Robert Johnson

£75.00£170.00

Robert Johnson, one of the USAAF’s highest-scoring fighter aces, flew the fearsome, all-powerful P-47 Thunderbolt fighter from January 1943 until May 1944. Based with the 61st Fighter Squadron at Halesworth, England – a member of the elite ‘Zemke’s Wolf Pack’ – Johnson flew the heavily contested long-range fighter escort missions, and on March 6, 1944, led two squadrons of P-47s escorting B-17 Fortresses on their first daylight raid over the German capital,  Berlin.

Intercepted by gaggles of Fw190, ferocious dogfights developed, despite which the Eighth lost 69 bombers on that historic raid.  Robert Johnson took part in 91 combat missions, was hit five times by enemy fire, was never shot down, and became the first American ace to exceed Richenbacker’s WWI record of 26 enemy aircraft destroyed in Europe. Flying alongside Gabreski and other great American fighter pilots, Johnson ended his war a Major with 27 victories.

SKU: MSA-00007 Categories: ,

Description

Robert Samuel Johnson (February 21, 1920 – December 27, 1998) was a fighter pilot with the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) during World War II. He is credited with scoring 27 victories during the conflict flying a Republic P-47 Thunderbolt.

Johnson was the first USAAF fighter pilot in the European theatre to surpass Eddie Rickenbacker’s World War I score of 26 victories. He finished his combat tour with 27 kills.

He was later credited by the Eighth Air Force claims board with a 28th victory when a “probable” was reassessed as a “destroyed”, then reduced back to 27 when a post-war review discovered that the Eighth Air Force had inadvertently switched credits for a kill he made with a double kill made by a fellow 56th Fighter Group pilot, Ralph A. Johnson, on November 26, 1943, a day when Robert Johnson aborted the mission after takeoff. (Their army serial numbers were also nearly identical, O-662216 and O-662217.)

 

Additional information

Dimensions 45 × 30 cm
Print Type

Framed, Framed – Rivet, Unframed

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