Combat Aviators & Crewmembers of All Wars

Combat Aviators & Crewmembers of All Wars This page is dedicated to all pilots and crewmembers who flew combat missions from WWI on regardless

Bruce Ward CarrBorn January 28, 1924Union Springs, New York, USDied April 25, 1998 (aged 74)St. Cloud, Florida, USBuried...
01/17/2025

Bruce Ward Carr
Born January 28, 1924
Union Springs, New York, US
Died April 25, 1998 (aged 74)
St. Cloud, Florida, US
Buried Arlington National Cemetery
Allegiance United States of America
Service / branch United States Army Air Forces
United States Air Force
Years of service 1942–1973
Rank Colonel
Unit 363rd Fighter Group
354th Fighter Group
4th Fighter-Interceptor Group
31st Tactical Fighter Wing
Commands 336th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron
Battles / wars World War II
Korean War
Vietnam War
Awards Distinguished Service Cross
Silver Star
Legion of Merit
Distinguished Flying Cross (4)
Air Medal (31)
Bruce Ward Carr (January 28, 1924 – April 25, 1998) was a highly decorated United States Air Force colonel. During World War II, he was shot down over Germany and, after evading capture for several days, snuck into a Luftwaffe airfield and stole an enemy plane which he flew back to Allied lines. He also became a flying ace credited with 14 or 15 aerial victories, including five in a single day, for which he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.

Bruce W. Carr was born on January 28, 1924, in Union Springs, New York. He began flying at the age of 15 in 1939, and enlisted into the United States Army Air Forces on September 3, 1942. Carr entered the Aviation Cadet Training Program, where his military flight instructor happened to be the very same person who taught him to fly in 1939.

Due to his previous flying experience, Carr was placed in an accelerated training program, flying the P-40 Warhawk at Spence Field, Georgia. Acquiring over 240 flight hours, Carr was promoted to flight officer on August 30, 1943.

Carr deployed to Europe in February 1944, where he was assigned to the 380th Fighter Squadron, 363rd Fighter Group, Ninth Air Force, at RAF Rivenhall in Essex, England. The 363rd was one of the first units to adopt the P-51 Mustang. Carr had never flown above 10,000 feet (3,000 m), but when he took the P-51 to an altitude of 30,000 feet (9,100 m), he was duly impressed and named his plane "Angel's Playmate."

On March 8, 1944, Flight Officer Carr scored his squadron's first kill, however, he was not given credit for it. Carr chased a German Messerschmitt Bf 109 to within a few feet off the ground, firing his guns the whole time. Only one bullet hit the enemy plane, and the pilot bailed out far too close to the ground and crashed. Carr said he scared the German pilot to death and caused him to kill himself.

Upon returning to the airfield, Carr was criticized by his leaders for being "overaggressive." In May, he was transferred to the 353rd Fighter Squadron, 354th Fighter Group, at RAF Lashenden in Kent. Claiming a probable kill over Normandy, France, on June 14, Carr scored his first official credit on June 17, when he assisted another pilot in downing an Focke-Wulf Fw 190. The next day, the squadron transferred to an airfield in France. On August 18, Carr was commissioned as a second lieutenant.

On September 12, Carr's flight strafed several Junkers Ju 88 bombers on an airfield in Germany. Later in that same mission, the flight spotted over 30 Fw 190s approximately 2,000 feet (610 m) below them. Carr personally shot three from the sky before es**rting a fellow pilot, whose aircraft was badly damaged, back to base. Carr was awarded the Silver Star for his actions that day.

On November 2, 1944, Carr took off on a mission and was shot down by flak while strafing ground targets over Czechoslovakia. He bailed out and landed near a Luftwaffe field with the intent of surrendering to the Luftwaffe troops, but it was becoming dark just as he got there. From the trees he watched as two mechanics fueled up an FW 190, and hatched a daring plan to escape by stealing that plane.

Near dawn he snuck out and jumped in the cockpit. Through experimentation, Carr was able to start the plane, and with Luftwaffe personnel already coming out to see what was going on he gunned it across a corner of the field on a path that had him pass between two hangars before he was airborne.

Managing to make it back to his home field in France, Carr was unable to lower the landing gear and was forced to make a belly up landing. Upon landing, he was presumed to be a hostile German pilot by the armed personnel at the airfield, until he was recognised by his group commander George R. Bickel.

On April 2, 1945, First Lieutenant Carr was leading three other aircraft on a reconnaissance mission near Schweinfurt, Germany, when he spotted 60 German fighters flying above them. Despite the enemy having an altitude advantage and outnumbering them, Carr led his flight in an attack and the pilots downed a total of 15 aircraft. Carr personally shot down two Fw 190s, three Bf 109s and damaged a sixth fighter. This feat made Carr the last ace in a day in the European Theater during the war and he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions.

Carr was promoted to captain on April 9, and claimed several more aerial victories that month, claiming two final victories on April 25. Carr flew a total of 172 combat missions during the war, accumulating 14 or 15 confirmed air-to-air victories. He had several more unconfirmed victories and multiple ground kills.

