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Hubert Zemke - A Man to Remember


At dusk on the afternoon of April 28, 1945, I was walking along the fence separating our compound from the adjacent North Compound of Stalag Luft I, the German prisoner of war camp near the town of Barth on the Baltic Sea coast. A "kriegie" on the other side of the double barbed wire fence yelled at me. "Lieutenant, get this message to Colonel Wilson right away." Lt. Col. Cy Wilson was the American officer in charge of North Compound I.

The kriegie who had hailed me was Col. Hubert Zemke, the ranking allied officer in the camp in which some 9,000 captured American and British RAF flyers were incarcerated -- some for as long as four years. I, a B-17 bombardier, had been shot down nearly a year and a half earlier.

Zemke glanced at a nearby guard tower to be sure he wasn't being watched and then quickly threw a small Nescafe coffee can over the fence to me. As he directed, I got the message to Colonel Wilson right away. Since the war in Europe was apparently nearing conclusion, I surmised that Zemke was making plans to cope with whatever was in store for us.



The next morning we were ordered to dig slit trenches and foxholes for protection from any bombs or strafing that might come our way, The Russian army was reportedly less than 25 miles away.

We learned later that the camp kommandant, who had just returned from a conference with Heinrich Himmler in a nearby town, informed Zemke that orders had been given him to evacuate the camp within 24 hours notice and move it to an undesignated location near Hamburg. Because of the ravaged transportation situation in Germany, such a move would entail a forced march for most, if not all, of the 150 mile journey.

Zemke persuaded the German Officer that it would be in his best interest and that of his staff, to remove themselves from the path of the oncoming Russians and to leave the camp in Zemke's control. The next morning we awoke to find that the Germans had left during the night. Zemke's "MP's" were manning the guard towers and the Stars and Stripes had replaced the Nazi swastika on the compound flag pole.

Boisterous Russian patrols stormed into the camp later during the day (May Day, the communist "day of days") and tore down the barbed wire fences. Zemke was told by the Russian commander that plans were being made to move us out of camp to Odessa, the Russian port city on the Black Sea. Zemke was outraged. We were less than 150 miles from allied territory. He wanted to have the 8th Air Force fly us out to France. Why transport 9,000 debilitated humans 1,500 miles to the East? Apparently the Russians were under the impression that according to terms reached by Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill at the Yalta Conference a few weeks earlier, Americans would not be allowed to fly over territory occupied by the Russians.

At the time I don't believe any of us fully appreciated what Hubert Zemke did for the kriegies of Stalag Luft I. The son of German immigrants, "Hub" spoke and understood the language of our captors. He was also fluent in Russian, having spent some time in Moscow, where he worked in the U.S. Embassy. He was one of two officers who went to Russia in 1941 to oversee the delivery of 200 P-40 fighter planes to the Soviets. (His - 47 Thunderbolt carried the name "Moy Tovarich" -- Russian for "My Comrade".) His linguistic fluency and leadership skills were first of all responsible for persuading the German kommandant to ignore the Nazi high command order to evacuate the camp and persuaded him to have the Germans flee and leave it in his hands, which is what happened. (Stalag Luft I was one of the few German POW installations which was not moved.)



What he accomplished in getting us out of Germany and out of the hands of troublesome allies was also the result of his negotiation ability. We found out later that Zemke had sent RAF Group Captain C.T. Weir to contact British Field Marshal Bernard L. Montgomery to see what he could do to convince the Russians that it would be impossible for the inmates of our camp to make the long journey to Odessa. Reportedly, Montgomery met with Marshal Rokossovsky, the commander of the White Russian Army Group (which had overrun Berlin and all of the area around the Baltic). As a result, Captain Weir and his party returned and reported that plans had been worked out to have the 8th Air Force evacuate Stalag Luft I. This was accomplished a week later when some 300 B-17's came into a nearby airfield and flew us to freedom.

Hubert Zemke was the U.S. 8th Air Force's famous fighter group commander. "Zemke's Wolfpack" broke all records for German planes destroyed. Zemke shot down 20 himself. Here is what General Ira Eaker, commander of the 8th Air Force, had to say about this remarkable 30-year old: "I was at Wright Field then. Mr. Henry Ford had decided that his production methods could turn out a lot of airplanes and he wanted to get one of our fighters down so his people could have a look at it. I arranged to send him a P-40. A second lieutenant reported in my office to make the delivery. He was a group engineering officer at Langley. He walked in. Typical fighter pilot, chip on shoulder..... looks you right in the eye....not insolent... just confident. It was Zemke."

Hubert Zemke died August 30, 1994. I will always remember him as a class act.

EX-POW Bulletin, February 1995

Oscar G. Richard III
1 posted on 07/09/2003 12:00:44 AM PDT by SAMWolf
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To: AntiJen; snippy_about_it; Victoria Delsoul; SassyMom; bentfeather; MistyCA; GatorGirl; radu; ...
WOLFPACK AT WAR

Their motto was Cave Tonitrum — Beware the Thunderbolt!


As the survivors of the 56th Fighter Group straggled back in over the field their commanding officer came down out of the control tower to meet them. Lt. Col. Hubert "Hub" Zemke had listened in helplessly as, over German-occupied Holland, his men met the enemy for the first time. This was April 1943, and the Luftwaffe was still a formidable fighting force; from the confused radio traffic Zemke could tell the combat had not gone well. Missing from the running commentary was the voice of Major Dave Schilling, the 62nd Squadron commander to whom Zemke had entrusted the mission. Now, as Schilling’s plane put down, Zemke took a jeep over to find out what had gone wrong.

