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Markings for THEY FOUGHT TO REBUILD 1/48

BM592, W/Cdr Alois Vašátko, CO of Exeter (Czechoslovak) Wing, RAF Exeter, Devon, United Kingdom, June 1942

Alois "Amos" Vašátko was the third most successful Czechoslovak fighter pilot of World War II with 14 confirmed and four probable kills,. During the Battle of France, he shot down twelve enemy aircraft plus two probably, making him the most successful Czechoslovak pilot and the fifth most successful ace of the Armée de l'air. After the defeat of France, he served with No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron, with which he participated in the Battle of Britain. After the Czechoslovak Wing was formed, he became its commander on May 1, 1942. The fateful evening of June 23, 1942, when 36 Spitfires escorted the Bostons for a raid on Morlaix airfield, proved fatal for him. During the ensuing dogfight, Vašátko collided with an Fw 190A-3 of Uffz. W. Reuschling from 7./JG 2 and died. Vasatko's personal Spitfire Mk.Vb s/n BM592 was a brand new aircraft, delivered to Wing on June 20, 1942. As the appearance of it has not been documented, its appearance can only be reconstructed, especially from the appearance of the first personal Spitfire of Vašátko´s successor, Karel Mrázek, which in turn is very well documented. The command aircraft were taken care of by the No. 310 Squadron personnel, and it is possible to deduce what Vašátko´s BM592 might have looked like. The AV personal codes were most likely placed between the cockpit and the Sky-coloured stripe, and the AV personal letters were repeated on the underside of the engine cowling. No other markings were probably applied.

 

EN765, W/Cdr Karel Mrázek, CO of Exeter (Czechoslovak) Wing, RAF Exeter, Devon, United Kingdom, June -July 1942

After the sudden death of the first commander of the Exeter (Czechoslovak) Wing, W/Cdr Alois Vašátko, on June 23, 1942, the existing commander of No. 313 (Czechoslovak) Squadron, W/Cdr Karel Mrázek, was appointed in his place. His first personal Spitfire in his new command was a Spitfire Mk.Vb s/n EN765, with which he made a total of 29 non-operational flights. W/Cdr Mrázek took advantage of the privilege that came with this position and had his initials applied to his new Spitfire as code letters, i.e. KM. According to surviving photographs, it is clear that the letters KM were displayed in Sky paint on both sides between the fuselage cockpit and the stripe of Sky paint in front of the tail surfaces. They were also found in a smaller form on the lower engine cowling. The coloring of the upper surfaces was the standard Day Fighter Scheme shades of Dark Green and Ocean Grey, the lower surfaces were in Medium Sea Grey. Karel Mrázek was one of the most capable young officers of the pre-war air force. During his wartime career he shot down four enemy aircraft, one probably and three damaged. He was the only Czechoslovak fighter pilot to clash with pilots from the Italian Expeditionary Corps Corpo Aereo Italiano, and he emerged from the battle successfully, managing to shoot down two Fiat Cr.42s. His leadership skills were recognized with high awards of DFC and DSO.

 

EP461, W/Cdr František Doležal, CO of Exeter (Czechoslovak) Wing, RAF Exeter, Devon, United Kingdom, April-July 1943

The first user of Spitfire EP461 was a veteran of the Battle of Britain and France, S/Ldr Jack Rose, Acting Squadron Leader of Exeter Station. Although without the appropriate rank, he filled in for W/Cdr Mrazek both functionally and as Wing Commander. In the period August-November 1942 Jack Rose led 15 sweeps as Wing Commander and marked his Spitfire with his initials JR. S/Ldr Frantisek "Dolly" Doležal, Commander of No. 310 Squadron, also used EP461 occasionally in December 1942 and early January 1943 without changing his markings. In January the JR became KM and was used by W/Cdr Karel Mrázek as his last personal Spitfire in the Czechoslovak Wing. On April 1, 1943, W/Cdr František Doležal became the new Wing Commander and took over the EP461 from Mrázek. At the time, the aircraft had its wingtips cut and a new round rear-view mirror installed. The Wing Commander's badge was painted under the left windshield. The code letters FD were in front of the fuselage cockade on both sides and their appearance varied on the starboard and port. The FD marking was placed also on the bottom of the engine cowling. The serial number EP461 was largely repainted in Ocean Grey camouflage paint on the right side after numerous changes of the code. W/Cdr Frantisek Doležal achieved his last aerial victory with this Spitfire when he damaged an Fw 190A from 8./JG 2 Richthofen on May 3, 1943. He ended the war with a total score of six confirmed victories, four probable and four enemy aircraft damaged. He was one of the first to return to Czechoslovakia after the war as early as May 17, 1945, but died aboard a transport Siebel on October 4, 1945. 

