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#1
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![]() Just posting this as I think it may be of interest to some of you good folks. Apologies for posting this way, I'm still trying to get my head around my newish PC and its assorted programs. This clipping, which is from the UK's Sunday Express newspaper dated 28.4.74., I found inside a book that had been "lost" for more years than I can recall. So now we know, the Ju 88 was really a WW1 a/c vbg ~~ Dingo ;~) |
#2
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![]() "Dingo" wrote in message ... Just posting this as I think it may be of interest to some of you good folks. Apologies for posting this way, I'm still trying to get my head around my newish PC and its assorted programs. This clipping, which is from the UK's Sunday Express newspaper dated 28.4.74., I found inside a book that had been "lost" for more years than I can recall. So now we know, the Ju 88 was really a WW1 a/c vbg ~~ Dingo ;~) "British knowledge of German airborne interception radar was greatly enhanced when, literally out of the blue, a Lichtenstein-equipped Ju 88R-1 D5+EV, landed at the RAF station at Dyce, Aberdeen. The pilot was Oberleutnant Heinrich Schmitt, a veteran of the Spanish Civil War and the Battle of Britain, the radar operator Oberfeldwebel Paul Rosenberger, and the flight mechanic Oberfeldwebel Erich Kantwill, and they had planned their flight to the British Isles and their defection very carefully. Members of 10./NJG 3 stationed at Grove in Denmark, they had been temporarily detached to the airfield at Kristiansund on the southern coast of Norway in response to a requirement voiced by Hitler that the nightly RAF courier flight between Stockholm and London should be intercepted and shot down. At about 15:30 hrs. on 9 May 1943 the Ju 88 took off, ostensibly for a routine airtest, and shortly afterwards the radio operator, in accordance with their plan, transmitted an SOS message to the effect that there was an engine on fire and they were ditching in the sea. Air-sea rescue machines sent off in response to the distress call found floating rubber dinghies, but understandably no sigh of the aircraft itself." From: The Other Battle Luftwaffe Night Aces Versus Bomber Command By: Peter Hinchliffe |
#3
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So, why did they do it? Dyed in the wool anti-fascists, or just a crew
tired of the war and the probability of getting killed? There surely is more to the story than this, intriguing though it is. Brian |
#4
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![]() "Robert Sveinson" wrote in message ... "Dingo" wrote in message ... Just posting this as I think it may be of interest to some of you good folks. Apologies for posting this way, I'm still trying to get my head around my newish PC and its assorted programs. This clipping, which is from the UK's Sunday Express newspaper dated 28.4.74., I found inside a book that had been "lost" for more years than I can recall. So now we know, the Ju 88 was really a WW1 a/c vbg ~~ Dingo ;~) "British knowledge of German airborne interception radar was greatly enhanced when, literally out of the blue, a Lichtenstein-equipped Ju 88R-1 D5+EV, landed at the RAF station at Dyce, Aberdeen. The pilot was Oberleutnant Heinrich Schmitt, a veteran of the Spanish Civil War and the Battle of Britain, the radar operator Oberfeldwebel Paul Rosenberger, and the flight mechanic Oberfeldwebel Erich Kantwill, and they had planned their flight to the British Isles and their defection very carefully. Members of 10./NJG 3 stationed at Grove in Denmark, they had been temporarily detached to the airfield at Kristiansund on the southern coast of Norway in response to a requirement voiced by Hitler that the nightly RAF courier flight between Stockholm and London should be intercepted and shot down. At about 15:30 hrs. on 9 May 1943 the Ju 88 took off, ostensibly for a routine airtest, and shortly afterwards the radio operator, in accordance with their plan, transmitted an SOS message to the effect that there was an engine on fire and they were ditching in the sea. Air-sea rescue machines sent off in response to the distress call found floating rubber dinghies, but understandably no sigh of the aircraft itself." From: The Other Battle Luftwaffe Night Aces Versus Bomber Command By: Peter Hinchliffe Thanks, Robert, for the extra detail. I'll have to try and find some time to do a bit of digging on this subject in respect to the a/c's crew. There is reference to this incident at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junkers_Ju_88 Cheers, Dingo ;-) |