The major’s fighter, Hairless Joe, had taken some hits. But the radio, Schilling explained, had gone out before the Group ever reached the Dutch coast. Rather than abort, the dashing but impetuous Schilling had retained command, and upon sighting a pair of bandits had led the 62nd’s attack. Scoreless, ambushed by Messerschmitt Bf 109s and Focke-Wulf FW 190s, they and the Group’s two remaining squadrons, the 61st and 63rd, belatedly escaped back over the Channel. Many of the missing pilots, their aircraft running low on fuel, had simply set down at the first English airfields they came across, but two did not return. It had been, as Zemke later recalled, "an ignominious combat debut."

Another commander might’ve taken it as an indictment of his own leadership skills. Zemke had joined the 56th only the previous year, a 28-year-old lieutenant with experience only as a combat observer in Great Britain and as a fighter pilot instructor in Russia, whose uncle died flying for Germany in 1916 and two cousins on the Russian Front while Zemke was in Moscow. In the rapidly-expanding U.S. Army Air Force, however, promotion came easily and he’d risen quickly to captain, major, and ultimately command of the Group. That the 56th lost 18 men even before shipping for England he attributed to the combination of inexperienced, gung-ho flyboys and a brand-new, trouble-prone fighter—Republic’s P-47 Thunderbolt, the "Jug."

"The pilots were all eager young fellows who thought the Thunderbolt was a terrific fighter simply because they had flown nothing else," said Zemke. Above 20,000 feet the P-47 was capable of 400 mph and the quickest roll of any fighter in the U.S. inventory, but even with a turbo-supercharged Pratt & Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp radial capable (in later models) of 2,800 horsepower, it required almost a half-mile run just to get 50 feet off the ground. "Accelerated poorly and climbed not too much better from a slow airspeed," noted Zemke. "Overall the P-47 was a big disappointment."



In England the 56th took over an ex-RAF grass strip at Horsham St. Faith, Norfolk. (Transferring command to now-Lt. Col. Zemke, Schilling, and pilots Goldstein, Shiltz and Altschuler, the RAF station chief grinned, "Sounds like I’m handing over to the Luftwaffe!") Equipped with new P-47Cs, they joined the 4th F.G. on a couple of "Rodeos"—fighter sweeps intended to lure the Luftwaffe into combat, but Zemke aborted due to an oxygen-system malfunction. And on the Group’s first "Ramrod"—a bomber-escort mission, for which the P-47, with its blunt, high-drag nose and resultant short range, had never been designed—his own radio went out. (Due to faulty ignition systems early-model P-47s suffered from inordinate radio static.) His men bounced some bogeys over Walcheren Island and knocked one down—realizing too late the fighters were British.

In all fairness the RAF had strayed from its assigned area, and in the heat of combat even experienced pilots failed at aircraft recognition. But in view of his Group’s dismal record (and aware his two aborts could be construed as failure of nerve rather than equipment) Zemke, upon his promotion to bird colonel, suspected he’d be bumped upstairs to make room for a more capable group commander.

Finally, on June 12, the 56th flew another Rodeo, 20,000 feet above Pas de Calais. German Jagdgeschwader (Fighter Wing) 26 had made these skies so much its own that its pilots were known to Allied airmen as "the Abbeville Boys." But by flying 10,000 feet lower than usual, the Group caught JG 26 by surprise: Over Ypres, Belgium, Schilling led the 62nd’s Blue Flight down after a Staffel (squadron) of FW 190s, but as the Jerries scattered, a schwarm (flight of four) looped around into kill position on Blue Flight’s tails.

Still up-sun, Capt. Walt Cook saw the trap and led Yellow Flight down to the rescue. He opened fire on the trailing Focke-Wulf from 300 yards. "Suddenly a big ball of fire appeared on his left wing and then black smoke poured out," recalled Cook. "He rolled to the left, went over on his back in a gentle roll, and then went into a violent spin, with smoke pouring out from the fuselage and wing. At no time did the pilot take evasive action, and I believe he was killed."

The next day, again over Ypres, Zemke led the 61st down behind a schwarm of Focke-Wulfs, pulling within 200 yards of the enemy No. 4: "A split second after firing, the fuselage burst into flames and pieces of the right wing came off." The No. 3 twisted away with only minor hits on the starboard wing tip, but the No. 2 "sat in the gunsight as one would imagine for the ideal shot. Again, when the trigger was pulled this aircraft exploded with a long sheet of flame and smoke."

Meanwhile the 61st’s Lt. Bob Johnson, an aggressive Oklahoman chafing in the "Tail-End Charlie" slot of his flight, left formation to make a solo attack, on the enemy leader no less. "I didn’t think that this was a Focke-Wulf, or that the man inside was a German, or that if he managed to whirl that black-crossed airplane around, then four cannon and two heavy guns would be hurling steel and explosives at me."

Johnson flamed the FW 190 with his first burst, but for abandoning formation received chewings-out from his flight leader, Lt. Jerry Johnson (no relation), his squadron leader, Maj. Francis "Gabby" Gabreski, and finally Zemke himself, whose leadership style had not been softened by his double kill. "I doubt I endeared Bob to his group commander," reflected Zemke. "Privately, it was good to know I had pilots of such aggressive calibre."

As it turned out, all four men were to race each other in downing German aircraft. For the time being Johnson swore, "The Krauts are going to have to shoot me out of formation."


Col. Francis 'Gabby' Gabreski
28 victories in WW II
6 ½ victories in Korea


Two weeks later he made good on his promise. His P-47, Half Pint, was again bringing up the rear when Johnson spotted 16 more fighters above and behind—Focke-Wulfs, the Abbeville Boys, diving in for the kill. He called them out to the rest of the Group but for a fateful second nobody moved. Johnson held position, a perfect target, as the Germans raked him with fire—and then his P-47 was spinning downward, out of control, with the canopy jammed shut, trapping him in a cockpit full of fire.

