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The Me-262 fighters Mk 108 cannon roared, and a single 30
mm Mine-Shell high-explosive round struck the waist
of a B-24 bomber. The thin-walled projectile detonated on impact,
spraying stainless steel shards in a circular pattern through the
Liberators fuselage. This single deadly hit nearly sliced
off the bombers tail and effectively destroyed the aircraft.
The B-24 did not die under the guns of an Me-262 in the skies over
Europe, however. It happened at the weapons test range at Wright
Field, Ohio, thanks to the efforts of Watsons Whizzers,
an Army Air Forces intelligence team that went to Europe to seize
enemy systems and technology.
The Messerschmitt fighter was in the United States because scientific
and technical intelligence personnel put their lives on the line
to obtain it and others in the field, make it flyable, and bring
it home for testing.
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| This 1946 photo shows one of
the Me-262 jet fighters, brought back by Watsons Whizzers,
in a low pass over Freeman Field, Ind. |
Led by AAF Col. Harold E. Watson, the Air Technical Intelligence
(ATI) group brought the dreaded Me-262 jet fighter with its swept
wings, axial-flow compressor turbojet engines, and 30 mm cannonsalong
with other technological secretsto the United States when
World War II ended in the European theater.
With the jet age in its infancy and the Germans enjoying a head
start in fielding the technology, obtaining working Me-262s was
a coup.
Black Lists
After the D-Day invasion of June 1944, ATI teams scoured the European
countryside, searching for enemy aircraft and related equipment.
They worked from master intelligence manifests known as Black
Lists.
When the fighting in Europe stopped in May 1945, the ATI effort
intensified. The Americans were only too aware that advanced German
technology, including documentation, had to be obtained quickly,
before it was destroyed or seized by other countriesespecially
the Soviet Union.
The project went by the code name Lusty (for Luftwaffe secret technology).
The effort required small teams of highly skilled maintenance troops
and pilots. It was up to them to find and acquire the revolutionary
German aircraft, make them flyable, and deliver them to seaports
for the trip to the United States. One of Watsons teams went
after propeller-driven aircraft. The Whizzers went after jets.
The job of commanding teams headed across Europe spread him thin,
so Watson relied heavily on 1st Lt. Robert C. Strobell to carry
out the acquisition of the Me-262 fighter.
Watson worked closely with Strobell, who was based at 1st Tactical
Air Force (Provisional) headquarters at Vital, France. A P-47 pilot
with the 353rd Fighter Group, Strobell was an experienced airman
with 79 missions and a Bf-109 kill to his credit.
The Me-262 acquisition started simply enough. Watson walked into
Strobells office, gave him a small amount of technical data,
and ordered him to proceed to Lechfeld, Germany, to obtain as many
Me-262s as possible.
Of course, Strobell would also have to train US pilots and maintenance
troops to handle the jet, but the good news was there were some
German pilots and technicians left at the field to help him out
(the Messerschmitt factory was nearby). Given the fact that the
war in Europe had just ended, the thought of working with Germans
was hardly comforting. The American troops called upon to trust
them with their lives still thought of Germans as the enemy.
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| The Me-262s used a nose-mounted
Mk 108 cannon, firing 30 mm high-explosive shells that proved
deadly to Allied bombers. Shown above is an Me-262 with a 50
mm nose-mounted cannon, under development before wars
end. |
Watson selected a team of volunteer US P-47 fighter pilots to learn
how to fly the Me-262. None of the pilots had any jet time whatsoever.
Most had never even seen a jet.
Pilots selected to fly the Me-262s were Capt. Kenneth E. Dahlstrom,
Capt. Fred L. Hillis, 1st Lt. Robert J. Anspach, 1st Lt. William
V. Haynes, 1st Lt. Roy W. Brown Jr., 1st Lt. James K. Holt, and
Strobell.
Meanwhile, TSgts. Noel D. Moon and Ernest C. Parker and SSgts.
John G. Gilson, Donald J. Wilcoxen, Archie E. Bloomer, Everet T.
Box, Charles L. Taylor, Robert H. Moore, and Charles A. Barr made
the project possible. The crew chiefs made the enemy aircraft flyable
despite having to work on a foreign field with no technical information.
It had been destroyed by German forces.
The 54th Air Disarmament Squadron was the first to arrive at Lechfeld,
home of the Me-262s. Squadron members had their work cut out for
them. Normally responsible for getting rid of German weaponry, they
were put in charge of collecting and resurrecting some of the very
items they were charged with eliminating. Unit personnel were billeted
in Augsburg at the Messerschmitt Aircraft Co. From there, they would
travel to Lechfeld each day to sift through wrecked and damaged
aircraft.
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Watsons Free Reign
Col. Harold E. Watson was the classic pilot-leader who wholeheartedly
took on the challenge of bringing Nazi Germanys finest
aircraft home for study.
After serving as a test pilot and earning a masters
degree in aeronautical engineering from the University of
Michigan, he was then assigned to US Strategic Air Forces
in Europe as 1st Tactical Air Force director of maintenance.
