Quote:
Originally Posted by aquarya
Ace of the Eighth, p. 122 - "The 358th had a good day on March 2 when they encountered two FW-190's near Charleroi and three Me-109's near Liege. The 190s were diving away when 1st Lt. Walt Gresham managed to hit the leader with a long-range, high deflection shot that blew up the aircraft and killed the pilot. Lieutenant Roscoe Fussel and Lt. Larry Dudley caught up with the other 190 and took turns getting hits on it until the pilot bailed out. It was later established, with gun-camera film and the recollections of the wingman who bailed out, that the FW-190 destroyed by Gresham was piloted by the great German ace Egon Mayer, the Luftwaffe's top B-17 killer."
I also have questions/concerns.
1) Apparently, only Mayer was lost, so who was this wingman who supposedly parachuted out, and why isn't he named in the book, if the evidence turns on his testimony?
2) I just pulled the gun cam footage of Walter Gresham at NARAII - incredibly it has survived - it shows a FW190 flying peacefully in a curve ahead - and although the camera shakes as Gresham fires burst after burst after burst no strikes can be seen, no fire, no smoke, no explosion, nothing, absolutely nothing. The plane does NOT take any violent evasive action but does seem to steepen its curve, which means that it is quite possible that the pilot is incapacitated, or is extremely inexperienced, but there is no explosion. The plane is far too far away to determine any unit markings. I could hardly believe that Mayer would continue to curve left when an American P-47 is approaching and shooting him from the left rear.
JG2 eyewitnesses found Mayer dead in an unburned plane which had crashed for unknown reasons. He had no visibly apparent bullet/shrapnel wounds.
The time/location discrepancies, description of explosion, plus the question about the wingman and the lack of apparent kill on the gun cam footage casts a long shadow over this account by Norman Fortier.
If you would like me to send you a copy of the gun cam footage video, please pm me.
All my best,
heather
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I'm not sure you have the correct footage. In the gun camera film I have (somewhere) from the original film copied to VHS, the FW 190 is in a diving left turn, pulling G's, and Gresham's burst hit the 20mm ammo (by the location and subsequent explosion) which blew off the 190's left wing (~50%). The 190 snap rolled left, nearly corrected, but couldn't sustain it and the 190 continued to snap roll left out of control.
I interviewed Colonel Gresham in 1978 concerning this action. He was unaware that his victory credit was being associated with Egon Meyer but his recollection was that the pursuit went to the Fumars area, starting from southeast of Charleroi and moving northeast.