The speed of his dive blew the flame out. Johnson managed to coast his crippled mount toward the Channel. Just when he thought he’d made good his escape, a lone FW 190 slotted in behind him. Unable to dogfight but unwilling to just sit there and take it, Johnson used his lack of speed to force the Focke-Wulf into an overshoot. Easily evading his fire, the German circled back to shoot him up twice more. Still Half Pint refused to go down; finally the German gave up, rocked his wings in grudging salute and turned back. With 21 cannon hits and more than 100 bullet holes in his Jug, Johnson made it across the Channel to a no-flaps, no-brakes landing at the RAF base at Manston, near Dover, ground-looping to a stop between two parked Hawker Typhoons. That day the 56th scored two kills, including one by Kentucky quail hunter Jerry Johnson, but lost four of its own.

In July, with a bomber group taking over Horsham St. Faith, Zemke’s men relocated to a half-built base at Halesworth, near Norwich. With this second-rate treatment in mind Zemke flew down to a gripe session by 8th Air Force bomber commanders. The 4th Bomb Wing’s Col. Curtis LeMay (chief of the post-war Strategic Air Command), complained that the only fighters he’d seen so far "all had black and white crosses on them," but declared his bombers would carry on "with or without fighter escort." Later, in the officers’ club, another bomber general stated he "wouldn’t pay a dime a dozen for any fighter pilots."

Zemke hurled his pocket change at the man’s feet: "Here, General, this is all I have handy at the moment. Any time you have a couple a dozen fighter pilots handy send them my way. We can sure use them." Then he jumped in his Jug and buzzed the place.

The bomber crews had good reason to be edgy: They were about to depart on one of their bloodiest missions, the first Schweinfurt-Regensburg raid. Escorting the B-17s part-way to Schweinfurt, the 56th returned to Halesworth and took on 200-gallon, pressed-paper ferry tanks converted for combat use. These upset the Jug’s handling and didn’t feed well in the low air pressure above 20,000 feet, but they gave the Thunderbolts enough range to meet the bombers over Germany.

They proceeded to teach a Staffel of twin-engined Messerschmitt Bf 110 night fighters (Me 110s to American fighter pilots) not to venture out in daylight. "The 61st came screaming down from the front and caught an Me 110 right over the last box of bombers," Zemke recalled. "Two P-47s shot at this guy at the same time—sixteen guns firing—and both of them hit him simultaneously. That Me 110 blew up as I’ve never seen anything blow up and fell, on fire, directly through the bomber formation...without hitting one of them."

Bob Johnson estimated the fireball at 2000 feet across. "For several seconds the German pilot tumbled in mid-air, within the flames.... He looked up...at the fire licking greedily at the edges of his parachute. ...The silk was a fiery streamer. Twenty thousand feet to go without a parachute."



One of the Bf 110 shooters was Jerry Johnson, who downed two more Germans in quick succession—the 56th’s first triple kill, except that he had to split credit for the Messerschmitt. (Two days later Johnson got a Bf 109, which would’ve made him the 56th’s first ace. Instead his score stood at 4 1/2.)

Zemke, having gotten a Bf 110 himself, estimated the combat at no more than seven minutes long, but at that distance from base fuel was already running low and he ordered a return home. From well to the north, however, Capt. Walker "Bud" Mahurin called back, "We’ve got ’em cornered. There’s plenty for everyone. Come on up this way."

Soon after the Zemke’s run-in with Bomber Command, Mahurin had formated a little too closely with one of the new Consolidated B-24 Liberators and his Thunderbolt’s tail had been sucked into the bomber’s props; the multiple-engined B-24 straggled home but Mahurin barely escaped from his falling Jug. Now he saw his chance to make amends—a Focke-Wulf above the bombers, preparing to turn down into them. "I sneaked up behind it and started to fire from about 300 yards closing to 200 yards. It blew up."

Mahurin and his wingman circled up through the bomber stream onto the tail of a second FW 190. "We followed him until he started to make a turn into the front end of the bombers, when I took a deflection [angled] shot at him and watched him blow up."

Not one to hold a grudge, Zemke recommended Mahurin for the Distinguished Flying Cross. Later it turned out one of his kills was none other than the commander of II Gruppe JG 26, Oberstleutnant (Lt. Col.) Wilhelm "Wutz" Galland, brother of the famous Luftwaffe General of Fighters Adolf Galland and himself a 55-victory Experte (ace). His body was found in his aircraft two months later, driven by the force of impact twelve feet into earth.

Bomber Command lost 60 of the 375 bombers on the mission. But the 56th, scoring 17 confirmed, one probable and nine damaged, prevented even more slaughter. "We had certainly broken up several German attacks," Zemke maintained. "It was the biggest go, by far, we’d had up to then and that day taught us a lot of lessons."

In August 1943 the 56th’s top guns began to distinguish themselves: Gabreski scored his first kill, Bob Johnson scored his second, and Zemke his fourth. In September he led the Group on its longest mission yet, a 250-mile Ramrod to Emden, Germany. (The P-47s had received new 75-gallon underwing tanks, made of metal and pressurized to feed at all altitudes.) Spotting a lone Focke-Wulf stalking a straggling B-17 several thousand feet below, Zemke dived and fired from 500 yards: "Immediately strikes were registered all over the aircraft. Surprisingly, the Focke-Wulf flew on in a straight line. Another burst brought smoke and flame and a third caused the left undercarriage leg to drop. Only then did the stricken plane fall away in a vertical dive. As no evasive action had been observed I concluded the first burst had killed the pilot."

