View Single Post
  #2  
Old 15th March 2018, 10:19
Laurent Rizzotti Laurent Rizzotti is offline
Alter Hase
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Paris, France
Posts: 2,932
Laurent Rizzotti will become famous soon enough
Re: MUSTANG LOSS 10 OCT 44

Here is what I have on the Mustang loss (and its victim that day):
"When construction of the Graf Zeppelin was resumed in 1942 the Ju 87C took over the role as a reconnaissance bomber, and torpedo bombers were no longer seen to be needed. Nine of the existing Fi 167 were sent to a coastal naval squadron in the Netherlands and then returned to Germany in the summer of 1943. After that they were sold to Croatia, where their short-field and load-carrying abilities (under the right conditions, the aircraft could descend almost vertically) made it ideal for transporting ammunition and other supplies to besieged Croatian Army garrisons between their arrival in September 1944 and the end of the War.

During one such mission, near Sisak on 10 October 1944, the Fi 167 WNr 4808 of the Croatian Air Force flown by eight-victories Croat ace Bozidar Bartulovic and his gunner Mate Jurkovic was attacked by five P-51 Mustang III of 213 Sqn RAF. Jurkovic had the distinction of claiming one of the Mustangs shot down - possibly one of the last bi-plane "kills" of the war - before itself being shot down. Bartulovic reported that five fighters made two passses on him, setting the aircraft alight and wounding him in the head. Both Croat men bailed out.

Three pilots of 213 Sqn, Sqn Ldr Clifford Vs, Sgt W E Mould and Sgt D E Firman claimed a single-engined biplane shot down over Martinska Ves but the Mustang III KH554 of Sgt W.E. Mould was hit by the return fire and was wrecked in a crash-landing 3 miles northeast Martinska Ves, Yugoslavia.

Source:
http://forum.12oclockhigh.net/archiv...hp?t-2979.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fieseler_Fi_167
http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/...ses/losses.htm (no more online)
http://home.att.net/~jbaugher/1944_1.html
"Osprey Aircraft of the Aces 49: Croatian Aces of World War 2", by Boris Ciglic. ISBN 1-84176-435-3
http://maps.google.fr/maps?hl=fr&q=Martinska%20Ves%20Croatie"

Mould survived but I have no idea what happened to him after force landing. The loss list above does not show him as a POW, so I guess he evaded capture or landed in partisan-held country.
Reply With Quote