#5
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![]() "Brian O'Neill" wrote in message g.com... So, why did they do it? Dyed in the wool anti-fascists, or just a crew tired of the war and the probability of getting killed? There surely is more to the story than this, intriguing though it is. Brian It's got me wondering to, Brian. I also wonder why the newspaper ran that item at the time ~ 1974. ~~ Dingo |
#6
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![]() "Dingo" wrote in message ... "Brian O'Neill" wrote in message g.com... So, why did they do it? Dyed in the wool anti-fascists, or just a crew tired of the war and the probability of getting killed? There surely is more to the story than this, intriguing though it is. Brian It's got me wondering to, Brian. I also wonder why the newspaper ran that item at the time ~ 1974. There was a load of stuff that never came to light until the nineteen seventies, like Station X in Bletchley and Ultra. My guess is that this would have been the thirty-year rule. |
#7
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"Dingo" wrote in
This clipping, which is from the UK's Sunday Express newspaper dated 28.4.74., I found inside a book that had been "lost" for more years than I can recall. So now we know, the Ju 88 was really a WW1 a/c vbg ~~ Dingo ;~) This "hijacking" was detailed in R.V. Jones book "Most Secret War" published in 1978 (pages 327-330 of the 1998 edition) According to the text, the 3 man crew was ordered to shootdown the Civil courier flyight from Scotland to Stockholm, and since they little sympathy with the Nazis decided to defect.they were escorted to Dyce, and debriefed. with British preforming extensive evaluations of the radar and the aircraft.. |
#8
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![]() "Dingo" wrote in message ... "Robert Sveinson" wrote in message ... "Dingo" wrote in message ... Just posting this as I think it may be of interest to some of you good folks. Apologies for posting this way, I'm still trying to get my head around my newish PC and its assorted programs. This clipping, which is from the UK's Sunday Express newspaper dated 28.4.74., I found inside a book that had been "lost" for more years than I can recall. So now we know, the Ju 88 was really a WW1 a/c vbg ~~ Dingo ;~) "British knowledge of German airborne interception radar was greatly enhanced when, literally out of the blue, a Lichtenstein-equipped Ju 88R-1 D5+EV, landed at the RAF station at Dyce, Aberdeen. The pilot was Oberleutnant Heinrich Schmitt, a veteran of the Spanish Civil War and the Battle of Britain, the radar operator Oberfeldwebel Paul Rosenberger, and the flight mechanic Oberfeldwebel Erich Kantwill, and they had planned their flight to the British Isles and their defection very carefully. Members of 10./NJG 3 stationed at Grove in Denmark, they had been temporarily detached to the airfield at Kristiansund on the southern coast of Norway in response to a requirement voiced by Hitler that the nightly RAF courier flight between Stockholm and London should be intercepted and shot down. At about 15:30 hrs. on 9 May 1943 the Ju 88 took off, ostensibly for a routine airtest, and shortly afterwards the radio operator, in accordance with their plan, transmitted an SOS message to the effect that there was an engine on fire and they were ditching in the sea. Air-sea rescue machines sent off in response to the distress call found floating rubber dinghies, but understandably no sigh of the aircraft itself." From: The Other Battle Luftwaffe Night Aces Versus Bomber Command By: Peter Hinchliffe Thanks, Robert, for the extra detail. I'll have to try and find some time to do a bit of digging on this subject in respect to the a/c's crew. I posted my stuff before I saw part II of your photos. I do hope that there was some extra knowledge in mine. There is reference to this incident at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junkers_Ju_88 Cheers, Dingo ;-) |
#9
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Thanks for the info on this! I've visited teh RAF museum at Hendon, and
it's nice to know where the Ju-88 came from. Interesting, isn't it, that a Spanish Civil War veteran finally got a belly full of Hitler when ordered to shoot down an unarmed courier aircraft. Brian |
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