After the war, Carr was assigned to the Acrojets as an F-80 Shooting Star pilot at Williams Air Force Base, Arizona. The Acrojets, which preceded the Thunderbirds, were the United States Air Force's first jet-powered aerobatic demonstration team.[1][2]

Major Carr later flew the F-86 Sabre in 57 combat missions with the 336th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron while stationed at Kimpo (K-14) Air Base in South Korea during the Korean War. He then served as the commanding officer of the 336th at Misawa Air Base in Japan, from January 1955 to August 1956.

On November 3, 1968, Carr was promoted to colonel and deployed to South Vietnam later that month. He was assigned to the 31st Tactical Fighter Wing at Tuy Hoa Air Base. He flew the F-100 Super Sabre in 286 combat missions during the war, which mostly consisted of flying close air support bombing and strafing missions. Carr was awarded the Legion of Merit and three Distinguished Flying Crosses during his deployment, before he rotated back to the United States in November 1969.

Carr retired from the Air Force in 1973. He died of prostate cancer on April 25, 1998, in St. Cloud, Florida, and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

11/03/2024

🇺🇲WWII uncovered: Honoring the Service of First Lieutenant Michael Pohorilla of the 8th Air Force, 385th Bomb Group

“When you’re young, you think you’re invincible. ... Just a few microseconds in combat and you become very, very humble,” - First Lieutenant Michael Pohorilla 2019 Columbus Dispatch interview

"Michael Pohorilla of New Albany Ohio, flew 35 combat missions over German-held territory as a First Lieutenant in the Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress "Sky Goddess" as a navigator in World War II.

Pohorilla was based in Great Britain as a member of the U.S. Army Air Corps’ Eighth Air Force. The 10-man crew on his bomber ranged from 18 to 22 years old, “barely out of high school,” he said. - Columbus Dispatch

Born in Eastern Pennsylvania, Michael Pohorilla was a graduate of Girard College, a college preparatory five-day boarding school located Philadelphia Pennsylvania.

According to the Columbus Dispatch: "His father was a World War I veteran and his two brothers served in the Navy in World War II. At the age of 18 years old Michael went to Army basic training in Miami - followed by several rotations of training on different bases located in the South including the military’s Aviation Cadet Program. He made his first solo flight at Souther Field near Americus, Georgia, and in May 1944 received orders to ship out for England. Mike was based with the 385th Bombardment Group, stationed about 40 miles east of Cambridge."

"First Lieutenant Pohorilla recalled a mission over Leipzig, Germany. The plant was protected by about 500 anti-aircraft cannons when Pohorilla’s unit bombed it in September 1944. When his unit returned in November, he said, the Germans had 1,000 such guns at the site. On the second attack Pohorilla's B-17 lost one of its engines. Due to the engine loss; fuel was being consumed at an accelerated rate. Unable to return to the English Channel and at an altitude too high to bail out, the pilot crash landed the plane in a beet field in Belgium. Due to the fuel being exhausted, the entire crew walked away without injury. The crash occurred on the plane’s 18th mission, which meant the crew was only halfway through its 35-mission tour."

With one exception, the crew on "Sky Goddess" survived the war. One gunner, 18 years old, was flying as a substitute on another B-17 that had gone down with its crew.

After the war Mike returned to Pennsylvania. He earned a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania, becoming a world-renowned petroleum and industrial chemist at Rohm and Haas before retirement. In 1947 he married his wife Ellen and the couple had two sons Mike Jr and Tom.

The Pohorilla family later relocated to New Albany Ohio, where Michael was very active in Veterans Affairs in his community. Serving as a board member of Mott's Military Museum in Groveport Ohio, Mike was dedicated to the preservation of military history and the education of future generations.

First Lieutenant Michael Pohorilla passed away on December 20, 2021 at the age of 97 years old. Michael lies in rest next to his wife Ellen at Arlington National Cemetery.

Please join us in remembering Mike Pohorilla. Rest in peace Mike - You are truly a member of the Greatest Generation. Lest We Forget.



WWII uncovered©️ description and photo sourced by the Columbus Dispatch August 3, 2019 Motts Military Museum, Inc and Legacy Database (Fair Use Photos)

Dieter Dengler (May 22, 1938 – February 7, 2001) was a German-born United States Navy aviator who was shot down over Lao...
09/19/2024

Dieter Dengler (May 22, 1938 – February 7, 2001) was a German-born United States Navy aviator who was shot down over Laos and captured during the Vietnam War. After six months of imprisonment and torture, and 23 days on the run, he became only the second captured US airman to escape during the war. Of the seven prisoners of war who escaped together from the Pathet Lao prison camp in Laos, only he and Thai citizen Phisit Intharathat survived.

Dengler was born and raised in the small town of Wildberg, in the Black Forest region of the German state of Württemberg. His father was drafted into the German Army in 1939 and was killed on the Eastern Front during the winter of 1943/1944. The family lived in extreme poverty; to survive, Dengler and his brothers scavenged scraps and leftovers from slaughtered sheep after neighbors' meals, and pulled down wallpaper adhered with wheatpaste from bombed-out buildings so their mother could boil it for nutrients. He became a blacksmith's apprentice at age 14 and was regularly beaten by the blacksmith and the other apprentices. Dengler later thanked the blacksmith for "his disciplined training," which taught him to be "more capable, self-reliant and... 'tough enough to survive'."

