Info EDUARD
Synced!
Request for consent to store optional information

We do not need to store any information (cookies, etc.) for the basic functioning of the website. However, we would like to ask for your consent to store optional information:

Anonymous Unique ID

Thanks to it, next time we will know that it is the same device and we will be able to more accurately evaluate the traffic. This identifier is completely anonymous.

Aa

Aa

Aa

Aa

Aa

 

 

 

 

aA

The 201st victory


Text: Jan Bobek

Illustration:  Piotr Forkasiewicz

Cat. No. 82138


Heinz Bär became one of the Luftwaffe's most famous fighter pilots and was one of the rare German airmen the Allied press wrote about during the war. His journey to the cockpit of a fighter plane took him through a job as a Luftwaffe aircraft mechanic, a series of rejections from superiors, violations of regulations and the cockpit of Ju 52. He gradually worked his way up to become a successful fighter pilot, a Staffelkapitän and then a Gruppenkommandeur. His health problems and exhaustion led to a conflict with Hermann Göring in the summer of 1943, which resulted in his removal as commander of I./JG 77. A subsequent conflict with an NSDAP functionary led to Bär's transfer to II./JG 1, with which he served as a simple pilot as punishment in early 1944, with 179 kills to his credit!

However, in March 1944,  Bär became acting commander of II./JG 1. From February to April he achieved 23 victories without being shot down himself. Among the highlights in this period  are the  downing of the bombers “Miss Ouachita” and “Flak Magnet”. In both cases, Bär's ground personnel witnessed the victories. With  B-17 “Miss Ouachita”, Bär appeared in a newsreel. The destruction of the Liberator “Flak Magnet” was an even more significant event, as it was Bär's 200th victory, and a short OKW communiqué (Bär's third) was issued two days later about this achievement. Albeit  II./JG 1 lost almost a hundred machines during the same period.

Major Heinz Bär scored his 201st victory on April 29, 1944 at 10:56 near Braunschweig while fighting bombers and their escorts heading for Berlin. Bär managed to lead the II./JG 1 formation into a frontal attack against the bomber formation, damaging one Liberator in the process.

Then a fighter escort of Thunderbolts from the 359th FG and apparently Mustangs from the 352nd FG appeared on the scene. In his report, Bär said that after the frontal attack in which he hit one Liberator,  his unit was dispersed by a strong fighter escort and there were separate engagements by Rotte and Schwarms. He pulled up and saw below an Fw 190 with its starboard undercarriage extended being chased by a Thunderbolt. He got behind the Thunderbolt and fired from above  and behind at a distance of about 150m. The Thunderbolt immediately exploded in mid-air and the individual parts crashed down to the ground. The impact occurred south of Braunschweig. In the minutes that followed, Bär's airmen claimed three more Thunderbolts and several four-engined bombers (including a B-24 as 202nd victory of Heinz Bär). One Mustang may have been claimed in this area by an airman from I./JG 302.

The problem is that no Thunderbolts were lost on this day, and even the Mustangs of the 352nd FG did not experience losses in this area. However, in studying German reports of Allied aircraft crashes, I found that one Mustang was shot down in this area and time. At 11:00 a Mustang crashed 700 meters northeast of Brasdorf and was so badly damaged that only the white letter J and the numbers 3, 6, and 7 could be discerned from its markings.  From these indications, it can be clearly determined that it was a P-51B-5-NA 43-6577 “WR-J” of the 354th FS, 355th FG. Its pilot was Capt. Thomas F. Neal Jr. Until now, it was believed he disappeared about 30 miles southwest of Berlin. In this area, he led his Falcon Red Flight in a dive to attack  four Fw 190s,  yet his wingman lost contact with him while passing through cloud cover and Neal then failed to respond to radio communications. The place where Neal actually ended up is quite far west of where he was last seen. He probably made his way back, perhaps joining the 359th or 352nd FG formation and eventually dying in combat with German fighters near Braunschweig. Of the information known so far from the German side, Heinz Bär's claim fits the best. Neal's Mustang had a razor back and olive camouflage of upper surfaces. It was therefore possibly   mistaken for a Thunderbolt. Neal was at the top of the 354th FS at the time with 4.5 kills and was one of its leading personalities.

Bär scored a total of 221 victories, of which 125  were over Western powers' pilots (including 16 in the Me 262), placing him second only to Hptm. Hans-Joachim Marseille, who achieved all of his 158 kills against RAF and Commonwealth airmen. Further details on this airman can be found in my three-part article in REVI Nos. 81 to 83 and in the French magazine ACES No. 8.


