Wind, Hans Henrik “Hasse” born 30-07-1919 in Ekenäs,
Raasepori Municipality, Uusimaa, Finland, started his pilot career in 1938 by volunteering to join a pilot training course. Hans was a reserve officer in the Winter War (1939–1940), but did not fly due to a lack of available planes. Wind had now decided to embark on a military career, and he finished training as a lieutenant on 17-06-1941.
Transferring to LeLv24, No. 24 Squadron (Finland)
in August 1941, he fought in the Continuation War.
The Continuation War, also known as the Second Soviet–Finnish War, was a conflict fought by Finland and Nazi Germany against the Soviet Union during World War II.
It began with a Finnish declaration of war on 25-06-1941 and ended on 19-09-1944 with the Moscow Armistice. The Soviet Union and Finland had previously fought the Winter War from 1939 to 1940, which ended with the Soviet failure to conquer Finland and the Moscow Peace Treaty.
Hasse flew a Brewster B239
(the export version of the Brewster Buffalo) from 1941 to 1943, claiming 39 of his victories in the type. On 22-09-1941, Wind was credited his first kill, an I-15. In August 1942, the squadron was transferred to Römpötti to operate over the eastern Gulf of Finland. On 14-08-1942, Wind shot down two Hurricanes,
and four days later a Hurricane and two I-16s.
At the end of 1942, his score stood at 14.5 claims. On 05-04-1943, Wind shot down three Il-2s. On 14 April, Wind claimed two Spitfires,
and on 21 April two Yak-1s
and shared one with fellow ace Sergeant Eero Kinnunen.
In August 1943, the unit converted to the Messerschmitt Bf 109G.
Hasse Wind was awarded his first Mannerheim Cross
on 31-07-1943 and his second on 28-06-1944.
Hasse Wind was promoted to captain on 19-10-1943 when he was 24 years old and was removed from front-line duty in order to instruct new fighter pilots. Wind was considered one of the most skillful aerial tacticians in the Finnish Air Force,
under command of Major-General Juha-Pekka Keränen
and Wind’s ‘Lectures on Fighter Tactics’ were written in 1943 and used in the training of new pilots for decades to come.
Wind returned to the front in February 1944. On 27-05-1944, he scored his first victory with the Bf 109, shooting down two La-5s. A Soviet offensive in the Karelian Isthmus started on 09-06-1944. On 13-06-1944, Captain Wind led six 109s against a formation of Pe-2 bombers, shooting down four of them. Wind’s streak continued in the days that followed; with a P-39 and an IL-2M on 15 June, two Pe-2s and a La-5 the next day, and on 19 June two P-39s (both of the 196 IAP; one flown by Hero of Soviet Union and eventual 29-kill ace Major A. V. Chirkov,
who bailed out) and a La-5. On 20-06-1944, Wind added two La-5s, two Yak-9s and a Pe-2. On 22 June, he claimed two Spitfires and a La-5, with two La-5s and two DB-3Fs the next day. On 25 June, he downed three Yak-9s and two Yak-7s.
Wind was seriously wounded in an aerial battle against some thirty Yak-9s and P-39s on 28-07-1944. Wind shot down one Yak-9 before a 37 mm shell fired by a P-39 exploded against his seat armour. Another shell pierced the armour glass behind his left shoulder, exploding on the instrument panel. Wind was badly wounded in his left arm. He still managed to fly and land at an airfield, even though his plane had been seriously damaged during the attack.
Wind recovered from his wounds, but never flew a combat mission again. He finished the war with a total of 302 combat sorties, scoring 75 kills, and is ranked second on the Finnish aces list.
He was married on 26-08-1945, then began his studies at the Helsinki School of Business, having resigned from the Air Force on 10-05-1945.
Death and burial ground of Wind, Hans Henrik “Hasse”.
Wind died on 24-07-1995, age 75 in Tampere, Tampere Municipality, Pirkanmaa, Finland and was survived by his wife and five children. Hasse is buried at Kalevankangas Cemetery, Tampere, Tampere Municipality, Pirkanmaa, Finland, Section K 15, R 15, H 20. Teir is a Memorial stone of Hans “Hasse” Wind and Tor Robert Lindblad
in Ekenäs, Finland. A monument to Tor Robert Lindblad a Mannerheim Cross receiver and Hans Wind has been erected in Etelä-Einsaari. The monument was unveiled on 04-06-2001, the birthday of Marshal Mannerheim. After the war, Lindblad served as a company commander in the Uusimaa Brigade until 1956. He then worked as a salesman and distribution manager. Lindblad was an avid modern pentathlete and became national champion in this sport in 1946.









Leave a Reply