339th Fighter Group

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

339th Fighter Group
P-51 Mustang
1944โ€“1945

The 339th Fighter Group was a unit of the

505th Fighter Squadrons
.

The group was an

RAF Fowlmere
. It had the highest claims of air and ground enemy aircraft victories in one year, and was the only group to claim over a hundred ground strafing victories on two occasions โ€“ 105 on 4 April 1945 and 118 on 16 April 1945. It was inactivated on 18 October 1945.

Formation and training

The group was constituted as the 339th Bombardment Group (Dive) on 3 August at

A-25 Shrike dive bombers.[3][self-published source?
]

The group moved to

, in July 1943 and finally to Rice Army Airfield, California, in September 1943. The latter was part of Desert Training Center in Mojave Desert. They converted to Bell P-39 Airacobra aircraft in 1943.[citation needed]

European theatre

Captain George Hrico, Captain Evan Johnson, Major Archie Tower and Lieutenant Richard Krauss of the 339th Fighter Group at RAF Fowlmere

The group was reassigned to the

P-51 Mustang aircraft and the first combat operation was on 30 April 1944.[citation needed
]

The unit engaged primarily in

B-24 escort duties during its first five weeks of operations, and afterwards flew many escort missions to cover the operations of medium and heavy bombers that struck strategic objectives, interdicted the enemy's communications, or supported operations on the ground.[citation needed
]

The group strafed airfields and other targets of opportunity while on escort missions. The 339th received a

Distinguished Unit Citation for operations on 10 and 11 September 1944. On the first of those days, when it escorted bombers to a target in Germany and then attacked an aerodrome near Erding, the group destroyed or damaged many enemy planes despite the intense fire it encountered from anti-aircraft guns and small arms. The following day the bomber formation being escorted to Munich was attacked by enemy fighters, but members of the 339th group destroyed a number of the interceptors and drove off the others and at the same time, other members of the 339th were attacking an airfield near Karlsruhe, where they encountered heavy fire but were able to destroy or damage many of the aircraft parked on the field.[citation needed
]

The 339th provided fighter cover over the

invasion of France in June 1944. They strafed and dive-bombed vehicles, locomotives, marshalling yards, anti-aircraft batteries, and troops while Allied forces fought to break out of the beachhead in France.[citation needed
]

The group attacked transportation targets as Allied armies drove across France after the breakthrough at

]

They escorted bombers and flew patrols during the Battle of the Bulge from December 1944 โ€“ January 1945. They provided area patrols during the assault across the Rhine in March 1945.[citation needed]

Aces of the 339th FG

Name and Rank Number of Aircraft Destroyed Note
Capt. Francis R. Gerard 8.00
Maj. William E. Bryan Jr. 7.05
Maj. Donald A. Larson 6.00
Capt. James R. Starnes 6.00
1st Lt. Lester C. Marsh 5.00
Capt. Robert H. Ammon 5.00
Capt. Edward H. Beavers 5.00
1st Lt. J.S. Daniell 5.00
  • Lt. Col. Dale E. Shafer, commanding officer of the 503rd Fighter Squadron, scored four aerial victories while flying
    Mediterranean Theater of Operations and three while serving with the 339th Fighter Group, bringing his total to seven aerial victories during the war.[4]

Post war

The 339th Fighter Group returned to

New York National Guard
on 24 May 1946.

References

External links