Lawrence Thompson meets Hartmann's G-14
".... this was my first major dogfight I had in the war, in January
1945. I was flying a P-51D and we were supposed to meet with bombers over
Romania. Well, the bombers never showed up! and we kept circling
and wasting our fuel. When we were low on fuel the squadron leader orders
us back to base, with the top group at 24,000 feet and the four bait Mustangs
ordered to 15,000 feet. Now you might not really think about it,
but the difference in altitude, 9,000 feet, is almost two miles, and assuming
that the top flight could dive and rescue the 'bait' airplanes, it
might take a full sixty seconds or more for the top group to come
to the rescue. A heck of alot can happen in sixty seconds. Earlier, I requested
to fly in the bait section believing that I'd have a better chance
to get some scores (at that time I had no victories either) and this
was my seventh mission. I have to say now that I grew up in Kansas City,
Kansas, and my older brother flew a Jenny biplane in the late 1930s,
so I learned the basics of flying even before joining the Army. So we're
all heading back to Italy when, all of a sudden, a dozen or so e109's bounce
us. From one moment it's a clear blue sky, next moment there are dozens'
of tracers passing my cockpit. I'm hit several times and I roll over to
the right, and below me is an P-51, heading for the deck, with an Me109
chasing him. I begin to chase the Me109. All this time I believe there
was another Me109 chasing me! It was a racetrack, all four
of us were racing for the finish line! Eventually I caught up with
the first Me109 and I fired a long burst at about 1,000 yards, to no effect.
Then I waited until about 600 yards, I fired two very long bursts, probably
five seconds each (P-51 has ammo for about 18 seconds of continuous bursts
for four machine guns, the remaining two machine guns will shoot for about
24 sec-onds). I noticed that part of his engine cowling flew off and he
immediately broke off his attack on the lead P-51. I check my rear view
mirrors and there's nothing behind me now; somehow, I have managed to lose
the Me109 following me, probably because the
diving speed of the P-51 is sixty mph faster than the Me109. So I pull
up on the yoke and level out;
suddenly a Me109 loomes about as large as a barn door right in front
of me! And he fires his guns at me, and he rolls to the right, in a Lufberry
circle. I peel off, following this Me109. I can see silver P-51s and black
nosed camouflaged painted Me109s everywhere I look, there's Me109 or P-51
everywhere! At this time I cannot get on the transmitter and talk, everyone
else in the squadron is yelling and talking, and there's nothing but yelling,
screaming, and incoherent interference as everyone presses their mike buttons
at the same time. I can smell something in the cockpit. Hydraulic fluid!
I knew I got hit earlier.
.... I'm still following this Me109. I just got my first confirmed kill
of my tour, and now I'm really hot. I
believe that I am the hottest pilot in the USAAF! And now I'm thinking
to myself: am I going to shoot this Me109 down too?! He rolls and we turn,
and turn; somehow, I cannot catch up with him in the Lufberry circle, we
just keep circling. About the third 360 degree turn he and I must have
spotted two Mustangs flying below us, about 2,000 feet below, and he dives
for the two P-51s. Now I'm about 150 yards from him, and I get my gunsight
on his tail, but I cannot shoot, because if I shoot wide, or my bullets
pass through him, I might shoot down one or both P-51s, so I get a front
seat, watching, fearful that this guy will shoot down a P-51 we're approaching
at about 390 mph. There's so much interference on the R/T I cannot warn
the two Mustangs, I fire one very long burst of about seven or eight seconds
purposely wide, so it misses the Mustangs, and the Me109 pilot can see
the tracers. None of the Mustang pilots see the tracers either! I was half
hoping expecting that they'd see my tracers and turn out of the way of
the diving Me109. But no such luck. I quit firing. The Me109 still dives,
and as he approaches the two P-51s he holds
his fire, and as the gap closes, two hundred yards, one hundred yards,
fifty yards the Hun does not fire a shot. No tracers, nothing! At less
than ten yards, it looks like he's go-ing to ram the lead P-51 and the
Hun fires one single shot from his 20mm cannon! And Bang! Engine parts,
white smoke, glycol, whatnot from the lead P-51 is everywhere, and that
unfortunate Mustang begins a gentle roll to the right. I try to watch the
Mustang down, but cannot, Now my full at-tention is on the Hun! Zoom. We
fly through the two Mustangs (he was taken POW). Now the advantage of the
P-51 is really apparent, as in a dive I am catching up to the Me109 faster
than a runaway freight train. I press the trigger for only a second then
I let up on the trigger, I believe at that time I was about 250 yards distant,
but the Hun was really pulling lots' of negative and positive g's and pulling
up to the horizon, he levels out and then does a vertical tail stand! and
next thing I know, he's using his built up velocity from the dive to make
a vertical ninety degree climb. This guy is really an experienced pilot.