Dengler's maternal grandfather, Hermann Schnürle, refused to vote for Adolf Hi**er and was subsequently paraded around town with a placard around his neck, was spat upon, and was sent to a rock mine to work as a laborer for a year. Dengler later credited his grandfather's resolve as a major inspiration while he was imprisoned in Laos and a factor in his refusal to sign a document penned by North Vietnam condemning American aggression in Southeast Asia.
During World War II, Dengler saw an Allied fighter plane firing its guns as it flew through Wildberg; he credited this as the moment he knew he wanted to be a pilot. Years later, after seeing a call for pilots in an American magazine, he decided to travel to the United States. A family friend agreed to sponsor him and he salvaged brass and other metals to sell so he could pay for the rest of the passage. In 1956, upon turning 18 and completing his apprenticeship, Dengler hitchhiked to Hamburg and spent two weeks living on the street before leaving by ship to New York City. In the US, he spent a week homeless in Manhattan before finding an Air Force recruiter.

He enlisted in June 1957 and attended basic training at Lackland AFB in San Antonio, Texas. He spent the next two years peeling potatoes, then working as a mechanic for a motor pool. His qualifications as a machinist led to an assignment as a gunsmith. He passed the test for aviation cadets but was told that only college graduates were selected to be pilots and his enlistment expired before he was selected for pilot training. After his discharge, Dengler worked with his brother at a bakery near San Francisco. He enrolled in San Francisco City College, then transferred to the College of San Mateo to study aeronautics. After two years of college, he was accepted to the US Navy's Aviation Cadet Training Program. After finishing flight training, he trained as an attack pilot in a Douglas AD Skyraider at the Naval Air Station in Corpus Christi, Texas. He joined the VA-145 squadron while they were on shore duty at the Naval Air Station in Alameda, California. In 1965, the squadron joined the carrier USS Ranger, which left for Vietnam that December. Dengler was initially stationed at Dixie Station in South Vietnam before moving north to Yankee Station.

Part of his training was a Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape program, where he escaped twice from the mock POW camp and was planning a third when the training ended. Because of his experience living in poverty, he knew how to scavenge for food and ate scraps and garbage from the instructors' meals. He reportedly set a record as the only student to gain weight during the course.
A Navy A-1 Skyraider from VA-15 catches a wire during carrier operations.
On February 1, 1966, the day after the carrier began flying missions from Yankee Station, Lieutenant, Junior Grade Dengler left the Ranger with three other aircraft on an interdiction mission against a North Vietnamese truck convoy. The pilots were forced to divert to their secondary target, a road intersection located west of the Mu Gia Pass in Laos, due to thunderstorms. US air operations in Laos at this time were classified. Visibility was poor due to smoke from burning fields and Dengler quickly lost sight of the other planes. After two-and-a-half hours of flying into enemy territory, the right wing was blown off his plane by anti-aircraft fire.

Immediately after being shot down, Dengler smashed his survival radio and hid most of his other survival equipment to keep Vietnamese and Lao search parties from finding it. He was apprehended the next day by Pathet Lao troops. He attempted to escape but was quickly recaptured while drinking from a spring. He was tortured as a punishment for escaping: he was hung upside down by his ankles with a nest of biting ants over his face until he lost consciousness, then suspended in a well overnight so he would drown if he fell asleep. He was also dragged through villages by a water buffalo. When he refused to sign a Pathet Lao document condemning the United States, slivers of bamboo were inserted under his fingernails and into incisions on his body.

Dengler was handed over to the Vietnamese and brought to a prison camp near the village of Par Kung. There, he met Thai prisoners of war Phisit Intharathat, Prasit Promsuwan, and Prasit Thanee; Chinese prisoner Y.C. To; and Americans Eugene DeBruin and Duane W. Martin. Except for Martin, a helicopter pilot in the US Air Force, the other prisoners were civilians employed by Air America, a civilian airline owned by the Central Intelligence Agency. The civilians had all been held by the Pathet Lao for two and a half years by the time Dengler joined them. At night, the men were handcuffed together and shackled to wooden foot blocks, and suffered chronic dysentery.

The other prisoners initially regarded Dengler's thick German accent and American allegiance with suspicion but eventually clued him in on their plans to escape. Shortly after, the group was moved to a new camp ten miles away at Hoi Het. There, the prisoners argued over whether they should attempt escape, with Dengler, Martin, and one of the Thai prisoners in favor of it and Intharathat initially opposed. After several months, during which they survived largely on a single handful of rice a day among the six of them, one of the Thai prisoners overheard the guards talking about shooting the group in the jungle and making it look like an escape attempt. As a result, the men unanimously agreed to try to escape. Their plan was to take over the camp and signal a C-130 Hercules flare ship that made nightly visits to the area. Dengler loosened logs under the hut to allow enough room for them to squeeze through.

