Texas Star
US Veteran
Vintage Fighters FG-1D Corsair Restoration
This summary of Ira Kepford's career in an F4U Corsair has (scroll down to it) a photo of him wearing a .45 auto. Not all Navy and Marine airmen got .38 Victory Model S&W's. He was in combat from late 1943-on.
I am reading a book by his boss in those days, Tom Blackburn, who led VF-17, whose Jolly Roger symbol is well known to most of us, I imagine. Blackburn also carried a .45 Colt auto, loaded with seven rounds of tracer ammo.
He was wearing that gun (and apparently no spare ammo) when he flew an F4F in support of Operation Torch, the invasion of Morocco in Nov., 1942. He had to ditch in the ocean after running out of fuel while looking for his carrier. Blackburn got into his tiny life raft and drifted in to be saved by a destroyer's crew several days later. His feet were almost ruined by immersion, as cold water kept sloshing into his little raft. The doc told him that another day would have seen gangrene set in!
Blackburn had a "large hunting knife", type not specified, but why he had only those seven rounds of tracer ammo is a puzzle.
Has anyone else got any good photos of airmen showing their sidearms? There's a well known one of Maj. Dick Bong, a P-38 ace who was America's top scorer, with 40 Jap planes to his known credit. He is widely believed to have gotten others, when he was the only witness. He has a .45 auto in a shoulder holster and a Randall Model 1 knife on his belt. The knife has either a 7 or 8-inch blade; I forget which. His chief rival, Tom McGuire, is pictured with a .45, also in a shoulder holster.
The linked article on Kepford says that he was the top guy in the Navy, with 16 kills. Actually, I think that David McCampbell had 34 kills. His F6F Hellcat was at least as deadly as Kepford's Corsair.
I read somewhere a statement by a Japanese pilot who said that he feared the Hellcat more, as it could get in tight and manuever almost as well as a Zero. Blackburn's book admits that the F4U wasn't able to manuever with the Zero.
Royal Navy test pilot Eric Brown compared the Corsair to the Seafire, saying that the Corsair was a shire horse compared to a thoroughbred pony. He felt that if the Seafire had had better landing gear for naval ops and a long range it could have defeated any other naval fighter. But he was very fond of the Hellcat, which served the Fleet Air Arm as well as with the US Navy. Brown was a vet of aerial combat over Europe, having once encountered a very skilled FW -190 pilot who matched him so evenly that the two eventually broke off combat and returned to their bases. He said that his Spitfire MK IX was better "in the horizontal" and the Focke-Wulf better "in the vertical". Neither man would fight the way the other wanted, and both were so good that they finally gave up trying to kill each other. Brown never mentioned his sidearm.
Anyway...I hope this interested someone. If you encounter photos or mentions by aircrew of their handguns, please post.
T-Star
This summary of Ira Kepford's career in an F4U Corsair has (scroll down to it) a photo of him wearing a .45 auto. Not all Navy and Marine airmen got .38 Victory Model S&W's. He was in combat from late 1943-on.
I am reading a book by his boss in those days, Tom Blackburn, who led VF-17, whose Jolly Roger symbol is well known to most of us, I imagine. Blackburn also carried a .45 Colt auto, loaded with seven rounds of tracer ammo.
He was wearing that gun (and apparently no spare ammo) when he flew an F4F in support of Operation Torch, the invasion of Morocco in Nov., 1942. He had to ditch in the ocean after running out of fuel while looking for his carrier. Blackburn got into his tiny life raft and drifted in to be saved by a destroyer's crew several days later. His feet were almost ruined by immersion, as cold water kept sloshing into his little raft. The doc told him that another day would have seen gangrene set in!
Blackburn had a "large hunting knife", type not specified, but why he had only those seven rounds of tracer ammo is a puzzle.
Has anyone else got any good photos of airmen showing their sidearms? There's a well known one of Maj. Dick Bong, a P-38 ace who was America's top scorer, with 40 Jap planes to his known credit. He is widely believed to have gotten others, when he was the only witness. He has a .45 auto in a shoulder holster and a Randall Model 1 knife on his belt. The knife has either a 7 or 8-inch blade; I forget which. His chief rival, Tom McGuire, is pictured with a .45, also in a shoulder holster.
The linked article on Kepford says that he was the top guy in the Navy, with 16 kills. Actually, I think that David McCampbell had 34 kills. His F6F Hellcat was at least as deadly as Kepford's Corsair.
I read somewhere a statement by a Japanese pilot who said that he feared the Hellcat more, as it could get in tight and manuever almost as well as a Zero. Blackburn's book admits that the F4U wasn't able to manuever with the Zero.
Royal Navy test pilot Eric Brown compared the Corsair to the Seafire, saying that the Corsair was a shire horse compared to a thoroughbred pony. He felt that if the Seafire had had better landing gear for naval ops and a long range it could have defeated any other naval fighter. But he was very fond of the Hellcat, which served the Fleet Air Arm as well as with the US Navy. Brown was a vet of aerial combat over Europe, having once encountered a very skilled FW -190 pilot who matched him so evenly that the two eventually broke off combat and returned to their bases. He said that his Spitfire MK IX was better "in the horizontal" and the Focke-Wulf better "in the vertical". Neither man would fight the way the other wanted, and both were so good that they finally gave up trying to kill each other. Brown never mentioned his sidearm.
Anyway...I hope this interested someone. If you encounter photos or mentions by aircrew of their handguns, please post.
T-Star
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