 

AD325, F/Lt Emil Foit, No. 310 Squadron, RAF Perranporth, Cornwall, United Kingdom, December 1941-February 1942

Emil Foit was born in 1913 in Brno and after graduating from the business academy and military schools he became a fighter pilot. After the occupation of Czechoslovakia in May 1939 he made his way to Great Britain via Poland and Sweden and then France in August, where he joined the Foreign Legion. He served in Tunis, Blida in Algeria and Oran. After the surrender of France, he went via Casablanca and Gibraltar to the UK, where he was accepted into the RAF in August 1940. He underwent brief combat training with Hurricanes, served briefly with the British No. 85 Squadron and in October 1940 was posted to Duxford with No. 310 (Czechoslovak) Squadron. From February 1942 to November 1942, he was B Squadron Commander. From January 1943 to January 1944, he served as commander of No. 310 (Czechoslovak) Squadron. During air combat he shot down three enemy aircraft and damaged five. He received numerous medals and decorations for his combat activities, including the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC). On his return to his homeland in 1945 he was appointed commander of the 10 Air Regiment at Kbely. After February 1948 he went into exile in Great Britain and served again in the RAF. Emil Foit died in 1976 in England. The Spitfire AD325, which he flew at the turn of 1941-1942, was a brand new aircraft, delivered to No. 310 Squadron during the rearmament to the Mk.Vb version. It bore the donation inscription WESTMORLAND II on the tank cover and most likely had the Czechoslovakian emblem on the engine cowling.

 

AR423, F/Lt František Trejtnar, No. 310 Squadron, RAF Ibsley, Hampshire, United Kingdom, September 1943-February 1944

František Trejtnar was born on March 7, 1917. He graduated from the aviation school in Prostějov and became a pilot in the Czechoslovak army. After the occupation of Bohemia and Moravia by Germans in 1939, he went to Poland. In a short time, he went to France, where he was accepted into the Foreign Legion. When the war broke out with the German attack on Gdansk, Poland, on September 1, 1939, he was transferred to the forming Czechoslovak Foreign Army in France and sent to retraining as a pilot. After the fall of France, he left Port Vendres for Gibraltar and from there he sailed to Liverpool aboard Neuralia ship. In the UK he was accepted into the Royal Air Force at the end of July 1940. In early November 1940 he was posted to No. 310 (Czechoslovak) Squadron at Duxford. He fought with the unit throughout his wartime career, during which he scored one Fw 190 shot down and two damaged. On June 23, 1942, during a combat with an Fw 190, František Trejtnar and his opponent went deep into English territory. Czech pilot was shot down during the engagement, had to bail out and broke his leg when he hit the ground on the parachute. The disoriented German pilot, Oblt. Armin Faber, landed his Fw 190 to the amazement of all at the British base at Pembrey. The Britons thus got their hands on a completely undamaged Fw 190A-3, which they subsequently subjected to a series of tests and practice dogfights. František Trejtnar flew the AR423 Spitfire shown here regularly from September 1943 to February 1944 as B Squadron Commander of No. 310 Squadron. The tank cover bore the donation inscription The ROBINSON Fighter. 


AD572, F/O František Peřina, No. 312 Squadron, RAF Harrowbeer, Devon, United Kingdom, February-June 1942

František Peřina was the first Czechoslovak fighter pilot, who achieved five confirmed kills and became ace. Born in 1911 in the village of Morkůvky near Břeclav, he left for Poland after the Munich dictate, from where he later headed by ship to France, where he retrained on Curtiss Hawk H-75 fighters. In December 1939 he became one of the first twenty Czechoslovak fighters sent to the Western Front. He was assigned to the famous Groupe de Chasse 1/5, where he flew mostly as the wingman of commander of the 1st Escadrille, Capitaine Jean Accart. During the three weeks of the French campaign, he shot down 11 aircraft confirmed and two probably. After the surrender of France, he continued on to the UK via Gibraltar by boat. He was accepted into the RAF at the rank of Pilot Officer and in September 1940 was posted to the recently formed No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron. In its ranks he participated first in the Battle of Britain and later in offensive sweeps over the occupied continent. During these actions he closed his combat score by shooting down an Fw 190. During World War II he was credited with shooting down 12 aircraft confirmed, two probably and one aircraft damaged. After the war he returned to his homeland but was forced to emigrate in 1949 after the Communists took over. He spent several years as a pilot in the British Royal Air Force, later flying in Canada and the USA. He lived in the United States until 1993, when he returned permanently to the Czech Republic. He died on May 6, 2006 at the age of 95. František Peřina flew the Spitfire Mk.Vb AD572 shown here regularly from February to June 1942 and shot down one Fw 190 on June 6, 1942.

