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signed by P-61 Ace Herman Ernst.
Herman Ernst, who
began his military service as a trombone player in the Tennessee National
Guard, was one of the first American aces of a new and highly specialized
type of aerial combat--night fighting. His love of flying began in his
youth in Chattanooga where he went for 15-minute flights with a local
airplane club whenever he could save two dollars from his lunch money.
Shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor, his National Guard unit, the
181st Field Artillery, moved to California where he successfully tested
for flight school. After pilot training, a checkout in the B-25, and a
course in aerial gunnery, Ernst was assigned to Florida for transition
into night fighters. In March 1944, he deployed to England with the 422d
Night Fighter Squadron (NFS), the first American unit of its type in the
European Theater of Operations. Unfortunately, their P-61 Black Widows did
not arrive for several months, and the crews had to fight off a move to
equip them with British Mosquito night fighters. Consequently, when the
brand new P-61s finally arrived, they had to win a "fly off"
against the Mosquito before the 422 NFS could begin flying combat patrols
over the English Channel. Lieutenant Ernst and his radar operator, Edward
Kopsel, aborted their first combat mission in mid-chase due to a
mechanical problem, but they still became the first crew in their unit to
score against the enemy when they destroyed a V-1 "buzz bomb" on
the night of 15 July. Their first victory against an enemy aircraft;
however, did not occur until November. In December, the 422 NFS was
committed to defend the besieged 101st Airborne Division against night
attack during the Battle of the Bulge. During this operation, the squadron
had one of its most successful nights on 26 December 1944, bagging five of
the elusive night "bogeys"--more victories than they often
scored in an entire month! As enemy aircraft became scarcer, the 422 NFS
scored only once in the next 2 months. Action picked up in March; however,
and in one night Ernst and Kopsel downed two Ju-87 Stukas and possibly
destroyed an Me-110. Their final tally of five aircraft and one "buzz
bomb" was unexcelled by any American nightfighter crew in Europe.
Following World War II, Lieutenant Colonel Ernst remained active in the
Tennessee National Guard and Air Force Reserve. Still an active civilian
pilot, he recently retired from his sound and communications business. |