On June 29, 1966, while the guards were eating, the prisoners slipped out of their restraints and seized the guards' unattended weapons, which included M1 rifles, Chinese automatic rifles, an American carbine, at least one submachine gun, and an early version of the AK-47. The men split into three groups: Dengler and Martin, DeBruin and To, and Intharathat, Promsuwan, and Thanee. They encountered at least five guards upon escaping the cell. Dengler and Martin began heading towards the Mekong River. With the exception of Intharathat, who was recaptured and later rescued, and DeBruin, who was reportedly recaptured before disappearing in 1968, none of the other prisoners were ever seen again

Dengler and Martin found a fast-flowing river they believed fed into the Mekong and built a raft to escape. They stopped in the evening to rest and tied themselves to trees to avoid being washed away by the torrential water. The next morning, they realized that they had gone in a circle rather than towards the Mekong. They had spotted several villages but remained undetected and eventually set up camp in an abandoned village. Though they had brought rice and were able to scavenge for food, they were still on the verge of starvation and initially lacked the strength to start a fire. Dengler eventually managed to locate Martin's discarded carbine cartridges and used the powder to start the fire. When the C-130 flew overhead that evening, they waved lit torches to signal an SOS. The plane circled and dropped flares but no rescue team turned up. Not long after, Martin was killed by a Akha villager when he was spotted by a child. Dengler escaped when the villager called for backup and evaded capture despite hallucinating vividly due to starvation. He returned to the abandoned village where he and Martin had camped and set the huts on fire to get the attention of the nightly C-130. The plane again dropped flares and though the crew reported their sighting to the Udorn Royal Thai Air Force Base, the fires were not recognized by intelligence as having been a signal from a survivor.

On July 20, 1966, after 23 days in the jungle, Dengler managed to catch the attention of a US Air Force pilot by using a parachute from one of the flares. Eugene Peyton Deatrick, the pilot of the lead plane and commander of the 1st Air Commando Squadron, spotted a flash of white while making a turn at the river's bend and backtracked. Deatrick and his wingman contacted rescue forces, but were told to ignore the sighting, as no airmen were known to be down in the area. He persisted and eventually managed to convince the command and control center to dispatch a rescue force.

Dengler was restrained by the helicopter crew as a precaution and strip searched to ensure he wasn't armed or in possession of a hand gr***de. Deatrick reported Dengler's claim to be a POW and his identity was confirmed when they reached a hospital in Da Nang. There, a conflict developed between the Air Force and Navy over who would control his debriefing and recovery. The Navy sent a team of SEALs to steal Dengler from the Air Force recovery ward. A fight ensued between the SEALs and Air Force security police in which numerous air force personnel, including several patients, were badly beaten and injured. The SEAL team escaped unscathed and rushed Dengler to the air field on a gurney. He was returned to the USS Ranger and eventually airlifted to the US for medical treatment.[citation needed] At the time of his rescue, he stood at 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) and weighed 98 pounds (44 kg

Highest-time A-10 pilot everSeven thousand five hundred hours is 312 and a half days. It’s also a record that will never...
09/08/2024

Highest-time A-10 pilot ever
Seven thousand five hundred hours is 312 and a half days. It’s also a record that will never be beaten. With the clock inching toward midnight on the divestiture of the A-10 Thunderbolt II attack aircraft, there are no pilots close enough in hours behind the “Warthog’s” stick to even come close to the bar set by Lt. Col. John “Karl” Marks.

As told by Mr. Bob Jennings, 442d Fighter Wing Public Affairs, in the article Living legend and highest-time A-10 pilot “Karl” Marks retires, since Marks retired on Aug. 23, 2024, in a ceremony held in the 5-Bay maintenance hangar on Whiteman Air Force Base (AFB), Mo., his name will go down in history as the highest-time A-10 pilot ever.

One of his most memorable deployments was during Operation Desert Storm. On February 25, 1991–at just 26 years old–then-1st. Lt. Marks and flight lead, Capt. Eric “Fish” Solomonson flew a trio of missions over Kuwait and Iraq, destroying 23 Iraqi tanks, using infrared AGM-65 missiles and the infamous GAU-8 cannon. Mission planning 30-years ago consisted of paper maps and cardstock lineup cards. Flying was far less automated and correcting for dive angle and airspeed was a must. Direct hits were annotated with a grease pencil on the inside of the canopy and battle damage assessments were written on the walls of the debrief room upon return. One day, three missions, all ordnance expended – a wildly successful day and campaign for these two attack pilots.

Since then, he’s deployed 12 more times, responding to 48 troops-in-contact situations over 358 combat sorties.

During his 1161 combat hours, Marks expended 39,340 rounds of 30mm ammunition, dropped nearly 350 bombs, and fired 59 Maverick missiles.

Outside of combat, Marks fired another 141,500 rounds, bringing his total to 180,840 30mm rounds.

Marks’s prowess in battle earned him the Distinguished Flying Cross, 18 Air Medals, and 11 Aerial Achievement Medals, among many other citations and awards.

“I’m glad he’s on our side,” said Col. Mike Leonas, the 442d Fighter Wing Commander. “I wouldn’t want to fight him.”