That made Zemke the 56th’s first ace, by a narrow margin: Schilling, who hadn’t scored a victory in 52 missions, got two that same day and three more by October 10th, when Bob and Jerry Johnson each got their fifth. With four of the five American aces in the European Theater of Operations (at this time Maj. Eugene Roberts of the 78th F.G. claimed eight kills), the 56th never looked back, scoring its 100th kill, a Messerschmitt Me 210 (by now even Messerschmitt used the Me designation), on November 5th. On the 26th, during a Ramrod to Bremen, they scored an E.T.O. record: 23 confirmed, three probable and nine damaged, including two for Gabreski.


Not My Turn to Die
With over 210 bullet holes in his P-47 Thunderbolt, and various personal wounds, pilot Bob Johnson is seen limping back to base after a confrontation with sixteen FW-190's. During this lonely and sobering trip he encountered another FW-190 who kindly escorted him to the English Channel, but not before he emptied every one of his 7.9 mm rounds into Johnson's plane!


A second-generation Pole who’d flown a Curtiss P-40 Tomahawk during the Pearl Harbor attack and a Supermarine Spitfire Mk. IX with the Free Poles in RAF service, Gabreski barreled down on a pair of Bf 110s, which dived away—always a mistake against the Jug. "I closed in rapidly behind them and opened fire on one at about 700 yards range...suddenly I was right on top of the 110. I just barely had time to push the control stick forward and duck below the burning German fighter." Regaining height, Gabreski dived after a second Bf 110. "This time I slowed my approach slightly, though we were still traveling at about 420 mph when I opened fire from 600 yards. The 110 took solid hits in its wing root and rolled over into a death fall at 14,000 feet."

Kills four and five for Gabreski; Schilling and Cook also scored doubles (Cook likewise achieving ace status), and Mahurin got three more Bf 110s to become the E.T.O.’s first double ace. By March 1944, with 20 kills, he ranked as its highest scorer, with Bob and Jerry Johnson right behind him. The 61st Squadron became the first in the E.T.O. with over 100 victories to its credit; the Group’s tally stood at 300. That month the Luftwaffe lost 22% of its pilots, a blow from which it never really recovered, and the 56th flew a Ramrod all the way to Berlin and back without meeting a single enemy fighter.

Then, on the 27th, while shooting down a Dornier Do 217 bomber south of Chartres, Mahurin was hit by its rear gunner: "I could see the shadow of my airplane with a great long trail of black smoke following me." He bailed out and was last seen running for a treeline. (He made it back to England via the French underground and an RAF rescue plane, but was not permitted to risk capture—and the secrets of his escape—again; transferred to the Pacific Theater, he scored another kill, and 3 1/2 MiGs in the Korean War, before being shot down again and captured by the North Koreans.) And Jerry Johnson, with 18 kills to his credit, was hit by ground fire while strafing a truck convoy and taken prisoner after bellying in.

So the mantle of high-scorer passed to Bob Johnson. By early May, near the end of his tour, he led the E.T.O. with 25 victories, just one less than World War I ace Eddie Rickenbacker. Returning from his last mission, an uneventful Ramrod to Berlin on 8 May, he rolled onto the tail of a passing Bf 109. The Jerry banked left, but Johnson rolled inside his turn. "We were real close. Close enough that I could see the pilot look back over his shoulder as I opened fire. He went into a dive but I kept right on his tail pouring fire into him. Suddenly his left wing came off and the fighter spun in. That made 26!" When his Nos. 3 and 4 chased a flight of Focke-Wulfs into a cloud, only to reemerge with the Germans on their tails, Johnson scared off the lead FW 190 with a few bursts. "I swung my nose to bear on the second plane. Hits! All over the wings and wingroots, and there it was. Number Twenty-seven...my last mission couldn’t have been more perfect."

By now the Wolfpack, flying out of Boxted, Essex—and numbering more than 400 kills—had developed P-47 tactics to a high art, diving to the attack and zoom-climbing back to safety. From this evolved group tactics: a lead squadron flying low, covered by the second at medium altitude, with the third high up in reserve. Spreading out ahead of the bombers to sweep the skies clean of German fighters—the "Zemke Fan"—the 56th Fighter Group presented an awesome array of aerial firepower.

On June 27th Gabreski downed a Bf 109 to match Bob Johnson’s score, and on July 5th latched onto the tail of another near Evreaux: "We made three turns together at 3,000 feet. I fired several bursts at him, but the angle of deflection was extreme and I saw no hits. This joker was pretty good, but he made the classic mistake when he tried to break off by diving out of the fight." Seeing Gabreski rapidly close, the German pilot belatedly broke left. "I led him two rings of deflection in my gunsight, which placed him out of sight under my nose, and opened fire." The Messerschmitt came back into view smoking; another burst finished it off.

So Gabreski had 28 aerial kills (and 2 1/2 on the ground) and the E.T.O. a new high scorer, but like Johnson before him Gabby was nearing the end of his tour. On his last day, July 20th, he took time off from a Ramrod to Frankfurt to strafe Bassinheim Airfield and set a parked Heinkel bomber afire. "At that time our policy was to make one pass on an airdrome and get out, because the flak gunners were always ready and waiting if you tried to come back for more. But I figured the flak had been so light that I could get away with another pass."

Coming back in right down on the deck, Gabreski saw his tracers pass over another He 111. Without thinking he dropped the nose—and the P-47’s big paddle prop clipped the ground. With no hope of returning to England, Gabreski bellied into a wheat field and was captured. (He went on to fly North American F-86 Sabres over Korea—as Mahurin’s commanding officer—downing 6 1/2 MiGs.)


Francis "Gabby" Gabreski (center), returning from a mission over enemy territory in his P-47 Thunderbolt, is greeted by swarms of ground crewmen who wanted details of his latest exploit.