He received a Bronze Star there after increasing the number
of operational aircraft by 18 percent in three months.
He was needed elsewhere. Because of his technical education,
flight test experience, and sheer guts, Watson was sent to
Wright Field, Ohio, to work for Air Technical Intelligence
near the end of the war.
He was given free reign to ensure that Operation Lusty, the
search for advanced German aviation technology, was successful.
Watson carried a card issued by the Supreme Allied Commander,
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. It stated, The bearer of
this card will not be interfered with in the performance of
his duty by the military police or any other military organization.
That was all Watson could have hoped for. His teams took
advantage of this leverage and trolled the European countryside
for intelligence treasures.
Watson took on the dangerous job of flight-testing unfamiliar
and sometimes poorly built and maintained aircraft, and by
the end of the war, he was constantly flying potentially deadly
aircraft.
His flight records included time in the Bf-109, FW-190, He-177,
Ju-388, and Ju-290 and jets such as the Me-262 and Ar-234. |
Booby Traps
There were 15 Me-262s, more or less, to turn over to Watsons
pilots and crew chiefs. The process had to be conducted carefully,
for booby traps were found, and several Me-262s had explosive devices
in the cockpits.
The 54th personnel did not have to start totally from scratch:
One flying Me-262 arrived at Lechfeld just before the war ended
in Europe. The pilot surrendered to the 54th ADS personnel, already
on scene, who enjoyed the sight of a heavily armed German pilot
giving up without a fight.
Two English-speaking German test pilots also proved invaluable
to the Whizzers. Ludwig Hofmann (dubbed Willie) and
Karl Baur (called Pete), both from Messerschmitt, taught
the young Americans to fly the exotic jet.
Hofmann knew Charles A. Lindbergh from prewar encounters and had
earned a reputation in Germany for fearlessly flying anything required
of him.
Baur was equally competent, serving as the chief Messerschmitt
test pilot. The Whizzers did not spend much time with Baur, as Watson
took Baur with him on other flight test missions for captured aircraft.
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| German aircraft line the deck
of HMS Reaper on their way to the US. Once in America, they
were ferried to Wright Field, Ohio, and Freeman Field, Ind.,
where they underwent extensive testing. |
The handful of German pilots and maintenance technicians had various
reasons for cooperating. One was that it was a paying job. In postwar
Germany, working 48 hours a week for the Americans was better than
most Germans could hope for. And in one case, a Luftwaffe pilot
was given the choice of flying with the Whizzers or going to prison
camp.
The jet surrendered by the German pilot at Lechfeld is now on display
at the Smithsonians National Air and Space Museum. Marked
with 49 kills (42 Soviet, five B-17s, a P-47, and P-51), this fighter
became known as Dennis when MSgt. Eugene Freiburger of the 54th
named the jet after his son.
Thus began a tradition with the 54th personnel, who inspired the
pilots that followed them into the Me-262s to again rename the jets
to suit their own desires. The Whizzer pilot of Dennis, Holt, renamed
it Ginny H. after his fiancee.
Another intact aircraft arrived on May 16, courtesy of Baur, who
ferried it from Rhein-Main Air Base, where ATI personnel had located
it in operational condition. The Beverly Ann was subsequently renamed
Screamin Meemie (for its noise) and today can be seen at the
National Museum of the US Air Force in Dayton, Ohio.
The 54th also found an original factory trainer aircraft at Lechfeld
still in a flyable state. After serving the American pilots faithfully,
this Messerschmitt, nicknamed Vera, ultimately ended up at NAS Willow
Grove, Pa., where it can be seen today. Thus, the first three aircraft
acquired by the Whizzers remain on display to this day.
Out With the Old
The majority of the teams aircraft, however, came from the
efforts of the 54th, which built most of the jets from an odd collection
of parts obtained from the wrecks at Lechfeld. Another task for
the 54th was insignia. The Nazi swastikas and crosses had to go.
These were US jets now and needed to wear AAF insignia.
Watson trusted Strobell to lead the way in getting the pilots and
ground crew trained and into the air. A nonflyable Me-262 came in
handy as a training tool; the Messerschmitt people used it to teach
maintenance and flight procedures. They tied the jet down and ran
up its one good engine to provide a feel for this unfamiliar form
of propulsion.
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| Members of the 54th Air Disarmament
Squadron named the Me-262s while the jets were under their care.
In turn, Watsons Whizzers would change the names. Above,
airmen inspect some 262s with their American names visible. |
This ground tester also helped the recovery team learn German instrumentation
and starting procedures. To make their complicated challenge more
manageable, each of the enlisted maintenance troops tried to specialize
in a different aspect of the aircrafts components.
The 54th always had to scrounge for aviation fuel and ended up
collecting all the diesel fuel it could get its hands on. When JP-1
could not be found, diesel worked as an alternate. (Army drivers
had to watch their trucks or lose fuel in the name of intelligence.)
