Poging GOUD - Vrij
The Original "Old Crow"
Flight Journal
|January - February 2023
Col. Bud Anderson's airborne reunion with a P-39Q Airacobra,The evening sun was low on the horizon as John Cyrier taxied toward the Commemorative Air Force's (CAF's) ramp at San Marcos, Texas on July 28. He had just completed the final leg of a four-stop flight home from AirVenture 2022 in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Cyrier pivoted the Central Texas Wing's P-39Q around to the right, braked to a stop, and cut power to the fighter's Allison V-1710 V-12 engine. Just after its 11-foot, seven-inch Aeroproducts propeller swung to a stop, he shot both arms through the P-39's rolled-down cockpit door windows, clenched his fists, and yelled an exultant "Yeeeaaah!"
Cyrier had just realized a dream three years in the making, reuniting America's highest ranking, living ace, Col. Clarence Bud” Anderson, with a tribute to the airplane he first dubbed Old Crow.”
Before Anderson went to combat in England with the 357th Fighter Group and scored 16.25 kills in Band D-model P-51 Mustangs wearing his famed Old Crow" livery, he flew another fighter—the Bell P-39 Airacobra.
Shortly after earning his U.S. Army Air Force wings and commission in September, 1942, Anderson received orders to the 328th Fighter Group at Hamilton Field near San Francisco to train in the P-39 at Oakland Municipal Airport. After three months, he was chosen to be among a cadre of officers forming a new group for combat, the 357th Fighter Group.
Initially, the Group trained at Tonopah, Nevada, practicing formation flight, gunnery, dive-bombing, and dogfighting, flying as much as 100 hours per month. New pilots, including Chuck Yeager, joined the unit throughout its time at Tonopah.
Anderson was made a flight leader in the 363rd Fighter Squadron, flying Dand later Q-model Airacobras as the Group made its way from Tonopah to bases in Santa Rosa and Oroville, California then Casper, Wyoming before leaving its P-39s behind and sailing for England in November 1943.
Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Dit verhaal komt uit de January - February 2023-editie van Flight Journal.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Flight Journal
Flight Journal
RESCUE CATS -PBY Catalina crews save airmen from hostile seas
\"TO A COLD, WET AND HUNGRY AIRMAN, sitting in a rubber dinghy in enemy waters, 600 miles from the nearest friendly base and 600 yards from the nearest enemy installation, the PBY is a breathtakingly beautiful sight.
16 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
A ROLL OF THE DICE
A lucky Liberator crew survives
13 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
DH Sea Vixen
ARGUABLY ONE OF THE MOST IMPRESSIVE CLASSIC JETS, even nearly seven decades after the type entered service, surely is the DH Sea Vixen “Foxy Lady” XP924 (civil registration G-CVIX).
2 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
DESPERATE FIGHT! French fighters of WW II
HISTORY HAS A WAY OF REWRITING ITSELF.
9 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
Powering the Age of Flight
GLENN HAMMOND CURTISS (1878-1930) was often called “The Colossus of Aviation” with good reason.
2 mins
May - June 2026
Flight Journal
DESPERATE MEASURES
Volksjäger, the Luftwaffe's last hope
10 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
THE Fairey Swordfish
Antiquated, yet devastatingly effective
14 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
Tuskegee RED TAILS
The men, the machines, the missions
11 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
THE HIGH-VELOCITY RAPTOR
The F-22A thrust vectoring system is the “bread and butter” of the Raptor's incredible maneuvering capability.
14 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
Mitchells over the Mediterranean
Wavetop warfare: skip-bombing and big guns
13 mins
January - February 2026
Translate
Change font size

