This is a new one on me. I’m a retired USAF fighter pilot, the son of an 8th Air Force pilot, and have thought I knew a thing or two about the Luftwaffe. I had no idea the Luftwaffe had a two seat trainer version of the BF-109. I have NEVER been disappointed by your mini-documentaries, but this one is especially good‼️ As always backed up with impressive photo evidence. Well Done Dr Felton‼️
@martinluton65137 ай бұрын
There is a two seat 109 in England that for around £2500 you can get a ride in and some stick time on. It’s based at Sywell near Northampton.
@joanofarc13387 ай бұрын
@@martinluton6513 Thanks, I’ve seen video of this aircraft, but thought it was converted into a two seater after the war. Once again, never knew there were two seater 109s used for training during the war. Appreciate the comment👍🏼
@AcroAirwolf7 ай бұрын
The Czech built also 109s after the war, named Avia S-199, equipped with Jumo-engines. They also made twoseaters, Avia CS-199. 25 of the S-199 went to Israel. Israel had no twoseaters.
@chriscarbaugh39367 ай бұрын
Also made two-seat FW-190s. There is one at the RAF Museum at Hendon, outside London.
@AcroAirwolf7 ай бұрын
@@chriscarbaugh3936 BTW: German types are not written with "-". It´s Bf 109 or Fw 190.
@Kevin-mx1vi7 ай бұрын
I admire the chap for sticking to his principles. He didn't want to fight Hitler's war and took a massive risk so's not to.
@empirednw66247 ай бұрын
He still betrayed his county and people though. Soooo principled…..
@almightyyoke7 ай бұрын
@@empirednw6624He ""betrayed"" the Nazi regime. That's a very principled thing to do.
@rebel-yellenterprises14797 ай бұрын
@@empirednw6624he was an Austrian citizen. Hitler and Austria had a forced, shotgun wedding with Hitler holding the shotgun. The man was an Austrian national patriot and felt some kinda way about the “wedding”.
@cactuslietuva7 ай бұрын
@@empirednw6624 what comment is that...he was Austrian, his country was annexed by nazi Germany, and he didn't wanted to fight for occupiers
@RedXlV7 ай бұрын
@@empirednw6624 He wasn't German, he was Austrian. Germany wasn't his country.
@roscoewhite37937 ай бұрын
Since this is about a crash-landed Bf-109 in England... I was scrolling through a Twitter page devoted to colourised photographs of military scenes, and found one showing a Bf-109 that had crash-landed in Britain in 1940, with the pilot surviving to be taken prisoner... and I gasped with surprise when I read the pilot's name. Back in my childhood, I'd met him, because my sister had been on an exchange program with a German family, and he'd come to visit.
@hawnyfox34117 ай бұрын
* What is the pilot's name BTW for those of us that are curious ??
@roscoewhite37937 ай бұрын
@@hawnyfox3411 Joachim Schypeck. He was an Oberleutnant when captured.
@shed662157 ай бұрын
Capt. Eric Brown CBE DFC AFC RN said of the Bf109G-12: 'One of my rashest adventures was to fly the Bf109G-12 tandem two-seater from the rear cockpit with no one in the forward cockpit. I was interested to ascertain what sort of view the instructor had for landing. The answer was none! I had to make three very frightening attempts before regaining terra firma. The periscope sight in the rear cockpit was of no use whatsoever in the vital final stage of flare, touch-down and landing run. One can only assumed that Luftwaffe instructors finding themselves in a Bf109G-12 acquired a fatalistic acceptance of an inevitable reliance on their pupils for the finale of each training flight. I would certainly not recommend the ultimate solution that I adopted of a split-S turning dive at the runway, and then a burst of power to avoid cratering the tarmac, and making tail-up contact on the mainwheels. After the tail dropped it was anybody's guess as to the direction in which the aircraft was heading. I had certainly not the vaguest idea.' (From 'Wings of the Luftwaffe'...a thoroughly interesting book.) To be a test pilot of a newly-manufactured aircraft is one thing, to fly an enemy combat aircraft is another - to fly as many as Capt. Brown did was certainly on another level!
@EdMcF17 ай бұрын
His auto-biography gets to a point where I read two 'suicide missions' per page, then it tails off to one per page. I had the immense honour of meeting him and hearing him talk about his experiences, beyond jaw-dropping.