Highest-time A-10 pilot’s legacy
It’s obvious Marks would have preferred at least one more combat deployment.

Retired Major General Brian Borgen, the presiding official, recounted a story from 2002 when Borgen was chosen to deploy as part of a group of four to Afghanistan, but Marks was not. Marks confronted Borgen in the hallway.

“He’s like ‘WTF? Why am I not going?’“ Borgen said. “And he was serious. He was angry at me.”

Marks said he considers it a compliment that Borgen often told him “Karl, we didn’t hire you for your personality.”

Lt. Col. “Karl” Marks leaves a legacy bigger than just total hours in the A-10 and rounds expended, though. Of his 7500 hours, nearly a third – 2480 – were spent in an instructor pilot role, and 598 were evaluator hours, ensuring younger pilots had the training and met the qualifications they needed to go to war – and more importantly, to come back.

Moreover, the number people attending the ceremony spoke to the number of lives Marks touched, and the number of lives he saved, during his 37-year career. Past and present A-10 pilots of all ranks joined family and civilian friends, and even joint terminal attack controllers all the way from Germany to celebrate the culmination of nearly four decades of distinguished service.

The first production A-10A was delivered to Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona, in October 1975. It was designed specifically for the close air support mission and had the ability to combine large military loads, long loiter and wide combat radius, which proved to be vital assets to the United States and its allies during Operation Desert Storm and Operation Noble Anvil.

In the Gulf War, A-10s had a mission capable rate of 95.7%, flew 8,100 sorties and launched 90% of the AGM-65 Maverick missiles.

Compared to today’s aircraft, the A-10 from 1991 seems primitive. Today, the engines are pretty much the same and the basic airframe hasn’t changed much; internally, though, it’s completely upgraded. The targeting pod now integrates with helmet-mounted display allowing not only for flight data to be displayed but also the target, the cannon now has a stabilization system to hold it on target while firing, GPS avionics advancements have led to GPS-guided weapons system integration, and additional systems can now automatically detect and respond to incoming threats with countermeasures.

08/01/2024
One of the most famous examples was Robert Johnson’s P-47.He’d been es**rting bombers, and his flight got bounced by FW1...
08/01/2024

One of the most famous examples was Robert Johnson’s P-47.
He’d been es**rting bombers, and his flight got bounced by FW190s. His plane was literally shot to bits, his canopy shattered and jammed, he couldn’t bail out, his tail was nearly shot away by 20mm cannon hits, his windscreen covered with oil and fluid sprays, and his engine on fire. And he kept flying. The fire, fortunately, flamed out.
An FW190 piloted by the famous ace Egon Mayer looked him over, settled in behind him, then pumped his plane full of lead as Johnson hunkered behind the armor plate, and Johnson tried to throw it off and got it briefly in front of his guns, but missed. The FW190 pulled alongside, saluted him, then fell to the rear again and shot it up some more.
Finally, incredulous that the Thunderbolt was still kicking, the FW190 pilot pulled alongside again, waved at him, appraised the plane yet again, fell behind one more, and shot at him even more from close range. Mayer finally pulled alongside one final time, shook his head in amazement, waggled his wings in salute, then, since he was over the Channel, flew off. He’d run out of ammo.
Johnson discovered his radio was working, got instructions to his base in England, then landed safely despite having no flaps or brakes. His face was burned, he had glass and metal splinters in his hands, he had two bullets in his leg, and a cannon shell had nicked his nose.

His plane had over 200 bullet holes in it with five holes in the propeller blades alone

Johnson was born in Lawton, Oklahoma, on February 21, 1920, the son of an automobile mechanic. In his war memoir, Thunderbolt!, he states that he first developed an interest in military aviation in the summer of 1928, when his father took him to see a United States Army Air Corps barnstorming team, "The Three Musketeers", appearing at Ft. Sill's Post Field. Four years later, Johnson took his first flight, a 15-minute night excursion over Lawton in a Ford Tri-motor.

Johnson was the first USAAF fighter pilot in the European theater to surpass Eddie Rickenbacker's World War I score of 26 victories. He finished his combat tour with 27 kills. He was later credited by the Eighth Air Force claims board with a 28th victory when a "probable" was reassessed as a "destroyed", then reduced back to 27 when a post-war review discovered that the Eighth Air Force had inadvertently switched credits for a kill he made with a double kill made by a fellow 56th Fighter Group pilot, Ralph A. Johnson, on November 26, 1943, a day when Robert Johnson aborted the mission after takeoff. (Their army serial numbers were also nearly identical, O-662216 and O-662217.)

Johnson attended Lawton public schools, was a Boy Scout, and excelled in athletics. For acquiring the skills and aggressiveness he later employed as a fighter pilot, Johnson credited an interest in shooting and hunting small game with a .22 rifle, boxing competitively to learn about controlling fear, and playing high school and junior college football as a blocking guard.