Of the 56th’s original aces, only Zemke and Schilling remained. Offered command of the 479th Fighter Group—P-38 Lightnings—Schilling refused ("Hell no, not P-38s") and was stunned when Zemke took it instead. "There was only one group Dave wanted...and deserved to command," felt Zemke. "And for me there was need of a new challenge, a new purpose...[but]...behind me was the greatest command of my service life." (By giving up his P-47 Zemke shortened his war. He scored two kills with the 479th, bringing his final aerial tally to 17 3/4, but on October 30th, on escort duty over Germany, his North American P-51 Mustang came apart in a thunderstorm. Zemke got out safely, only to be captured.)

His departure marked the Wolfpack’s darkest chapter. On September 17th they were handed the dirtiest ground-attack work of all: antiaircraft suppression, in support of the ill-fated Allied airborne invasion of Holland (Operation "Market Garden"). In two days of dueling with flak sites Schilling’s men took out 34 emplacements, but lost 17 P-47s destroyed and a dozen damaged. Two pilots became POWs; four were killed. The Group’s old nemesis, JG 26, got through the dazed P-47 fliers the next day to knock down 17 helpless troop transports.

Thankfully October 1944 was a quiet time for the 8th Air Force. The Luftwaffe was saving its precious planes and fuel reserves for the "grosse Schlag": the Great Blow, the Ardennes offensive, in which the Germans hoped to prevent the invasion of their Fatherland. As they planned, foul weather initially curtailed Allied fighter cover. Not until December 23rd could Schilling lead his men over the battleground, where he lost track of two consecutive enemy formations in the clouds. He angrily took to task his ground controllers, who replied, "Don’t worry about it! There’s bigger game on this heading!"

There was: a large enemy formation below and 40-plus ahead, including new Focke-Wulf FW 190D "long-nosed" high-altitude fighters. Sending the 61st and 63rd down to attack the Germans below, Schilling brought the 62nd around behind those ahead. "I managed to hit the right-rear Me 109 with about a 20-degree deflection shot at a range of about 700 yards." As the Messerschmitt dropped off, Schilling moved up on the next in line, setting it afire. "I then picked another and fired at about 1,000 yards and missed as he broke right and started to dive for the deck. At about 17,000 feet I had closed to about 500 yards and fired, resulting in a heavy concentration of strikes, and the pilot bailed out."

Now separated from his flight, Schilling spotted 35 to 40 Focke-Wulfs circling 1,000 feet below him. "I repeated the same tactics as before and attacked one from about 500 yards’ range." As the FW 190 went spinning downward Schilling latched onto a fifth, which put up more of a fight: "He immediately took violent evasive action, and it took me several minutes of maneuvering to get in a position to fire. I fired from about 300 yards above and to the left, forcing me to pull through him and fire as he went out of sight over the cowling. ...The pilot immediately bailed out."

Hooking up with a stray 63rd Sqn. pilot, Schilling looked for a sixth kill, but when his wingman was attacked broke off to help him out. Both escaped. When all the gun-camera film was sorted out the Wolfpack had chalked up its best day ever—34 enemy aircraft destroyed. Their tally now stood at over 800—25% of the 8th A.F. total. (Schilling, awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, soon moved up to join 65th Wing Headquarters, finishing the war as a full colonel with 22 1/2 aerial and 11 1/2 ground kills.)



After that the 56th’s only real challengers in the air were the new Me 262 jet fighters. The Wolfpack had downed jets before, with lucky passing shots or by catching them over their runways. They’d stuck with the Jug when all other groups went to P-51s, and were sole recipients of the P-47M—up-engined to produce 465 mph (more speed than a Mustang)—with which they accepted combat on the jets’ terms. On April 5th, 1945, a Wolfpack pilot actually ran down a 262 in a shallow dive. Attempting to out-turn the P-47, the German pilot was cut off and shot down.

On April 13th, the second anniversary of their first combat mission, the Wolfpack celebrated by savaging Eggebeck Airdrome. Coming across the field line-abreast at 400 to 450 mph, they fired more than 78,000 rounds of .50-caliber, destroying 91 enemy aircraft where they sat and making them the first 8th A.F. Group to surpass the magic number: 1000 destroyed.

Later this score was reduced, but the 56th Fighter Group finished the war with 992 1/2 confirmed kills, including 664 1/2 in the air—more than any other 8th Air Force fighter group. Furthermore they scored 58 probables, and 543 damaged in the air and on the ground. At war’s end a P-47M was exhibited under the Eiffel Tower, its nose emblazoned with the legend Zemke’s Wolfpack, 56th Fighter Group, 1000 Enemy Aircraft Destroyed!

Fitting tribute to Hub Zemke’s example: "A fighter pilot must possess an inner urge for combat. The will at all times to be offensive will develop into his own tactics. I stay with an enemy until either he’s destroyed, I’m out of ammunition, he evades into the clouds, or I’m too low on gasoline to continue the combat."

AVIATION HISTORY, July 1994

Donald A. Hollway


Additional Sources:

www.nationalaviation.org
www.merkki.com
www.donhollway.com
www.af.mil
www.brooksart.com
home.att.net/~historyzone
www.milartgl.com

2 posted on 07/09/2003 12:02:34 AM PDT by SAMWolf (Call out the vice squad! Someone's mounting a disk drive!)
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5 posted on 07/09/2003 12:07:43 AM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: SAMWolf
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8 posted on 07/09/2003 3:13:44 AM PDT by WhiskeyPapa (Virtue is the uncontested prize.)
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To: SAMWolf
On This Day In History



