Gerhard Barkhorn: 301 Kills — The Ace History Put in Second Place

by | Apr 14, 2026 | History & Legends, Military Aviation | 0 comments

Quick Facts

NationalityGerman 🇩🇪
Aerial Victories301 (2nd all-time)
Aircraft FlownBf 109G, Fw 190
WarsWorld War II (Eastern Front)
Born / Died20 Mar 1919 – 8 Jan 1983 (age 63)
UnitJG 52
Gerhard Barkhorn: 301 Kills — The Ace History Put in Second Place
5-Luftwaffe-pilot-Major-Gerhard-Barkhorn-01 — via Wikimedia Commons

He is the second-highest-scoring ace in history, yet lives almost entirely in Erich Hartmann’s shadow. Gerhard Barkhorn scored 301 confirmed aerial victories — a total that would make him the greatest ace in any other context — and did it through sheer, grinding persistence over three years of brutal Eastern Front combat.

The Slow Starter

Born in 1919 in Königsberg (now Kaliningrad), Gerhard Barkhorn joined the Luftwaffe before the war and served in the Battle of Britain — but scored no victories there. His first Eastern Front kills didn’t come until late 1941, a full year after he entered combat. Where Hartmann was a natural, Barkhorn was a craftsman — he built his skills methodically, learning from every engagement, refining his approach until he was as close to perfect as a fighter pilot could be.

Bf 109 F-2 of JG 52 after emergency landing in southern Russia, 1941-42
A Bf 109 F-2 of 2./JG 52 — Barkhorn’s own wing — after a forced landing in southern Russia, 1941-42. Wikimedia Commons / public domain.

301 Victories, 1,104 Missions

Barkhorn flew an extraordinary 1,104 combat missions — more than any other pilot in WWII. He was wounded twice and shot down nine times, yet always returned to the cockpit. His 301 victories were achieved almost entirely against Soviet aircraft on the Eastern Front, where the density of air combat was unlike anything in the West. He received the Knight’s Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords and ended the war as one of Germany’s most respected combat leaders.

Unlike many of his contemporaries who burned brightly and died young, Barkhorn survived the war. He went on to serve in the Bundeswehr’s Luftwaffe, eventually flying jets. He died in a car accident in 1983 at age 63 — outliving the war only to be claimed by a motorway outside Cologne.

The Quiet Titan

Barkhorn is not the flashiest figure in this series. He didn’t have Hartmann’s mystique or Richthofen’s romance. But 301 confirmed kills across 1,104 missions represents something arguably more impressive than natural genius: absolute, sustained, professional excellence over years of unbroken combat. He was the pilot’s pilot — methodical, relentless, and utterly formidable.

“I was no hero. I was simply a pilot who survived.”

— Gerhard Barkhorn, JG 52

Watch: Gerhard Barkhorn Documentary

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