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Old 11th May 2013, 15:06
paal naess paal naess is offline
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Re: 333 Sqn 11 Jun 44

According to a book about 333, Engebrigtsen's service no. was 7160. He appears to be born in 1916, I cannot find anything more than that. He survived the war, went on to study law. For many years he worked for NORAD (not the US defence thingy but the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation, in Sri Lanka. He wrote his book Seirens bitre frukter (lit. The bitter fruits of victory), an anti war book, in 1991. It goes into this incident in detail. Regarding a comment above that Jonassen went down with the plane; that is NOT correct. Jonassen was alive and floating with Engebrigtsen, but must have drifted away. When Engebrigtsen was rescued, he remembers saying he was right next to him, but the rescuers could not find him. According to the book, the court martial was 8 weeks after the incident. The Spitfire pilot was a New Zealander, and had been in stockade since the shooting. He lost rank and was sent back to NZ.

Odd Gjestrum Jonassen's service no. was 0040, according to the 333 book. He was born October 3. 1918 in Larvik. When they were shot down, they were flying their 26. mission together, according to Engebrigtsen.
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