$3,650.00
Condition: Mint
Maker: GWL
Base Material: Tombak
In stock
Product Description: This mint Luftwaffe Pilots Badge is an absolutely stunning piece. The condition of this award is phenomenal. It’s an early, high quality badge, made of Tombak. The silver gilded wreath is mint, with full original finish. Brightly burnished highlights contrast handsomely with the more matte look of the gilded finish in the recesses of the design. The eagle is also mint, with all of the original finish. The eagle highlights, including the swastika, are highly burnished and beautiful. The reverse of this mint Luftwaffe Pilots Badge is maker marked behind the eagle with the stylized initials of the firm of Gebrüder Wegerhoff in Lüdenscheid over stamped with RC. The rivets are textbook for this maker, and are tight, with no wobble of the eagle. The hardware is also exactly what one expects to see on this variant, with correct hinge, functional needle attachment pin, and catch. This is an absolutely perfect badge, in exquisite condition. The Mint Luftwaffe Pilots Badge is a scarce Luftwaffe award. To find any Third Reich award in this condition is challenging; to find a scarce badge like this, as well-preserved as this one is, is difficult in the extreme. This mint award simple cannot be upgraded.
Historical Description: The Luftwaffe Pilot Badge was instituted by Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring on August 12, 1935. It was among the earliest badges introduced in the German Wehrmacht and was worn by all qualified pilots in the German Air Force, similar to the “wings” worn by some other armies. The design of the badge featured a large, swooping eagle clutching the German national swastika emblem, surrounded by a wreath of oak and laurel leaves. The badge was normally presented in a blue hinged case. It was worn on the upper left uniform pocket, and a cloth version was also authorized for field use. In the nearly ten years from the introduction of this badge, to the end of WWII, the manufacturers of these awards made many changes in the features of the designs. Some companies, like Juncker, Assmann, and Deumer, had early first pattern badges which looked completely different from later pieces by the same manufacturers. Pilot badges were made of aluminum, nickel silver, plated Tombak, and zinc. The eagle was always a separate piece, riveted to the wreath, with different manufacturers using different rivet designs. As the war progressed, and dies wore out, many makers produced badges with subtle changes. All of these changes, over time, opened up a large spectrum of variation collecting for Luftwaffe badge collectors.
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