Fighting in a Fiord

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MIflyer

1st Lieutenant
7,062
14,491
May 30, 2011
Cape Canaveral
On 9 Feb 1945 a force of 30 Beaufighters from 144, 404, 455, and 498 squadrons along with 10 Mustangs from 65 Squadron set out to attack German naval ships in Forde Fjord in Norway. The ships were about 15 miles up the fjord from the coast. Normally they would have attacked by flying from East to West but steep rising terrain to the East ruled that out. So they overflew the fjord and attacked from the North, thereby giving the Germans almost 30 minutes of warning to get ready and scramble fighters.

The team of Percy Smith, Observer, and Spike Holly, pilot attacked a ship, watched a Beaufighter next to them explode and then were shot down by an FW-190, with Smith blazing away with his Browning and badly wounded. They both became POWs at Stalag Luft 1. The FW-190 pilot Rudy Linz, who had 69 victories, was shot down and killed by one of the Mustangs.

Flight Sgts Butler an Nichol were on their first anti-shipping mission. They were hit, which knocked out their hydraulics and splashed so much fluid over the windshield the pilot could hardly see to fly. An FW-190 attacked but broke off after Nicholl fired a red Very flare and the Mustangs responded. They climbed through clouds, came out on top, and were a bit surprised to find that while hit they were unhurt and with two good engines. They made a belly landing at Dallachy.

The raid failed to do significant damage to the German ships and cost 9 Beaufighters, with only 5 surviving crew from those shot down. The Germans lost 5 fighters. It was the most costly shipping strike of the entire war.

I suppose that if we made a movie about this we could call it "455 Squadron" or perhaps "Ill-Starred Wars."
 
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On 9 Feb 1945 a force of 30 Beaufighters from 144, 404, 455, and 498 squadrons along with 10 Mustangs from 65 Squadron set out to attack German naval ships in Forde Fjord in Norway. The ships were about 15 miles up the fjord from the coast. Normally they would have attacked by flying from East to West but steep rising terrain to the East ruled that out. So they overflew the fjord and attacked from the North, thereby giving the Germans almost 30 minutes of warning to get ready and scramble fighters.

The team of Percy Smith, Observer, and Spike Holly, pilot attacked a ship, watched a Beaufighter next to them explode and then were shot down by an FW-190, with Smith blazing away with his Browning and badly wounded. They both became POWs at Stalag Luft 1. The FW-190 pilot Rudy Linz, who had 69 victories, was shot down and killed by one of the Mustangs.

Flight Sgts Butler an Nichol were on their first anti-shipping mission. They were hit, which knocked out their hydraulics and splashed so much fluid over the windshield the pilot could hardly see to fly. An FW-190 attacked but broke off after Nicholl fired a red Very flare and the Mustangs responded. They climbed through clouds, came out on top, and were a bit surprised to find that while hit they were unhurt and with two good engines. They made a belly landing at Dallachy.

The raid failed to do significant damage to the German ships and cost 9 Beaufighters, with only 5 surviving crew from those shot down. The Germans lost 5 fighters. It was the most costly shipping strike of the entire war.

I suppose that if we made a movie about this we could call it "455 Squadron" or perhaps "Ill-Starred Wars."
Another worthy action by 455 Sqn was an incident some 60 miles up the fjiords when a shell hit the top left of the windscreen of the Beaufighter Steve Sykes was flying. Sykes left arm was hanging uselessly, he still had control and his Nav was un-injured and able to work the radio. Another Beau took the lead for Sykes to follow; he had 13 wounds and a fractured arm. The Nav's life was absolutely tied to that of his pilot. Their destination was RAF Sumburgh a one-way airfield 250'up a sea cliff - all landings to the west; all takeoffs to the East. they were led by one of their Beaufighters, Sykes made the 2 hour flight with the Nav keeping him awake. It was a successful wheels-up landing. He was in hosp for a couple of months after 04 Apr 1945 - at Sumburgh. One extra item of interest was the Beau Observers headgear. There was insufficient space for a steel helmet, the observer had a leather helmet with hard steel ribs in pockets so it was a bit flexible. There was at least one incident of a Beau's prop taking out the Navigator''s glass bubble.

The Old Man had a burning Beau land wheels-up at Leuchars, coming to rest beside an airfield picket. the Observer jumped clear and seeing the picket called "Get my Skipper out. The picket was none too bright and couldn't read the instructions. He rammed his 0.303 through the Pilot's side window, little fames were licking along, the pilot now with a broken jaw, was dragged clear.

The picket was reportedly given 7 days confinement and the Military Medal. No I can't prove a word of it! Just a 455 Sqn legend.

Hampdemon
 
The book Beaufighter Boys has numerous accounts of Beaufighter ant-shipping actions in the Med. Turns out it was a very good anti-shipping aircraft not only due to its durability but also because the pilot probably had the best view ever devised forward and down, if not much in any other direction. They could get very, very, low over the water. You'd probably have to switch to helicopters to find as good and as bad a view as a Beau. The observer could see many things the pilot could not and did not always find it a good idea to mention it all.