@stuartclemmons38327 ай бұрын
Eric Brown managed the landing because he was a first rate pilot with exceptional skills. An average pilot would have likely ended his life doing that!
@georgehugh34557 ай бұрын
Seems like he could have figured out that 'view problem' while taxiing for take-off....
@kiwisteve65987 ай бұрын
At the 6.28 mark in the video you can see the a comment on the drawing of the wreck that the rear canopy had triangular inserts in it to improve the forward view. Maybe Eric’s plane lacked that modification.
@memkiii7 ай бұрын
@@georgehugh3455 Not really considering that you can't see where you are going even from the front seat.
@jensenhealey087 ай бұрын
Love these little vignettes of the war that give a more person feel for different participants' perspectives.
@joakimkarlsson92557 ай бұрын
A video about Paul Hiul, the danish mechanic who stole a Heinkel He-111 and flew it to Sweden, would be cool.
@Peace2U-ec6es7 ай бұрын
Interesting to hear more and more stories related to acts of kindness and civil decency during the madness of WWII. Thanks to Dr Felton for bringing this one to a new light.
@DaveSCameron7 ай бұрын
That surely depends on the point of view.
@luciaconn67887 ай бұрын
Peace-nick here, Ukrainian deaths are driving me crazy. "... When he sees war he tries to stop it," Bobby Kennedy eulogy to JFK. Present day leaders want power for power's sake.
@HughLyon-Sack7 ай бұрын
Mark, your narration is better than 95% of all the other content providers on KZbin.
@gregb64697 ай бұрын
Especially since he is a real human being, not a computer-generated voice that mis-pronounces words.
@pablo24267 ай бұрын
Good narration but not the best channel on ww2. I prefer Yarnhub for his extraordinary animations et Opération rooms for his narration+ animations. Mark doesn’t explain with animation but with only real videos. It is also very good but classic.
@jonclassical20247 ай бұрын
So interesting...great book on this subject.... (Arrival of Eagles: Luftwaffe Landings in Britain 1939-1945, by Andy Saunders, is published by Grub Street, priced £20.) In one review I found it states "As for his eventual fate, little more is known about the brave Austrian. “Several years ago, I tried to track him down but got absolutely nowhere,” says Saunders. “He’s probably dead now, but I’d have loved to have met him and found out what really motivated him to risk everything in such an incredible flight." Thanks Dr. Felton for brightening my Wednesday!
@jonclassical20247 ай бұрын
I think you are very correct Dr. Felton, he was a brave Austrian, like "Capt. von Trapp"...hated the Germans and took the ultimate decision. I would bet he went home to live in Austria as soon as he could!
@derin1117 ай бұрын
Ah! I didn’t see this. You may have answered my question above.
@tomyeplcharger7 ай бұрын
My grandfather flew on this type (G12) in the JG105 based in Helmstedt Markersdorf in early 1945.
@superjonboy8737 ай бұрын
Unlike the Pilot in this video, Mark NEVER fails to land a successful video!
@userbosco7 ай бұрын
The irony is history never gets old.... Thank you again Mr. Felton for another fascinating story from our past.
@nicolas24197 ай бұрын
I didn't know this story. Seeing the title, I initially thought that the video was going to tell the story of René Darbois, a Frenchman from annexed Alsace-Lorraine who was drafted into the Luftwaffe and who found a way to become a fighter pilot despite his suspicious origins. In July 1944, he defected to Italy with a Bf-109G which can be seen today at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.
@Ken-fh4jc7 ай бұрын
I’ve seen it!
@robertvermaat21247 ай бұрын
It's from the book: Arrival of Eagles: Luftwaffe Landings in Britain 1939-1945, by Andy Saunders, published by Grub Street.
@stangace207 ай бұрын
Didn't even know they made 2-seat 109's, I thought the closest thing to that was an ME 108
@glennpatton7227 ай бұрын
True, there was a 2-seat 109 in Where Eagles Dare(?) I thought it was a Spanish CASA only trainer, well it wasn't (it had a Merlin!)
@shed662157 ай бұрын
@@glennpatton722 The 109s in the Battle of Britain film had Merlins, they too were also from Spain.
@wannabe46687 ай бұрын
Training planes
@JeffHenry-cq3is7 ай бұрын
Most aircraft have a training model
@Thorr-kl6jl7 ай бұрын
The training version of the Bf-109 was the Bf-109G12.