 

EP785, P/O Ladislav Světlík, No. 312 Squadron, RAF Churchstanton, Somerset, United Kingdom, January-April 1943

Pilsen native Ladislav Světlík was born on March 23, 1917. He took advantage of the 1000 new pilots for the country campaign and learned to fly. Between 1936 and 1937 he completed military training in Prostějov and then served as a fighter pilot. After the German occupation, he went to France via Poland, where he joined the Foreign Legion. After reassignment to the Air Force, he was retrained at Chartres on the Curtiss Hawk H-75 and scored four confirmed and three probable kills in combat against the German Luftwaffe. After the fall of France, he moved to the UK. Here he was assigned to No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron. Despite the amount of combat missions he completed, he scored only one more kill when on May 23, 1944, in his new Spitfire Mk.IXc, he shot down an Fw 190 flown by German ace Lt. Georg Kiefner. After completing his second combat tour in July 1944, he was ferrying Vickers Wellingtons and at the very end of the war he served with No. 147 Squadron as a transport pilot. He returned to Czechoslovakia in August 1945 and served with the Army Transport Group until 1946. He then joined Czechoslovakian Airlines. After February 1948, he became one of the pilots who carried out a coordinated emigration with the use of three transport aircraft. He returned to the UK and rejoined the Royal Air Force. He died on July 27, 2008 in New Zealand. He was promoted in memoriam to the rank of Colonel in 1991. An interesting feature of Spitfire Mk.Vb EP785, which Ladislav Světlík flew regularly in the spring of 1943, is the depiction of the No. 312 Squadron emblem on the tank cover. The emblem is not known to have been drawn on any other Mk.Vb Spitfire serving with the unit.

 

AD380, F/O Alois Hochmal, No. 313 Squadron, RAF Hornchurch, Devon, United Kingdom, October 1941-April 1942

Not every pilot who fought in World War II can boast the title of fighter ace, participation in exceptional actions, a significant number of flying hours or high honors. A large number of them achieved, for example, only a third of the aerial victory, or flew their entire war career without recording any combat. And it was with the enormous contribution of hundreds of these unassuming heroes and patriots who did not accept the occupation of their homeland, that Czechoslovakia was liberated during World War II. The aircraft of No. 313 (Czechoslovak) Squadron date from the first half of 1942, when the unit was part of the Hornchurch Wing, famous for its Walt Disney cartoon characters. The author of these drawings was Sgt. Karel Pavlík, a native of Pilsen, who used his original profession as a letter painter to decorate individual Spitfires with drawings under the windshield, as requested by the pilots. The drawing of Robber the kitten was painted by him on Spitfire AD380 RY-R. An interesting feature of this Spitfire’s livery are the code letters RY-R. The first letter R was in Sky color and the following letters Y-R in Sky Blue. Also, the stripe in front of the tail surfaces was in Sky Blue. At the top of this was the s/n AD386, with the original Sky color shining through underneath. The aircraft of serial number AD386 never served with No. 313 Squadron, it was probably a misspelling during a previous camouflage repair. The actual serial number of this Spitfire was AD380 and the aircraft served with No. 313 Squadron from October 28, 1941, to April 24, 1942 and was most often flown by F/O A. Hochmal, F/Sgt V. Foglar and Sgt O. Kresta.

 

EP110, F/Lt Otmar Kučera, No. 313 Squadron, RAF Hawkinge, Kent, United Kingdom, August-September 1943

The Spitfire LF Mk.Vb EP110 flown by B Flight Commander of No. 313 Squadron RAF, Otmar Kučera, DFC, had the code RY-R and here is portrayed its appearance during Operation Starkey on September 9, 1943. During this operation, black and white invasion stripes were used for the first time to distinguish own and foreign aircraft. They were also painted on aircraft that were to take part in low-altitude operations that day. But the stripes looked different from the well-known “invasion” ones of the later Normandy landings. No. 313 Squadron moved to Hawkinge Airfield, which was under the command of No. 11 Group, Fighter Air Command, in mid-August 1943 after a recuperation stay and patrolling in the north over the Orkneys. The squadron thus became involved in operational flights of the deceptive Operation Starkey as part of the Hawkinge Wing. During these operations, the unit also scored one air combat victory thanks to its commander S/Ldr. Jaroslav Himr.