Birthdates which occurred on July 09:
1764 Ann Ward Radcliffe English Gothic novelist (The Italian)
1766 J Schopenhauer, writer
1802 Thomas Davenport invented 1st coml electric motor
1819 Elias Howe Spencer Mass, invented sewing machine
1856 Nikola Tesla, Croatia, electrical engineer/physicist who developed alternating current./inventor (Tesla Coil)
1858 Franz Boas anthropologist/linguist (Mind of Primitive Man)
1864 Franz Miller becomes first Train Murderer
1878 H.V. Kaltenborn Milwaukee Wisc, newscaster (Who Said That?)
1879 Ottorino Respighi Bologna, Italy, composer (Pines of Rome)
1887 Samuel Eliot Morison historian (Admiral of the Ocean Sea)
19-- Kathleen Layman Houston Tx, actress (Casey-Heartland)
1901 Barbara Cartland romance author (Camfield #69)
1901 Jester Hairston NC, actor (Thats My Mama, Rolly-Amen)
1905 Clarence Campbell Saskatchewan, 3rd NHL pres (1946-77)
1909 Jester Hairston actor (Riley-Amen)
1915 David Diamond Rochester NY, composer (Paderewski Prize-1943)
1916 Edward Heath (C) British PM (1970-74)
1917 Ted Steele Hartford Ct, orch leader (Cavalcade of Stars)
1924 Leonard Pennario Buffalo NY, pianist (LA Philharmonic)
1925 Alan Dale Bkln NY, singer (Alan Dale Show)
1927 Ed Ames Malden Mass, actor (Mingo-Daniel Boone)
1927 Leonard Patrick "Red" Kelly NHL hall of famer (Norris trophy)
1928 Vince Edwards Bkln NY, actor (Ben Casey, Matt Lincoln)
1929 Hassan II king of Morocco (1961- )
1929 Lee Hazelwood Ok, country singer/songwriter (Summer Wine, Jackson)
1930 Buddy Bregman Chicago, orch leader (Eddie Fisher Show)
1932 Donald Rumsfeld politician (Sec. Defence)
1935 Ronnie Burns Evanston Ill, adopted son of George Burns
1936 David Zinman NYC, conductor (Balt Symphony-1983)
1936 James Hampton actor (Teen Wolf, Amazing Howard Hughes, Hawmps)
1937 Clemon Daniels AFL player of year 1963, Half back (Oak, Dallas SF)
1937 David Hockney English artist (Pop Art)
1938 Brian Dennehy Ct, actor (Check is in the Mail, F/X, Cocoon, Ants)
1938 Paul Chihara Seattle Washington, US/Japanese composer
1939 James Hampton Okla City OK, actor (Bugler Dobbs-F Troop)
1939 Richard Roundtree New Rochelle NY, actor (Shaft, Roots)
1941 Karin von Aroldingen Germany, ballet dancer (NYC Ballet Co)
1941 Takehide Nakatani Japan, lightweight (Olympic-gold-1964)
1943 Bon Scott vocalist (AC/DC-Highway to Hell)
1943 John H Casper Greenville SC, Col USAF/astronaut (STS-36, sk:STS-50)
1946 Mitch Mitchell drummer (Jimi Hendrix Experience)
1947 O(renthal) J(ames) Simpson SF, NFL running back (Buf Bills)/actor
1952 John Tesh Garden City NY, TV host (Entertainment Tonight)
1954 Debbie Sledge Phila, vocalist (Sister Sledge-We are Family)
1955 Jimmy Smits NYC, actor (Victor-LA Law, Running Scared, Believers)
1956 Marc Almond rocker (Everything I Want Love to Be)
1956 Tom Hanks Concord, Calif, actor (Bossom Buddies, Big, Punchline)
1957 Kelly McGillis Newport Beach Ca, actress (Top Gun, Accused, Witness)
1958 Jimmy Smits NYC, actor (Victor Sifuentes-LA Law)
1959 Jim Kerr rocker (Simple Minds-Don't You Forget About Me)
1963 Pamela Annette Sanders Miami Florida, playmate (November, 1985)
1965 Frank Bello Bronx NY, rock bassist (Anthrax-Protest & Survive)
1971 Bobby Leslie TV rocker (Guys Next Door-I Was Made For You)
1971 Scott Grimes Lowell Mass, actor (Together We Stand)
1976 Fred Aaron Savage Ill, actor (Kevin-Wonder Years, Vice Versa)



Deaths which occurred on July 09:
1441 - Jan/Johannes van Eyck, Flemish painter (Lamb Gods),
1755 British Gen. E Braddock mortally wounded during French & Indian War
1850 B b [Bah '¡ prophet] executed in Tabriz, Iran; Rahmat 16, 7
1850 Zachary Taylor 12th pres of US, dies in White House served 16 mo
1875 Francis Preston Blair Jr famed St Louis lawyer, dies at 54
1951 Harry Heilmann baseball hall of famer outfielder (Det), dies at 56
1968 Allyn Edwards host (One Minute Please, Mr Citizen), dies at 53
1968 John Indrisano actor (OK Crackerby), dies at 62
1974 Former U.S. Chief Justice Earl Warren died in Washington D.C.
1977 Dr Loren Eiseley prof of Anthropology (Animal Secrets), dies at 69
1985 Rafael Campos actor (Ramon-Rhoda, Sancho-V), dies of cancer at 49
1988 Barbara Woodhouse dog trainer, dies at 78 of a stroke
1990 Howard Duff actor, dies at 76 of a heart attack
1992 Eric Sevareid, News correspondent (CBS), dies of stomach cancer at age 79.




Reported: MISSING in ACTION

1967 LEE CHARLES RICHARD SAN DIEGO CA.
[PROB DEAD REMAINS RETURNED 06/03/83]
1967 MARTIN EDWARD H. SAVANNAH GA.
[03/04/73 RELEASED BY DRV, ALIVE IN 98]
1971 LILLY CARROLL BAXTER MORGANTOWN WV.
1972 KETCHIE SCOTT D. BIRMINGHAM AL.

POW / MIA Data & Bios supplied by
the P.O.W. NETWORK. Skidmore, MO. USA.