I'm in a vertical climb, and my P-51 begins to roll clockwise violently,
only by pushing my left rudder almost through the floor can I stop my P-51
from turning. We climb for altitude; in the straight climb that Me109 begins
to out distance me, though my built up diving speed makes us about equal
in the climb. We climb one thousand fifteen hundred feet, and at eighteen
hundred feet, the hun levels his aircraft out. A vertical climb of 1,800
feet! I've never heard of a piston aircraft climbing more
than 1,000 feet in a tail stand. At this time we're both down to stall
speed, and he levels out. My airspeed indicator reads less than 90 mph!
So we level out. I'm really close now to the Me109, less than twenty five
yards! Now if I can get my guns on him.........
At this range, the gunsight is more of nuisance than a help. Next thing,
he dumps his flaps fast and I begin to overshoot him! That's not what I
want to do, because then he can bear his guns on me. The P-51 has good
armor, but not good enough to stop 20mm cannon hits. This Luftwaffe pilot
must be one heck of a marksman, I just witnessed him shooting down a P-51
with a single 20mm cannon shot! So I do the same thing, I dump my flaps,
and as I start to overshoot him, I pull my nose up, this really slows me
down; S-T-A-L-L warning comes on! and I can't see anything ahead of me
nor in the rear view mirror. Now I'm sweating everywhere. My eyes are burning
because salty sweat keeps blinding me: 'Where is He!?!' I shout to myself.
I level out to prevent from stalling. And there he is. Flying on my right
side. We are flying side to side, less than twenty feet separates our wingtips.
He's smiling and laughing at himself. I notice that he has a black heart
painted on his aircraft, just below the cockpit. The propeller nose and
spinner are also painted
black. It's my guess that he's a very experienced ace from the Russian
front. His tail has a number painted on it: "200". I wonder: what the "two
hundred" means!? Now I began to examine his airplane for any bullet hits,
afterall, I estimate that I just fired 1,600 rounds at the hun. I cannot
see a single bullet hole in his aircraft! I could swear that I must have
gotten at least a dozen hits! I keep inspecting his aircraft for any damage.
One time, he even lifts his left wing about 15 degrees, to let me see the
undercar-riage, still no hits! That's impossible I tell myself. Totally
impossible. Then I turn my attention back to the "200" which is
painted on the tail rudder. German aces normally paint a marker for
each victory on their tail. It dawns on me that quick: TWO HUNDRED KILLS
!! We fly side by side for five minutes. Those five minutes take centuries
to pass. Less than twenty five feet away from me is a Luftwaffe ace, with
over two hundred kills. We had been in a slow gradual dive now, and my
altitude indicates 8,000 feet. I'm panicking now, even my socks are soaked
in sweat. The German pilot points at his tail, obviously meaning the "200"
victories, and
then very slowly and dramatically makes a knife-cutting motion across
his throat, and points at me. He's telling me in sign language that I'm
going to be his 201 kill! Panic! I'm breathing so hard, it sounds like
a wind tunnel with my mask on. My heart rate must have doubled to 170 beats
per minute; I can feel my chest, thump-thump and so. This goes on for centuries,
and centuries. The two of us flying at stall speed, wingtip to wingtip.
I think more than once of simplyramming him. He keeps watching my ailerons,
maybe that's what he expects me to do. We had heard of desperate pilots
who,
after running out of ammunition, would commit suicide by ramming an
enemy plane. Then I decide that I can Immelmann out of the situation, as
I began to climb, but because my flaps are down,
my Mustang only climbs about one hundred feet, pitches over violently
to the right and stalls. The next instant I'm dangerously spinning, heading
ninety degrees vertically down! And the IAS reads 300 mph! My P-51 just
falls like a rock to the earth! I hold the yoke in the lower left corner
and sit on
the left rudder, flaps up, and apply FULL POWER! I pull out of the
dive at about 500 feet, level out, (I began to black out so with my left
hand I pinched my veins in my neck to stop from losing blood). I scan the
sky for anything! There's not a plane in the sky, I dive to about fifty
feet elevation, heading towards Italy. I fly at maximum power for about
ten minutes, and then reduce my rpm (to save gasoline), otherwise the P-51
has very limited range at full power. I fly like this for maybe an hour,
no planes in the vicinity; all the time I scan the sky, check my rear view
mirrors.
I never saw the Me109 with the black heart again. I mention the Me109
with the black heart and "200"
written on the tail. That's when the whole room, I mean everybody,
gets instantly quiet. Like you could hear a pin drop. Two weeks later the
base commander shows me a telex: "....according to intelligence, the German
pilot with a black heart is Eric Hartmann who has downed 250 aircraft and
there is a reward of fifty thousand dollars offered by Stalin for shooting
him down. I never heard of a cash reward for shooting down an enemy ace
... "
-Lawrence Thompson