepower 2 cylinder engine. The Plane had a maximum speed of just 70 mph and only burned a gallon of gas in 50 miles.

From his start in Berlin, Warthausen went through Moscow, Baku, Calcutta, Burma and Bangkok. While on his stop in Bangkok, Thailand he was given a pet Siamese cat by the King of Siam. His new friend was the Mascot for the remainder of his trip.

He is said to have only been nervous one time during his trip, and that was flying 500 miles over un-inhabited jungles of southern Asia. Also in Asia, Warthausen went through Singapore, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Kobe, and then to Yokohoma. From Yokohoma, he put his plane on an ocean liner destined for San Francisco.

Warthausen stopped in many cities of the United States while on his adventure. He stopped in Tulsa, St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Washington and New York.

While in El Paso, Texas, Warthausen was riding in a taxi from the airport to his hotel when the taxi and another car collided, sending Warthausen out through the front windshield of the taxi. Warthausen ended up spending six weeks in a hospital before he recuperated enough to continue on his trip back to Berlin.

Warthausen put his plane aboard another ocean liner from New York to Cherbourg. Then finally from Cherbourg, he flew his plane back to Berlin.

Baron Wartuasen received the Hindenburg Cup in both 1929 and in 1930.


17 hours of solo flying:


Only once was he nervous. That was when he soared over 500 miles of un- inhabited jungle in southern Asia

Baron Koenig-Wartuasen had received the Hindenburg Cup in 1929 and in 1930)

References

  • The Bee Friday, October 11, 1929 [1]
  • Solo Flights Around the World [2]
  • Pilot Web Magazine [3]
  • The Daily Northwestern, Wednesday, August 14, 1929 [4]