 

BM210, S/Ldr František Fajtl, CO of No. 122 Squadron, RAF Hornchurch, Devon, United Kingdom, May 1942

František Fajtl was born on August 20, 1912, in Donín, Louny district. He graduated from the Military Academy in Hranice and graduated in 1935 as an air force lieutenant. In June 1939 he fled to France via Poland, where he joined Armée de l’Air as a sergeant. He fought in the Bloch MB.152 and Morane-Saulnier MS.406 and when France fell, he retreated to North Africa and from there made his way to England via Gibraltar. In the ranks of No. 1 and No. 17 Squadron he took part in the Battle of Britain. In 1941 he became commander of No. 313 Squadron, and a year later he became the first Czechoslovak to take command of an English squadron, namely No. 122 (City of Bombay) Squadron. Already on May 5, 1942, he was shot down over France and made an emergency landing in the occupied territory. In dramatic circumstances, he made it across France and the Pyrenees to Spain, where he was captured and imprisoned in the Miranda concentration camp. On his release he returned to England, was promoted to the rank of Wing Commander and, at his own request, returned to combat as CO of No. 313 Squadron. In January 1944 he was appointed commander of a group of pilots who went to the Soviet Union. After retraining as a La-5FN, he led the 1st Czechoslovak Independent Fighter Regiment in the USSR. Like other pilots fighting on the Western Front, he was discharged from the army after the war and imprisoned. Afterwards he worked as a labourer and as a clerk. He was not fully rehabilitated until after the fall of communism. He died at the age of 94. In all, he shot down four enemy planes during his wartime career, certainly, and damaged two.

 

R7192, P/O Josef Příhoda, No. 111 Squadron, RAF Debden, Essex, United Kingdom, February 1942

Josef Příhoda trained as a mechanic, but in 1935 he volunteered for the air force. Gradually, he completed pilot training and a fighter course at Aviation Regiment 4 in Hradec Králové. After the occupation of the country on March 15, 1939, he got to France via Poland, but with the necessary Foreign Legion entry. During September, finally, he was accepted into the Armée de l’Air and training began. However, both the designated ERC 571 and the GC III/4, located in North Africa, had obsolete aircraft and did not get into action. The fall of France meant evacuation to the UK, where Josef Příhoda joined the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve. Rated Sergeant he retrained on Hurricanes and in October 1940 joined No. 1 Squadron, with which he intervened in the crucial Battle of Britain. This was followed by night operations and offensive actions over occupied Europe. In late September 1941 he transferred to No. 111 Squadron flying with Spitfires. In mid-April 1942, already with a reputation as a very experienced pilot, he joined No. 313 Squadron. On October 23, he received the DFC Distinguished Flying Cross for outstanding combat action, including five confirmed and two probable kills. He took part in many actions over enemy territory and was killed in Operation Ramrod 56, which targeted the Brest submarine base. His Spitfire crashed in the sea. The Spitfires of No. 111 Squadron, with which Příhoda flew in late 1941-1942, wore night livery at the time with a new modified C1 emblem on the fuselage in a reduced form. With this livery Spitfire R7192, JU-Y, Příhoda shot down one Bf 109 and damaged another on February 12, 1942.

 

AR435, Sgt. František Loucký, No. 65 Squadron, RAF Gravesend, Kent, United Kingdom, July 1942

František Loucký began his combat activity within the RAF on September 17, 1941, with No. 65 (East India) Squadron flying Spitfires Mk.Vb. František Loucký flew, among others, Spitfires codenamed YT-E. The first one was serial number W3456, the second AB133 and the third AR435. The AB133 and AR435 Spitfires bore Loucký’s nickname Lucky painted under the windshield, while the AR435 was accompanied by a small Czechoslovak insignia. In June 1942, Loucký was transferred to Czechoslovak No. 312 Squadron. There he flew missions against targets in occupied Western Europe, participated in air cover of bombers, attacks against ships, etc. In the autumn of 1943, he volunteered for the Czechoslovak fighter unit in the USSR. This 1st Fighter Aviation Regiment was sent to help the Slovak uprising (SNP) on September 17, 1944. During the SNP battles, he was severely wounded by enemy anti-aircraft fire while attacking German tanks near Ružomberok and was airlifted to the USSR for treatment. He returned to the 1st Czechoslovak Fighter Aviation Regiment after his recovery on November 23, 1944 and on December 7. 1944 he was transferred to the newly formed 2nd Czechoslovak Fighter Aviation Regiment, where he served in training as a gunnery officer of the unit and also flew to Prague-Letňany Airport on May 16, 1945. Due to persistent difficulties resulting from war injuries, he was discharged from active military service on June 29, 1946. In 1947 he published a book “I Stayed Alone”. After his death, his book about the fallen airmen of the Czechoslovak Foreign Resistance “Many Did Not Fly”, was published.

10/2024
Info EDUARD 10/2024

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/

10/1/2024

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