@threechevy42037 ай бұрын
I remember hearing about Bob Hoover escaping from a German pow camp by walking up to a parked airplane and flying it back across Allied lines. Saw him at an air show once, he was an amazing pilot!
@autocad32277 ай бұрын
Mark Felton needs to do a video on that one
@bob_the_bomb45087 ай бұрын
@@autocad3227I think he has?
@bongobrandy62977 ай бұрын
This is the first time I've seen or heard of the two seater Me109.. Danke!
@tonyholden52547 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in Lowestoft, into all things airplane since I was a small boy. Never heard of this incident. I have learned so much about local WW11 history from you Mark, thank you!
@boinkporkpork7 ай бұрын
I read this as defecated rather than defected. Although with that landing who knows. Another great video, thank you Dr. Felton
@JackRoss907 ай бұрын
This isn’t related to the video but I want to thank you for these videos. I found your channel when I was sick with COVID and I binged everything you put up. Cheers!
@AgencyIsland7 ай бұрын
Cant imagine the feeling of "well the germans didnt shoot me down, hope the english dont either " so many variables that could go against you
@garylawson53817 ай бұрын
Thank you Mark Felton Productions!
@samnewman59277 ай бұрын
Absolutely loved this episode. Norfolk had a crazy amount of air bases during the war, my grandparents met at one of them, my grandfather being a navigator in a wellington and my grandmother being in the WAAF. I never met my grandfather but he was shot down over Germany, survived spending the rest of the war at Stalag Luft 3. I’d love an episode regarding all of the airbases once in Nofork, most of which are abandoned or overgrown.
@hawnyfox34117 ай бұрын
* Sounds like your Grandad might've been based at either Marham or Feltwell - ( just inside the Norfolk border ) Also sounds like an interesting tale/event Did YOU know which base it was by any chance ?
@oliviersavard86767 ай бұрын
i've been doing a list of old raf airbases in england on google earth and there's indeed an absolute ton, i'm not even done and so far i've found upwards of 200 bases, and that's only the air bases that have survived enough to be noticeable from the sky, not even the bases that were demolished and covered by residential development
@jeffreymcfadden94037 ай бұрын
The wing in the foreground had Italian markings. Probably from a C202 or C205.
@robertsolomielke51344 ай бұрын
TY Dr. Felton for another forgotten jewel of the lesser known fates in wartime Europe.
@mondo8517 ай бұрын
Another great historical story. This is one of my favorite KZbin channels, very much at the top of the list. So incredibly refreshing to view historical accounts that are informed by research and obvious respect for the subject matter, and, especially, free of indoctrinating narratives.
@x-TheTheo7 ай бұрын
Love your videos, DR. Felton! Keep up the great work.
@julosx7 ай бұрын
Another Luftwaffe pilot did even better. René Girard was a Frenchman from eastern France. When the Germans crossed the border in 1940, Girard realised that he would be sent to Eastern Front if he did nothing. Instead, he contacted the Luftwaffe asking to be a fighter pilot since he knew that it would take 4 years of training before his CO send him to some front. During his training, he engaged into his own risky mission : take microfilms of every location and base he would be sent to. The last one was a fighter unit specialized into ground attack in Northern Italy. The every first day he was in operation, he said to his "team mates" that he had a problem with his 109 G-6 aircraft. Instead he ran away with it, shutting off his Telefunken transponder as soon as he left the German controlled air space. After an hour of flight, he landed on a secondary US air base (used mostly for refuelling U.S. aircrafts coming from other locations). He was brought to the base commander and gave him all of his microfilms and a functional, operational Me-109 that still exists today. It was originally painted in two tones of grey on the upper surfaces. One of the panels on the fuselage was mounted upside down so that the left Balkankreuz didn't look right. Girard eventually survived the war. Because of a leak in a algerian newspaper, the Germans learnt about what happened to him and they tried to threaten his parents in France to have him surrender. So a Gestapo car was sent to his parents location. This car and its agents never reach their home since it was straffed by some 8th Air Force fighter somewhere along the road. So they too survive the war. René Girard became in a helicopter pilot during the Algeria war. He commited suicide in 1956 and never knew what his former 109 ever became.
