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Old 28th June 2010, 09:24
biltongbru biltongbru is offline
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Help with RAF patrol on Calais 26 May 1940

In an interview with a stuka pilot recently he claimed that they were attacked by RAF Spitfires while diving on targets in Calais 26 May 1940 and that the Spitfires joined in the dive in an attempt to shoot the stukas down but some of the spitfires could not pull out of the dive and crashed to the ground. Please see conversation below on the Axis forum.

Is it possible that someone can maybe help to see if the reports from the RAF match with the account of the stuka pilot Heinz Migeod?

1) Were there any British patrols on that day to Calais?
2) If so what time was this patrol in Calais?
2) If so what kind of aircraft; Spitfires or Hurricanes?
3) If so, did they report sightings of Ju-87's in the Calais region?
4) Did they experience any losses that day?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Thomas H View Post
Thank you very much for this upload, very interesting!

Smart order by his commander. Maybe someone here can put a date to this event and conform the number of Spitfires lost in this encounter.

3) Stuka targets in France
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g4Rv63_X7jY

Best regards,

Thomas


Quote:
Originally Posted by biltongbru View Post
Thanks for the complement.

I asked Heinz today about this mission and he said again it happened when they flew a mission to Calais.

I had a look in his Flugbuch and found that he flew this mission on 26 May 1940 on Calais "Zitadelle" whatever that means. They took off at 8:40 and landed at 10:30. So I presume they should have been in Calais at about 9:30 in the morning.



If one can maybe establish from the Allied point of view the following:

1) Were there any British patrols on that day to Calais?
2) If so what time was this patrol in Calais?
2) If so what kind of aircraft; Spitfires or Hurricanes?
3) If so, did they report sightings of Ju-87's in the Calais region?
4) Did they experience any losses that day?

I think that it will not be easily reported that one of your own aircraft accidently dove into the ground but maybe just reported as missing (I could be totally wrong here)

We all know today that squadron reports were always a bit exaggerated from both sides: 4 enemy planes downed can easily be 1 or 2 , we must not forget that.

I have no experience to trace the whereabouts of the RAF squadrons on that particular day but I am sure someone in the forum has the resources to get this information?
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