At the age of 11, Johnson began working as a laborer in a Lawton cabinet-making shop, working 8 or more hours daily after school to earn four dollars a week. At 12, he began applying his earnings to flying lessons, soloing after 5 hours and 45 minutes of instruction. He achieved his student license and logged 35 hours in four years of instruction, before suspending his flying lessons because of a newfound interest in girls. While attending Cameron Junior College, Johnson resumed flying in the Civilian Pilot Training Program, and accumulated 100 hours total flight time by his second year. Johnson gave up his full-time job to allow for his varied interests, but continued to hold a series of part-time jobs, including as a firefighter with the Lawton Fire Department.

Aviation cadet
In the summer of 1941, Johnson enlisted as an aviation cadet in the United States Army, and entered the service at Oklahoma City on November 11, 1941, as a member of Class 42F. Pre-Flight training was conducted at Kelly Field, Texas, beginning November 12 and was still in progress when the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor thrust the United States into World War II.

On December 18, 1941, Johnson reported to the Missouri Institute of Aeronautics, a civilian contractor school in Sikeston, Missouri, for Primary Flying Training. His first five hours of the pre-solo training phase were flown in a PT-19A, in which he was instructed in spin recoveries, stalls, and basic turning maneuvers. He then began nearly sixty hours of Primary training in the more agile PT-18 Kaydet, practicing aerobatic maneuvers. All of the training, which included more than 175 landings, was conducted in open-cockpit trainers in the dead of winter.

On January 28, 1942, at the midpoint of Primary, he was forced to switch instructors by the school commander. His new instructor became a flying mentor, for which Johnson wrote: "I shall always be indebted to men like (Phil P.) Zampini...(for their) willingness to turn the fledgling into an eagle." Johnson's classmates in Primary included several pilots who would become fighter pilots with him in the 56th Fighter Group, as well as Frank K. Everest Jr.

In February 1942, the USAAF regulation requiring aviation cadets to be unmarried was rescinded. Johnson married Barbara Morgan (whom he had met in high school) in Benton, Missouri, on February 21 immediately upon completing Primary Flying Training.

North American AT-6 Texan trainer
On February 27, 1942, Johnson began Basic Flying Training at Randolph Field, Texas. As with the other phases of flying training, the 9-week course of instruction included ground school, military training, and intensive flying practice, this time in the North American BT-9. He received 70 hours of instrument, formation, and night flying in March and April 1942. At the conclusion of basic, at the recommendation of his instructors, Johnson requested multi-engine school for his advanced training course.

Johnson began Advanced training at nearby Kelly Field on May 3, 1942. Although in training for transition to bombers, because multi-engine trainers were not yet available his 93.5 hours of Advanced Flying Training were performed in variants of the North American T-6 Texan: the BC-1 basic combat trainer and the AT-6 advanced trainer. Johnson completed his flight training on June 28, and was commissioned July 9, 1942, as a second lieutenant. Although he requested transition training in the Douglas A-20 Havoc, he instead received orders to report to the 56th Fighter Group.

P-47B Thunderbolt
Johnson reported to the group's 61st Fighter Squadron on July 19, 1942, in Bridgeport, Connecticut. The unit had just received the first production P-47B Thunderbolts, and, in effect, was flight testing the new fighter as it trained. While the 56th FG was responsible for many of the modifications that made later variants a successful fighter-bomber, the training resulted in more than forty crashes and 18 fatalities, many of which Johnson blamed on the inadequacy of the small airport at Bridgeport. However, he also asserted that many more lives would have been lost, had not the P-47 proved to have an exceptionally rugged airframe. The P-47 became the first USAAF aircraft to provide an understanding of compressibility and its effects.

The 56th FG was alerted over overseas movement on November 26, 1942, and ceased flying operations in preparation. On December 28 it moved to Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, and on January 6, 1943, sailed from the New York Port of Embarkation aboard the RMS Queen Elizabeth for Scotland. The group arrived on January 13 without aircraft at its first base in the United Kingdom, RAF Kings Cliffe. There it received new P-47C Thunderbolts and trained on them until April, when it began combat operations from a new base at RAF Horsham St Faith.

Johnson, still classified as a bomber pilot, was not officially qualified to fly the P-47 in combat. To rectify that, he was sent to Llanbedr, Wales, on March 10, for a two-week course in gunnery training in which he would fire the Thunderbolt's weapons for the first time. However, bad weather prevented any training flights, and he returned to Kings Cliffe still not qualified. Johnson feared he was losing the confidence of both his group commander, Colonel Hubert Zemke, and his flight leader, Captain Gerald W. Johnson, in his ability to perform as a fighter pilot.

2nd Lt. Johnson flew his first combat mission on April 18, 1943, which was the second mission of the 56th FG. The mission, a fighter sweep over the coast of the Netherlands, proved entirely uneventful. On his return from his first combat sortie, Johnson and four other pilots were sent to RAF Goxhill to complete gunnery training, but because he could not hit the target sleeve until his final day of training, he wrote, he failed to achieve the minimum required percentage of hits and did not officially qualify as a combat pilot.