It brings to mind that night fighter pilot's summation:

"It's a good thing it was dark because if we'd been able to see what was really going on it would have been bloody terrifying."
 
On 9 Feb 1945 a force of 30 Beaufighters from 144, 404, 455, and 498 squadrons along with 10 Mustangs from 65 Squadron set out to attack German naval ships in Forde Fjord in Norway. The ships were about 15 miles up the fjord from the coast. Normally they would have attacked by flying from East to West but steep rising terrain to the East ruled that out. So they overflew the fjord and attacked from the North, thereby giving the Germans almost 30 minutes of warning to get ready and scramble fighters.

The team of Percy Smith, Observer, and Spike Holly, pilot attacked a ship, watched a Beaufighter next to them explode and then were shot down by an FW-190, with Smith blazing away with his Browning and badly wounded. They both became POWs at Stalag Luft 1. The FW-190 pilot Rudy Linz, who had 69 victories, was shot down and killed by one of the Mustangs.

Flight Sgts Butler an Nichol were on their first anti-shipping mission. They were hit, which knocked out their hydraulics and splashed so much fluid over the windshield the pilot could hardly see to fly. An FW-190 attacked but broke off after Nicholl fired a red Very flare and the Mustangs responded. They climbed through clouds, came out on top, and were a bit surprised to find that while hit they were unhurt and with two good engines. They made a belly landing at Dallachy.

The raid failed to do significant damage to the German ships and cost 9 Beaufighters, with only 5 surviving crew from those shot down. The Germans lost 5 fighters. It was the most costly shipping strike of the entire war.

I suppose that if we made a movie about this we could call it "455 Squadron" or perhaps "Ill-Starred Wars."
The Mustangs were piloted by Free Polish. Not sure which action it came from but in the Aust War Memorial Museum is a ship's mast top - extracted from the leading edge of a Beaufighter wing (flying below mast-top height - Hampdemon
 
Just looked up Stephen Sykes Stephen Joseph Sykes DSO DFC (1920-1957) | WikiTree FREE Family Tree Pretty incredible stories - 2-3 hour flight from Norway to Shetland with a right arm broken and bleeding, shrapnel from a 20mm shell hit on the top left corner of his windscreen. His Nav could reach around him to lower flaps and undercart. I suspect Shetland could be nasty, built on cliff edge jutting out to the East 230' above S/L with a downhill run to the edge.
 
The Mustangs were piloted by Free Polish. Not sure which action it came from but in the Aust War Memorial Museum is a ship's mast top - extracted from the leading edge of a Beaufighter wing (flying below mast-top height - Hampdemon
It wasn't the Poles providing the escort on 9th Feb 1945 "Black Friday". As noted the Mustangs came from 65 squadron RAF.

On 1 Nov 1944 the Poles of 315 squadron had moved north from Coltishall in Norfolk to Peterhead, north of Aberdeen, to provide escorts to the Mosquitos and Beaufighters of the Banff & Dallachy strike wings of Coastal Command. They returned south to Andrews Field, Essex on 15 Jan 1945. They were joined by the Mustangs of 309 Polish squadron for a month Nov/Dec 1944.

315's place at Peterhead was taken by 65 squadron with Mustangs between 16 Jan and 6 May 1945.

On 1 May 1945 122 squadron flew its Mustangs north from Andrews Field to Peterhead. It remained in the north of Scotland, flying from several bases, until renumbered as 41 squadron on 1 April 1946, as part of post-war RAF reorganisation.

234 squadron with Mustangs also flew north to Peterhead the same day, 1 May 1945, from its base at Bentwaters and stayed until July.

611 also took its Mustangs north to Peterhead on the 7th May 1945 where it disbanded on 15 Aug.


The reinforcement at the beginning of May 1945 related to Operation Doomsday, the preoccupation of Norway by units flown in by Dakota.

 
Okay, this Mustang is from 315 Sdgn.

BeauandMustangCROP.jpg
 
According to the book about the no.315 Polish Squadron RAF they were moved to the Andrews Field on October 10, 1944 and on October 30, 1944 to the Peterhead airfield. On December 6 and 7, 1944 the squadron participated in escorting flights of the "Roadstead" operation. On Dec. 6 the Mustang III PK-U (HB833) flown by /Lt. Jerzy Schmidt was lost during escorting of the 18 Beaufighters and on 7 Dec. the F/O Andrzej Czerwiński and his Mustnag III PK-C (HB857). On Dec. 23 1944 the Mustang flown by F/O Tadeusz Lubicz-Lisowski was lost during the escort mission. In January 1945 the suadron flew 4 more escort flights to Norway and then returned the Andrews Field on January 16, 1945.
 

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