On this day...
118 Hadrian, Rome's new emperor, makes his entry into the city.
455 Avitus, the Roman military commander in Gaul, becomes Emperor of the West.
0711 Berbers under Tarik-ibn Ziyad occupies Northern Spain
1401 Mongol monarch Timur Lenk destroys Baghdad
1533 Lady Jane Grey (at 15 years old) was proclaimed queen of England in succession to Edward VI; her reign ended 13 days later when she became a prisoner in the Tower of London
1536 French navigator Jacques Cartier returns to Saint-Malo from Canada
1540 England's King Henry VIII 6-mo marriage to Anne of Cleves annulled(If at first you don't succeed try try again)
1595 Johannes Kepler inscribes geometric solid construction of universe
1755 Brit Gen E Braddock mortally wounded during French & Indian War
1776 Dec of Ind read aloud to Gen Washington's troops in NY
1800 Mt Vernon Gardens becomes site of 1st summer theatre in US
1816 Argentina declares independence from Spain
1846 Capt Montgomery claims Yerba Buena (SF) for US
1853 Adm Perry & US Navy visit Japan
1860 Temperature hits 115ø F in Ft Scott & 112ø F in Topeka Kansas
1862 Gen John Hunt Morgan captures Tompkinsville, Ky
1863 Union troops enter Port Hudson
1868 1st black cabinet member in SC (Francis L Cardozo-sect of state)
1872 Doughnut cutter patented by John Blondel, Thomaston, Me
1878 An improved corncob pipe patented by Henry Tibbe, Washington, Mo
1879 C H F Peters discovers asteroid #199 Byblis
1893 Daniel H Williams performs "world's 1st successful heart coperation"
1902 L Carnera discovers asteroid #487 Venetia
1910 Walter Brookins becomes 1st to pilot an airplane to 1 mile altitude
1914 1st US duplicate auction bridge championship held, Lake Placid, NY
1915 Germany surrenders South West Africa to Union of South Africa
1916 1st cargo submarine to cross the Atlantic arrives in US from Germany
1917 British warship "Vanguard" explodes at Scapa Flow killing 800
1918 101 killed & 171 injured in worst US train wreck, Nashville, Tenn
1918 US Army's Distinguished Service Cross authorized
1927 Atty William T Francis named minister to Liberia
1932 Washington Redskins (then Boston Braves) formed
1932 Yanks' Ben Chapman hits 2 inside-the-park HRs, tying record
1933 Frankford Yellowjackets sold, rechristened Philadelphia Eagles
1934 SS-Reichs Fuhrer Himmler takes command of German Concentration Camps
1940 German Evangelist Church protests against euthanasia pogroms
1940 NL beats AL 4-0 in 8th All Star Game (Sportsman Park, St Louis)
1944 World's largest circus tent catches fire at Ringling Brother's - Barnum & Bailey 2nd performance. 168 die. (Hartford Conn)
1946 AL beats NL 12-0 in 13th All Star Game (No 1945 game) (Fenway Park)
1947 Britain's Princess Elizabeth & Lt Philip Mountbatten's engagement
1948 Satchel Paige, 42, debuts in majors pitching 2 scoreless inn for Cleve
1950 13.15" (33.40 cm) of rainfall, York, Nebraska (state 24-hour record)
1951 Pres Truman asked Congress to formally end state of war with Germany
1953 1st helicopter passenger service (NYC)
1953 Phillies Robin Roberts ends streak of 28 consecutive complete games
1955 1st black executive on White House staff (E Frederic Morrow)
1955 Bill Haley & Comets' "Rock Around the Clock" tops billboards chart
1956 Dick Clark's 1st appearance as host of American Bandstand
1957 AL beats NL 6-5 in 24th All Star Game (Busch Stadium, St Louis)
1957 Discovery of element 102 (Nobelium) announced
1958 Giant splash caused by fall of 90 million tons of rock & ice into Lituya Bay, Alaska washes 1,800 feet up the mountain
1963 NL beats AL 5-3 in 34th All Star Game (Municipal Stad, Cleveland)
1968 39.83 cm (15.68") of rainfall, Columbus, Miss (state 24-hour record)
1968 NL beats AL 1-0 in 1st indoor All Star Game (Houston Astrodome)
1969 Tom Seaver's no-hit bid against Cubs ends with 1 out in the 9th
1972 1st tour of Paul McCartney & Wings (France)
1973 9th Maccabiah games opens in Tel Aviv, Israel
1976 Houston Astro Larry Dierker no-hits Montreal Expos, 6-0
1976 Uganda asks UN to condemn Israeli hostage rescue raid on Entebbe
1978 American Nazi Party, holds a rally at Marquette Park, Chicago (I HATE Illinois nazis)
1978 L Chernykh discovers asteroid #2530 Shipka
1978 Nearly 100,000 demonstrators march on Wash DC for ERA
1979 Dr Walter Massey named director of Argonne national Lab
1979 Voyager 2 flies past Jupiter
1980 7 die in a stampede to see the pope in Brazil
1980 Walt Disney's "The Fox & The Hound" released
1981 The Jacksons begin a 36-city tour
1982 Margaret Thatcher begins her 2nd term as British prime minster
1982 Pan Am Boeing 727 crashes in Kenner, La, killing 153
1986 Att Gen's Com on Pornography links hard-core porn to sex crimes
1988 "Facts of Life," Lisa Whelchel weds Steve Cauble
1989 1st time Wimbeldon has both men & women's final on same day, Boris Becker beats Stefan Edberg & Steffi Graf beats Martina Navratilova
1991 AL beats NL in 62nd All Star Game in Toronto



Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"
US : National Canned Luncheon Meat Week (Day 4)
Argentina : Independence Day (1816)
Morocco : Youth Day/King Hassan II's Birthday
US : National POW/MIA Recognition Day
South Africa : Family Day - - - - - ( Monday )
Swaziland : Reed Dance Day - - - - - ( Monday )



Religious Observances
Christian : St Thomas More, humanist/martyr
Old Catholic : Feast of St Maria Goretti, virgin/martyr
Feast of St. Thomas More.
Feast of the Martyrs of China II.