The 56th experienced its first combat on April 29, losing two planes and pilots, but Johnson was not scheduled for the mission and did not resume missions until May 3. On May 14 he encountered Luftwaffe aircraft for the first time on a mission to es**rt Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses to bomb Antwerp, damaging two Focke-Wulf Fw 190s that had broken up his squadron's formation but becoming separated from the group. Finding himself alone, he broke off the engagement and returned to base to find that he had been erroneously reported as missing in action. On May 19, as part of a diversionary mission, his flight was ambushed by German fighters, but again the inexperienced Johnson was able to elude them.

On June 13, while flying in a flight led by his squadron commander, Major Francis Gabreski, Johnson shot down his first German aircraft (of 10 Staffel, JG 26). The 56th had scored its first confirmed kill just the day before, but had missed an opportunity to achieve a larger victory. As a result, Johnson and his element leader agreed that the pilot spotting the enemy should immediately attack and be supported by the other, regardless of who was leading. Johnson achieved his kill, over an Fw 190, doing just that, but discovered that his element leader had not covered him as agreed. Johnson was reprimanded by Zemke, Gabreski, and Jerry Johnson for breaking formation when the other pilot denied his concurrence. Even so, the kill was confirmed, one of the first among the novice 8th Fighter Command pilots. Johnson received a bottle of Scotch whisky from Major General Carl Spaatz, commanding the 8th Air Force, to mark the occasion.

One of the 56th's worst setbacks occurred on June 26, 1943, when 48 P-47Cs left a forward operating base at RAF Manston late in the afternoon to provide es**rt for B-17 bombers returning from a mission against Villacoublay airfield in the Paris suburbs. As the P-47s approached the rendezvous point near Forges-les-Eaux, they were jumped from above and behind by 16 Focke-Wulf Fw 190s of II Gruppe, JG 26. The first pass scattered the Thunderbolts, and Johnson's aircraft, flying at the rear of the 61st Squadron's formation, was seriously damaged by an Fw 190 fighter which fired 21 20 mm cannon shells into his fuselage which ruptured his hydraulic system. The canopy was shattered, a cannon shot left shrapnel in his leg and a machine gun bullet grazed the tip of his nose. For a while, the flaming P-47 plummeted from the sky, spinning in spirals until Johnson managed to regain control by kicking left rudder to level the wings and pulling back on the stick. The flames went out at this time as well. Burned and partially blinded by hydraulic fluid, Johnson tried to bail out, but his parachute snagged, and the canopy was damaged and would only open about 6 inches. He tried to pry the canopy loose with no success.

After pulling out of the uncontrolled spin and with the fire amazingly going out on its own, Johnson headed for the English Channel but was intercepted by a single Fw 190. The German fighter began pumping rounds into the helpless Thunderbolt. Bullets and cannon shells tore through the fuselage. Johnson jolted every time a shell thumped into the armor plate. Johnson alternatively hit the rudder pedals to throw off the enemy's aim, causing him to overshoot, briefly giving Johnson the advantage. Johnson fired off a couple of rounds before the German looped around to pull up to Johnson's wing. The pilot looked over Johnson's plane, then shook his head in disbelief, then waved at Johnson before getting back behind him to attack again. After another assault of gunfire, the German pilot once again pulled up to Johnson's wing. He waved again before maneuvering to make a final attack. The German manipulated his rudder to move side to side as he fired, spraying Johnson wingtip to wingtip. Unable to fight back, he maneuvered while under a series of attacks, and although sustaining further heavy damage from hundreds of 7.92 mm rounds, managed to survive until the German ran out of ammunition. The German for a final time pulled up to Johnson's wing. He rocked his wings to salute Johnson, then turned back. His opponent was possibly the commander of III/JG 2, Major Egon Mayer. However, this theory remains unverified. After landing, Johnson tried to count the bullet holes in his airplane but gave up after the tally passed 200 – without even moving around the aircraft. He also saw the 20 mm shell that had exploded behind his headrest and jammed his canopy.

Another pilot from the 56th fighter group, Lt. Gerald Johnson, recounted the engagement differently. He saw two Fw 190s chasing Robert Johnson's aircraft, one covering the other. Gerald Johnson shot down the Fw 190 attacking Johnson's aircraft, but did not locate the second aircraft. After Robert Johnson recounted the story to the group, Gerald Johnson kept quiet to avoid "spoiling his glory", but recorded his version in his memoir.

While Johnson made it back to land at Manston, four other pilots of the 56th FG were killed in action. A fifth pilot, Samuel D. Hamilton, able to extend only one of his plane's landing gear struts, had to bail out over the English Channel and was rescued north of Yarmouth. 56 FG suffered two more P-47s damaged beyond repair, one Johnson's, and at least 5 more severely damaged against 9 Jagdwaffe confirmed claims. Johnson suffered shrapnel wounds and minor burns to his face, hands, and legs, and was awarded the Purple Heart. He resumed flying missions on July 1.

As the 56th Group gained experience, its success in aerial combat improved dramatically, beginning with 17 Luftwaffe fighters shot down on August 17 while es**rting bombers attacking Regensburg and Schweinfurt. Johnson, promoted to first lieutenant in July, got his second kill on August 19 over the Netherlands when he exploded a Messerschmitt Bf 109, but scheduling often left him on the ground on days when the 56th scored high.