The team proceeded to overhaul all nine Lechfeld aircraft that
ultimately made the cut for recovery to the United States. The first
one completed became the Air Force museums bird.
The Whizzers for the most part learned to fly the aircraft by getting
checked out in the two-seat Vera on June 9. (See Who Was First
To Fly This Jet? p. 66.) This checkout was extremely brief,
yet seven minutes of in-flight instruction would be sufficient for
these pilots to get the feel for the Messerschmitt. The next day,
they took an Me-262 up solo for the ferry leg to Melun, France.
The morning of the 10th saw nine Me-262s lined up ready for the
flight to Melun. Hofmann took Vera to Stuttgart, then to St. Dizier,
France, before proceeding to Melun.
Led by Watson, the six American pilots and Baur ferried the remaining
Me-262s on the short flight to Melun. For five of the American pilots,
it was their first time to solo in a jet, and their performance
was flawless.
Before the aircraft could continue to the coast, the Whizzers had
to wait for a special event to take place. Gen. Carl A. Tooey
Spaatz wanted to see the Whizzers demonstrate their newfound jet-age
skills.
More than two weeks passed, and the Whizzers busied themselves
collecting other German aircraft, checking out a new pilot, renaming
their aircraft, and even coming up with the name and the emblem
that history remembers them by. They finally got their chance to
show off before Spaatz on June 27, 1945.
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Who Was First To Fly This Jet?
After learning the basics of the aircraft, 1st Lt. Robert
C. Strobell, the Me-262 recovery team coordinator in Germany,
decided he ought to be the Whizzer to take the first flight.
In June 1945, Strobell suggested that former Messerschmitt
test pilot Karl Baur fly a local checkout mission in an Me-262
known as Beverly Ann.
By Jeep, he interrupted the Germans return taxi and
switched places with him, taking control of the aircraft himself.
He let the US maintenance troops refuel the jet and proceeded
to take an impromptu first jet ride.
Strobell had trouble taking off because he did not have enough
ground speed and used all of the runway to get aloft. Once
airborne, the leading edge slats scared him because they kept
popping in and out at lower speeds, a phenomenon Americans
had not yet experienced.
Strobell also learned the hard way that a jet does not slow
down quickly with a decrease in throttle, and he overshot
the field by 10 miles during his approach for landing. He
also lowered the landing gear at excessive airspeed, and the
nose wheel door popped his nose up another 20 degrees.
Other than that, his flight went well. Strobell was impressed
by how smoothly the aircraft flew and how fast it was. Two
of the other pilots walked up to Strobell after the flight
and snapped the propellers off his Army Air Forces collar
pins. He was a jet pilot now.
Col. Harold E. Watson technically preceded Strobell into
the air on May 30 while on a checkout ride with Baur. Watsons
records also indicate that he flew a single-seat Me-262A-1a
on June 3. Strobells flight records were destroyed later
in a P-47 crash that almost killed him, so it will never be
known for sure which American first soloed in the Me-262.
One thing is certain: The 54ths operations officer,
Captain Ward, beat them both for the honor of the first American
to fly aboard an Me-262. Ludwig Hofmann, a former Messerschmitt
test pilot, took him up in the two-seat Vera in mid-May 1945. |
Wicked
Three jets took off to perform, but one had a landing gear problem
and had to land. The other two executed high-speed passes for the
general, while Strobell took this opportunity to do something none
of them had done: aerobatics. His barrel roll impressed Spaatz so
much he remarked to Watson, Hal, thats a wicked aeroplane.
The next leg of the journey required the pilots to fly the jets
to Cherbourg, France, so the treasures could be loaded on the British
aircraft carrier HMS Reaper. The trips from Melun to Cherbourg began
June 30 and continued through July 6. Reaper would deliver the ATI
prizes to Newark, N.J.
On the first day, tragedy nearly claimed one of the Whizzers. One
Me-262 shed some turbine blades and crashed. German pilot Hofmann
barely escaped, parachuting to safety. The other aircraft made the
leg of the trip without loss, although one ended up in the wrong
place when the pilot overshot Cherbourg in cloud cover and found
himself too low on gas to make it to his primary destination. He
landed his Me-262 safely on the Isle of Jersey.
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| Airmen tow a two-seat Me-262
out of a hangar. One two-seat trainer used by the Whizzers to
learn to fly the jet fighter was dubbed Vera. That fighter today
is on display at NAS Willow Grove, Pa. |
The Whizzers got the operational Me-262s from Germany to the Cherbourg
dock, where the jets were loaded onto Reaper, along with a number
of more-traditional German propeller-driven aircraft bound for the
US.
They departed France for Newark on July 19, 1945. The aircraft
were then ferried to Wright Field and Freeman Field in Indiana,
where much of the exploitation and testing of the foreign aircraft
took place.
Robert L. Young is the historian at the Air Force’s National Air and Space Intelligence Center, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio. He has authored and coauthored two Air Force award-winning historical studies and published articles on foreign aircraft. This is his first article for Air Force Magazine.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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