Religious History
1228 Death of Stephen Langton (b.ca.1155), Archbishop of Canterbury. It was Langtonwho formulated the original division of the Bible into chapters in the late 1100s.
1530 German reformer Martin Luther wrote in a letter: 'This is a definite sign thatwe are God's children, because we are men of peace.'
1838 Birth of Philip P. Bliss, American gospel singer and songwriter. His best-remembered hymns include 'Wonderful Words of Life,' 'It is Well with My Soul' and 'Let theLower Lights Be Burning.'
1843 Birth of Ralph E. Hudson, sacred composer and music publisher. His most enduringhymns include 'At the Cross' and 'Blessed Be the Name.'
1896 Birth of William Cameron Townsend, American missionary and linguist. In 1942 heestablished what has become the largest evangelical missionary agency in the world --Wycliffe Bible Translators (WBT).

Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.



Thought for the day :
"As a general rule, the freedom of any people can be judged by the volume of their laughter"



Today's 'You Might Be A Redneck If' Joke...
"You've ever been arrested on an obscene mud-flap charge."



16 posted on 07/09/2003 6:16:56 AM PDT by Valin (America is a vast conspiracy to make you happy.)
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To: SAMWolf
Bumping for a later read...gotta go take care of office business...at least I get breakfast out of it!

One of the first WWII books I read was Thunderbolt! by Robert S. Johnson, who flew with Zemke.

Great stuff, can't wait to see what you've brought us today!

17 posted on 07/09/2003 6:40:09 AM PDT by HiJinx (A Dollar a Day keeps the Libs at Bay...3rd Quarter FReepathon is on!)
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To: SAMWolf
He looks like a boxer doesn't he?


52 posted on 07/09/2003 11:20:13 AM PDT by SpookBrat
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To: SAMWolf
Ooops, when I was reading the thread, that picture I just posted wasn't there. There were lots of little white boxes with the red x in them. Sorry to post a duplicate.

Anyway, I liked your thread. I love my country. As long as you are free, you can come from nothing and be someone. These types of stories always leave me filled with great pride for our country and the American spirit, especially immigrants who did something great with their lives for their "new" country.

54 posted on 07/09/2003 11:23:46 AM PDT by SpookBrat
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To: SAMWolf

Wednesday's weird warship, CSS Manassas

Manassas class Ironclad ram
Displacementt. 387 t.
Lenght. 143'
Beam. 33'
Draft. 17'
Complement. 36
Armament. 1 64-pdr. Dahlgren

CSS MANASSAS, formerly the steam propeller ENOCH TRAIN, was built at Medford, Mass., by J. O. Curtis in 1855. A New Orleans commission merchant, Capt. J. A. Stevenson, acquired her for use as a privateer and fitted her out at Algiers, La., as an ironclad ram of radically modern design. Covered with 1-inch iron plating, her hull projected only 2 feet above the water, and her plated top was convex causing cannon shot to glance off harmlessly. She was provided with sharp irons on her bow to stave holes through enemy vessels. Fast moving, lying low in the water and a difficult target, virtually bomb-proof, she looked like a floating cigar or egg shell and was described by Union intelligence as a "hellish machine."

Commissioned as a Confederate privateer on 12 September 1861 MANASSAS was seized soon afterwards by Flag Officer G. N. Hollins, CSN, for use in the lower Mississippi River. With Lieutenant A. F. Worley, CSN, in command she participated in Flag Officer Hollins' surprise attack on the Federal blockading squadron at Head of Passes, Mississippi River, on 12 October 1861. In the action MANASSAS violently rammed USS RICHMOND damaging her severely below the water line. MANASSAS, however, suffered the loss of her prow and smokestack and had her engines temporarily thrown out of gear from the impact. She managed to retire under heavy fire from USS PREBLE and RICHMOND whose shells glanced off her armor. Two months after this engagement MANASSAS was purchased for direct ownership by the Confederate Government.

Under Lieutenant Worley, MANASSAS joined the force of Capt. J. K. Mitchell, CSN, commanding Confederate naval forces in the lower Mississippi. She participated in the engagement of 24 April 1862 during which Flag Officer Farragut, USN, on his way to New Orleans, ran his fleet past the Confederate forts Jackson and St. Philip. In the action MANASSAS attempted to ram USS PENSACOLA which turned in time to avoid the blow and deliver a broadside at close range. MANASSAS then ran into murderous fire from the whole line of the Union fleet. She then charged USS MISSISSIPPI and delivered a long glancing blow on her hull, firing her only gun as she rammed. Next she rammed USS BROOKLYN, again firing her gun, and injuring her rather deeply, but not quite enough to be fatal.

After this action MANASSAS followed the Union fleet quietly for a while but as she drew closer MISSISSIPPI furiously turned on her. MANASSAS managed to dodge the blow but was run aground. Her crew escaped as MISSISSIPPI poured her heavy broadsides on the stranded Confederate vessel. Later MANASSAS slipped off the bank and drifted down the river in flames past the Union mortar flotilla. Comdr. D. D. Porter, USN, in command of the mortar boats, tried to save her as an engineering curiosity but MANASSAS exploded and immediately plunged under water.

72 posted on 07/09/2003 11:51:57 AM PDT by aomagrat (IYAOYAS)
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To: SAMWolf
You know who could play Hubert Zemke in a movie? Tommy Lee Jones.
131 posted on 07/09/2003 7:44:34 PM PDT by SpookBrat
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