That situation changed in early October when a week of deep pe*******on es**rt missions resulted in a multiplicity of victories for the 56th FG. On October 8 Johnson, assigned as Jerry Johnson's wingman on an es**rt mission to Bremen, shot down an Fw 190 that was attacking another P-47. Two days later, covering bombers as they withdrew from Münster, his squadron engaged an estimated 40 fighters intercepting the bombers. In a prolonged and vicious dogfight Johnson shot down a Messerschmitt Bf 110 and one of its Fw 190 es**rts, but suffered severe battle damage himself. Both he and 56th deputy commander Major David C. Schilling became aces on that date, becoming the fourth and fifth pilots of the Eighth Air Force to achieve the feat.

Johnson had become an ace while flying primarily as a wingman and overcame a reputation among his commanders for being a "lone wolf" who went off on his own from his squadron. On November 26, 1943, however, Johnson was advanced to flight lead, although on his first mission in that capacity he was forced by a fuel leak to turn back to base shortly after takeoff. Between December 22, 1943, and January 5, 1944, Johnson was the only member of his squadron to score victories, shooting down five German fighters.

In February 1944 the 56th FG began employing 150-gallon drop tanks on missions, enabling them to es**rt heavy bombers to the target area on deep pe*******on missions. The 56th was assigned a patrol sector west of Hanover in the vicinity of Dümmer Lake, and there on four missions in February and March Johnson shot down eight more German planes to become the leading U.S. ace at the time.[8] Johnson's 200-hour combat tour was nearly over and he applied for and was granted a 25-hour extension of his tour. Promoted to captain on March 15, he scored three more victories before being transferred to the 62nd Fighter Squadron to act as its operations officer (S-3).

He was promoted to major on May 1, 1944, and on the last mission of his extended tour, recorded his final kills on 8 May 1944, when he broke Rickenbacker's record. He returned to the United States on June 6, 1944. Johnson flew a total of 89 combat missions between April 1943 and May 1944.

Johnson had four aircraft assigned to him during combat operations. His crew chief in the 61st FS was S/Sgt. Ernest D. "Pappy" Gould, and in the 62nd FS, Sgt. J.C. Penrod. Per Roger Freeman, all of Johnson's aerial victories are believed to have occurred while flying these aircraft:

P-47C-2-RE Half-Pint HV : P a/c serial 41-6235 (damaged on June 26, 1943, repaired, sent to 9th AF[10]), one victory
P-47D-5-RE Lucky HV : P a/c serial 42-8461 (crashed March 22, 1944, in bad weather while being flown by another pilot), 21 victories
P-47D-15-RE All Hell HV : P a/c serial 42-76234, 3 victories
P-47D-21-RA Penrod and Sam LM : Q a/c serial 42-25512, 2 victories. This plane was named after Booth Tarkington's boys' novel of the same name, matching Johnson's crew chief's surname (Penrod) and his own middle name (Samuel)

Command pilot
Distinguished Service Cross
Silver Star
Silver oak leaf clusterBronze oak leaf clusterBronze oak leaf clusterBronze oak leaf cluster Distinguished Flying Cross with silver and three bronze oak leaf clusters
Purple Heart
Bronze oak leaf clusterBronze oak leaf clusterBronze oak leaf cluster Air Medal with three bronze oak leaf clusters
Air Force Presidential Unit Citation
American Defence Service Medal
American Campaign Medal
Silver starBronze star European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal with silver and bronze campaign stars
World War II Victory Medal
National Defense Service Medal
Korean Service Medal
Air Force Longevity Service Ribbon
Armed Forces Reserve Medal with bronze hourglass device
Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom)
United Nations Korea Medal
Korean War Service Medal

Johnson, Robert S.
Captain (Air Corps), U.S. Army Air Forces
61st Fighter Squadron, 56th Fighter Group, 8th Air Force
Date of Action: March 15, 1944
Citation:
The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress July 9, 1918, takes pleasure in presenting the Distinguished Service Cross to Captain (Air Corps) Robert Samuel Johnson, United States Army Air Forces, for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations against an armed enemy while serving as Pilot of a P-47 Fighter Airplane in the 61st Fighter Squadron, 56th Fighter Group, EIGHTH Air Force, in aerial combat against enemy forces on 15 March 1944. On this date, Captain Johnson courageously led a flight of fighter airplanes in a determined attack against a numerically superior and well-supported force of enemy fighters attempting to intercept a friendly bomber formation. Although more than thirty enemy fighters were in a favorable position above him, Captain Johnson, mindful only of his duty to protect the bombers, without hesitation, led his flight of nine planes in an attack on another formation of more than forty enemy fighters then about to engage the bombers. During the engagement that followed, he personally destroyed three enemy fighters. By his extraordinary courage, his aggressiveness, and his determination to destroy the enemy and protect the bombers, Captain Johnson rendered valorous and distinguished service to our nation. Captain Johnson's unquestionable valor in aerial combat is in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service and reflects great credit upon himself, the 8th Air Force, and the United States Army Air Forces

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