11/2023
Info EDUARD 11/2023

Good Day, Dear Friends We find ourselves in the same situation with November’s new releases as we did with the October ones, in that they also have been available for purchase a couple of weeks ahead of the newsletter announcement, meaning that they will already be known to a large percentage of readers and perhaps even in their possession.

11/1/2023

Read

Don't miss out

Editorial

Editorial

Good day, Dear Friends After the February premiere and the March sequel of the P-40E, it's time for what was probably the most significant foe of the Warhawks, the Japanese Zero. The last new release of a member of the Zero family, the Rufe float version, was exactly two years ago, in April 2023.

04/2025

KAMIKAZE TOKKŌTAI

KAMIKAZE TOKKŌTAI

One of the most well-known words from the field of aviation, recognized even by those with no interest in the subject, is kamikaze. It is associated with the predominantly aerial campaign that began in October 1944 and lasted until the end of the war in the Pacific. During this period, hundreds of airmen sacrificed their lives in service of the Japanese Empire.

04/2025

Dekelia Greek Air Force Museum

Dekelia Greek Air Force Museum

The Hellenic Air Force Museum is a relatively young institution, having existed in its current form since 1986. However, it certainly has a lot to build on, as its aviation collections were previously part of the Hellenic War Museum. The museum is organisationally under the Hellenic Air Force (HAF) administration and its mission is not only historical research, collection, preservation and access to exhibits, but also the retrieval, conservation and restoration of artefacts related to Greek aviation history.

04/2025

Aerial War in Ukraine - The First Mirage 2000s Have Arrived

Aerial War in Ukraine - The First Mirage 2000s Have Arrived

The full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine began three years ago, on February 24, 2022. This continuation of the series does not only cover the most recent period from February 1, 2025, to February 28, 2025, but also recaps events from the past year. However, we will start with the most significant updates—developments on the global political scene.

04/2025

Like a Painting on Canvas

Like a Painting on Canvas

Market Garden was the largest Allied airborne operation of World War II, launched on 17 September 1944 in the Netherlands. Its objective was to use paratroopers (the "Market" component) and the rapid advance of ground forces (the "Garden" component) to seize key bridges over rivers and canals, thereby creating a corridor for an attack into Germany. However, the operation ultimately failed due to strong German resistance, poor coordination, and delays in the Allied advance, particularly at Arnhem, where British paratroopers were unable to hold a crucial bridge.

04/2025

Tail End Charlie - Almost an April problem

Tail End Charlie - Almost an April problem

It's not entirely my fault that I’m writing my Tail End Charlie text at the last-minute again. I scheduled my work quite responsibly yesterday, Sunday, two days before the current issue was due out. However, somehow I didn't keep up at the end of the day. Understandably, I could blame my slow work, my tendency to run away from responsibilities, orstimuli that release the right hormones into my brain for the wrong mood, and a thousand other things rooted solely in my nature, irresponsibility, and laziness. But this time it's different my friends.

04/2025

Flying Knights in Australia

Flying Knights in Australia

03/2025

P-40E Warhawk

P-40E Warhawk

The Curtiss P-40 line of fighter aircraft stood out among American fighter types for having remained in front-line operations from the summer of 1941, before the U.S. entered World War II, through the end of the conflict four years later. Only Grumman’s versatile F4F Wildcat naval fighter could match that record.

02/2025

Check out other issues

© 2025 Eduard – Model Accessories, s.r.o.

Mírová 170

435 21 Obrnice

Czech Republic

https://www.eduard.com

support@eduard.com

+420 777 055 500

Article The 201st victory waiting for thumbnails …

Sending statistics … done (1287 ms)

Rendering The 201st victory (324910): (1/1) (0 ms)

No sync content to local

Viewport set: width=device-width, user-scalable=0; scale = 1

No sync content to local

Screen: easyReading

--==[ RUN ]==--

Info EDUARD: theme set to 8895

Device info: input=mouse, webkitPrefix=no, screen=1264x0(1)

Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)

 r85/appLogo-123.png

 r85/pubLogoa-156-cz.png

 i7878/item1065719-small.jpg

 p156/vth421083-1.jpg

 r85/appLogoa-123.png

 r85/vth512745-0.jpg

 r85/vth512770-0.jpg

 r85/vth512760-0.jpg

 r85/vth512765-0.jpg

 r85/vth512748-0.jpg[p1]

 r85/vth512759-0.jpg[p1]

 r85/vth508075-0.jpg[p1]

 r85/vth500096-0.jpg[p1]

 r85/vth489177-0.jpg[p1]

 p156/vth512637-1.jpg[p1]

 i7878/vth421237-1.jpg

 i7878/vth421238-1.jpg