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Markings for P-51D Mustang 1/72

P-51D-20, 44-72218, Lt Col. John D. Landers, CO of 78th FG, 8th AF, Duxford, United Kingdom, March 1945

John Dave Landers was born on August 23, 1920, in Joshua, Texas. He joined the Army Air Force in April 1941. After completing the pilot training in January 1942 he was assigned to the 9th FS in Australia, a unit that flew P-40s. In the Pacific theatre he scored six kills and was called back to the States in January 1943. There, he served as a flight instructor, but in April 1944, on his own request, he was reassigned to a combat unit. It was 38th FS based at Wormingford, operating P-38s, which they changed for P-51s as of July 1944. After being promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, he assumed command of the 357th FG, which he led from October to December 1944. After some downtime in the United States, he returned to Great Britain and was named CO of 78th FG, holding this post until the end of the Second World War. In December 1945, he left the military and worked in construction. He died on September 12, 1989.

 

P-51D-15, 44-15041, Lt Col. John C. Meyer, CO of 352nd FG, 8th AF, Y-29 Asch, Belgium, December 1944

John Charles Meyer finished flight training on July 26, 1940, at the age of 21, after which he was assigned to the 33rd PS on Iceland, a unit that was flying the P-40s. After his return to the States, he was named the CO of the newly formed 487th FS, which had undergone conversion training onto the P-47 and in June 1943 was transferred to United Kingdom, from where they performed escort missions for bombers over continental Europe. In April of 1944, the unit was rearmed with the Mustangs, and the number of kills attributed to Major Meyer began to rise. In November 1944, he was named Deputy Commander of the 352nd FG, to which his own 487th FS was subordinate. Under his command, the 352nd FG was relocated to the forward base at Asch in Belgium. On January 1, the Luftwaffe conducted a raid on this base, and Meyer was able to get his unit in the air to counter the raid, claiming a pair of Fw 190s in the process. These would be the last two kills that he would achieve during the war, because on January 4, he suffered a major fracture of his left leg, the treatment of which required his return to the United States. After the war, he saw combat in Korea, and in Vietnam he led the Linebacker II campaign. Over the course of the WWII, he shot down 24 enemies, and he added another two during the Korean War. He retired a General as the head of the Strategic Air Command. He passed away as the result of a heart attack on December 2, 1975.

 

P-51D-10, 44-14896, Maj. Leonard K. Carson, 362nd FS, 357th FG, 8th AF, Leiston, United Kingdom, September 1944

Major Leonard “Kit” Carson was one of the most successful pilots of the 357th FG. He finished the war as a commander of the 363rd FS with 18.5 kills to which he added three airplanes destroyed on the ground. He flew four P-51 Mustangs, all of them carried his personal inscription “Nooky Booky” on the engine cowling. The aircraft s/n 44-14896 was his third. It sported seven kill markings on the side of the fuselage which Carson scored till the beginning of November 1944. The plane was marked with standard identification stripes including the invasion bands on the fuselage. Carson’s Mustang was camouflaged in the dark green paint on the upper surfaces including the landing flaps’ interiors. The paint was probably British RAF Dark Green. The lower surfaces were painted in Medium Sea Grey.

 

P-51D-20, 44-63607, Lt Col. Glenn T. Eagleston, CO of 353rd FS, 354th FG, 9th AF, Y-64 Ober Olm, Germany, April 1945

Glenn Todd Eagleston was born on March 12, 1921, in Farmington, Utah, and he joined the USAAF in 1940. In 1942, he underwent flight training, after which he was first assigned to the P-39 equipped 79th FS, and then to the 353rd FS, which was transferred to Boxted in the UK with their Mustangs in October 1943. Although being a constituent of the 9th Air Force, the unit flew escort missions for 8th AF bombers. In the spring 1944 landing preparations, the 354th FG returned to tactical support of ground forces, and eventually relocated to fields in liberated Europe to remain close to combat areas, and this included the 353rd FS. Squadron command was handed over to Capt. Eagleston in October 1944, and the unit used their Thunderbolts in support of ground forces. In mid-February 1945, the unit went back to using the Mustangs. After the Second World War, during which Glenn Eagleston amassed 18.5 kills over enemy aircraft, he remained in the service, and took part in combat over Korea, where he shot down a pair of Soviet MiG-15s. He retired at the end of February 1967 and died on May 7, 1991. 

 

P-51D-5, 44-13298, Capt. Fredie F. Ohr, 2nd FS, 52nd FG, 15th AF, Madna, Italy, Autumn 1944

The 52nd Pursuit Squadron, known after May 1942 as the 52nd Fighter Group, was established in January 1941 at Selfridge Field in Michigan. Initial training was undertaken on the P-39 and was followed by a move to Northern Ireland in the summer of 1942, where the unit continued training on Spitfires, and this was in turn followed by a brief combat tour over western Europe under the command of the 8th AF. By November 1942, the entire unit was transferred to northern Africa. After arrival there, combat operations were undertaken through north Africa, Sicily and Italy while still flying Spitfires, but this time under the leadership of the 12th AF. In April 1944, the long awaited change to the Mustang arrived, along with a change in mission assignment and location under the 15th AF, tasking the 52nd FG with escort duties of this Army Air Force’s strategic bombers. The aircraft flown by Freddie Ohr, an American ace of Korean origin, was as it was delivered from the manufacturing facility. The red nose and yellow rear fuselage distinguished aircraft of the 52nd FG and the yellow wing bands were reserved for aircraft of the 15th AF.

 

P-51D-20, 44-72570, Lt. Ralph S. Gardner/2nd Lt. Chester Jatczak, 457th FS, 506th FG, 20th AF, Iwojima, June/July 1945

This aircraft was shared by Ralph Gardner and Chet Jatczak, named Fighting Lady on port side and later renamed to Broadway Gal with inscription on the nose. For Chet Jatczak this was Broadway Gal plane No.2, as he flew No.538 also named Broadway Gal previously in June and early July. The aircraft No.538 shot down near Suzuka on July 16, 1945, while being flown by Capt. John Benbow during the strafing of airfields in Nagoya area. He became most probably a victim of Maj. Yohei Hinoki flying a Ki-100. The Broadway Gal inscription style is not known. The original squadron color were green stripes on the tail, replaced by solid green paint after the squadron entered the operation for better visibility.

01/2025
Info EDUARD 01/2025

INFO Eduard is a monthly scale model-historical magazine published in Czech and English by Eduard Model Accessories since 2010. The magazine is available for free on the Triobo platform and can be downloaded in PDF format. Eduard is a manufacturer of plastic models and accessories with over 30 years of tradition. Throughout its history in the plastic modeling industry, Eduard has become one of the world's leaders. Further details about the company and its product range can be found at www.eduard.com. You can subscribe to the INFO magazine and receive product information for free at: https://www.eduard.com/cs/info-eduard/

 

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