OK:
Hohenzollern/Mecklenburg group =
von ONDARZA, originally commissioned Sekondeleutnant 18.8.1894 Yy in FeldArtRgt 24, in CHINA with Feldhaubitz Munition-Kolonne. In Southwest Africa as Oberleutnant 17.5.04 J in 1905 "field unit not reported" per Rangliste, returned with Crown Order 4X and Friedrich Franz Cross 2nd (no date colonial). Hauptmann 22.3.10 F4f, having picked up the Griffin Order with Crown and the XXV Years Service Cross early for all that overseas double credit time. Deutscher Ordens-Almanach confirms 1897 Centenary Medal. In 1914 he was an instructor at the Military Technical Academy, "uniform of Field Artillery Regiment 60."
Hohenzollern House Order 3X gazetted 22 March 1917 as Major (18.8.16 H). Discharged as char. Oberstleutnant aD-- Honor Rank List shows him as Commander of 3rd Guard Field Artillery Regiment, so hopefully Glenn can provide his first name, command dates, and birth and death dates. (We do all make a nice team, eh?)
He was presumably the older brother of Herbert von Ondarza, also of Feld Art Rgt 60, born 1878, who was recalled for Wehrmacht service after retiring from the Reichsheer, eventually reaching Generalleutnant-- and who got the German Cross in Gold in 1941 at the ripe old age of 63 as a Generalmajor! Now if that 1939 Spange on the ribbon bar of Older Brother Notyetnamed is correct, he TOO was an Elderly Warrior in WW2!!!!
Old style ribbon bar =
Unknown first name, last name RICHARD, of Inf Rgt 83:
Hauptmann 19.9.01 Aa later mysteriously given retroactive seniority of 19.9.98, Major 20.12.10.
Deutscher Ordensalmanach confirms 1897 of course, but like von Ondarza, provides no name or birth data.
Awards are (and I was expecting a Crown 4X first)--
Red Eagle 4X, Red Eagle 4 with Crown, Waldeck Merit 4, XXV, Southwest Africa, 1897, Bavarian Military Merit 4x (this and the Red Eagle 4X for SWA) Saxe-Ernestine House Order-Knight 1st, Brunswick House Order-Knight 2nd.
He was in Inf Rgt 147 in 1902, but seems to have settled permanently in Waldeck's Inf Rgt 83 after that, except for service in 2. Feldregiment in SWA. He was killed in action near Boncelles 6 August 1914 as commander of II./Inf Rgt 83-- possibly while wearing this massive ribbon bar. (See "von Brömbsien" for another "overdecorated" 1914 target).
So, a Feeble Human Brain CAN still take on a Mighty Megatron Computer! Rick
Hohenzollern/Mecklenburg group =
von ONDARZA, originally commissioned Sekondeleutnant 18.8.1894 Yy in FeldArtRgt 24, in CHINA with Feldhaubitz Munition-Kolonne. In Southwest Africa as Oberleutnant 17.5.04 J in 1905 "field unit not reported" per Rangliste, returned with Crown Order 4X and Friedrich Franz Cross 2nd (no date colonial). Hauptmann 22.3.10 F4f, having picked up the Griffin Order with Crown and the XXV Years Service Cross early for all that overseas double credit time. Deutscher Ordens-Almanach confirms 1897 Centenary Medal. In 1914 he was an instructor at the Military Technical Academy, "uniform of Field Artillery Regiment 60."
Hohenzollern House Order 3X gazetted 22 March 1917 as Major (18.8.16 H). Discharged as char. Oberstleutnant aD-- Honor Rank List shows him as Commander of 3rd Guard Field Artillery Regiment, so hopefully Glenn can provide his first name, command dates, and birth and death dates. (We do all make a nice team, eh?)
He was presumably the older brother of Herbert von Ondarza, also of Feld Art Rgt 60, born 1878, who was recalled for Wehrmacht service after retiring from the Reichsheer, eventually reaching Generalleutnant-- and who got the German Cross in Gold in 1941 at the ripe old age of 63 as a Generalmajor! Now if that 1939 Spange on the ribbon bar of Older Brother Notyetnamed is correct, he TOO was an Elderly Warrior in WW2!!!!
Old style ribbon bar =
Unknown first name, last name RICHARD, of Inf Rgt 83:
Hauptmann 19.9.01 Aa later mysteriously given retroactive seniority of 19.9.98, Major 20.12.10.
Deutscher Ordensalmanach confirms 1897 of course, but like von Ondarza, provides no name or birth data.
Awards are (and I was expecting a Crown 4X first)--
Red Eagle 4X, Red Eagle 4 with Crown, Waldeck Merit 4, XXV, Southwest Africa, 1897, Bavarian Military Merit 4x (this and the Red Eagle 4X for SWA) Saxe-Ernestine House Order-Knight 1st, Brunswick House Order-Knight 2nd.
He was in Inf Rgt 147 in 1902, but seems to have settled permanently in Waldeck's Inf Rgt 83 after that, except for service in 2. Feldregiment in SWA. He was killed in action near Boncelles 6 August 1914 as commander of II./Inf Rgt 83-- possibly while wearing this massive ribbon bar. (See "von Brömbsien" for another "overdecorated" 1914 target).
So, a Feeble Human Brain CAN still take on a Mighty Megatron Computer! Rick
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