@AAO3427 ай бұрын
I have never noticed that the canopies on the G-12 opens in a different way than the ordinary 109s . Only left and top panel opens while the right one stays in place . On ordinary 109s the whole canopy opens . I think your audience will find a video about the Junkers Ju88 that went down in the Kilsfjord near Kragerø in Norway interessting .
@chrissnape95377 ай бұрын
I had never heard this story before. It is stimulating to learn new to me history. I stumbled across your channel a few months back. Your presentation is special and keeps one interested. This Austrian had a great deal of courage, as he must have known his piloting was less than special. Attempting a belly landing shows how much he disliked Hitler and the German goals. The home guard helping him out of the plane was very decent. I would like to think that rational attitude is still possible. Here in Canada, I believe it is still possible. I am not so sure about our neighbors to the south. It reminds me of your WWI story regarding the enormous Zeppelin, that crash landed in England. It only took two British officials to escort thirteen German airmen to the nearest police station. In both stories, the Germans and British showed such humility and integrity. Luckily, I still have many episodes left to view. Thanks, Sir Felton 😊
@Dunbar07407 ай бұрын
My great aunt was killed in a raid on Lowestoft, along with 31 other people, on May 12th 1943. The raid was conducted by 24 Focke-Wulf FW-190s. These were single engine fighter/bombers that resemble the 109, to an untrained eye. Suffolk's air defence was, subsequently, keen to exact revenge. The Austrian pilot in Dr. Felton's account was lucky he didn't wander across the coast slightly further south. I've no doubt the twitchy coastal gunners would have provided a less agreeable welcome.
@AudieHolland7 ай бұрын
No type of FW-190 even remotely resembles the ME-109, other than that they are single engine, single seat fighter mono planes. The P-51B Mustang resembled an ME-109 more than any other plane, which is why early escort pilots flying the type would not like to get close to their own bombers they were protecting.
@Dunbar07407 ай бұрын
@@AudieHolland As I said "...to the untrained eye", there appears to be a resemblance between the two German single engine monoplanes. To the untrained eye. To the untrained eye...
@MrGuto7 ай бұрын
My eye is untrained. I just looked at pictures of both planes. Look similar indeed, to my untrained eyes.
@AudieHolland7 ай бұрын
@@Dunbar0740 You don't have to be trained to spot differences in how supposedly similar things look different. People not trained in identifying guns will still spot the obvious difference between a revolver and a semi automatic. You don't need to have a trained eye to see that the ME-109 differs from the FW-190 because the first one has a streamlined nose, the latter has a stub nose. To spot the differences between any ME-109 and the Mustang P-51B. Now that takes training.
@Dunbar07407 ай бұрын
@@AudieHolland To "train one's eye" is an English colloquialism which means to focus. An "untrained eye" means, "at a glance" or refers to a layperson.
@daystatesniper017 ай бұрын
Yet another golden nugget of information ,many thanks .
@williambarr28467 ай бұрын
I suppose if one is going to attempt a landing in such an aircraft, in ruff terrain you would want you landing gear 'up' and sliding in on you're belly to avoid nosing over, and cartwheeling- Thank you for another well produced 'piece'-
@C61-y9s7 ай бұрын
Mr. Felton is truly a hidden gem to his audience and the world. God bless and a long life to you.
@viliamklein7 ай бұрын
I wonder what happened to him after the war.
@Peace2U-ec6es7 ай бұрын
I wonder what happened to his family during the war.
@StephanieSwift-jt3hz7 ай бұрын
I've been wondering exactly the same thing.
@fredbloggs80727 ай бұрын
I can't find anything online that says what happened to Wimberger after he was sent to the POW camp. It would be nice to know how his story finished.
@markbrown3827 ай бұрын
@@fredbloggs8072Yeah I can’t find anything. Hope he had a good life.
@MrTuftynut7 ай бұрын
Wow - Another great video and story. What a shame that rare two-seat 109 G 12 variant was not kept for posterity and in a museum now!
@theonlymadmac47717 ай бұрын
There is a flying 2 seater in Usedom Germany
@jamieflame017 ай бұрын
That is how people, real people, stop a war of their rulers desire.
@patrickmunneke83487 ай бұрын
Yeah only in fairytales
@user-yy1rs3df3q7 ай бұрын
It's a cool story but lets not pretend he was doing this for anything other than for self serving reasons.
@jamieflame017 ай бұрын
@user-yy1rs3df3q Well I ain't no senators son, are you?
@FireBlade97732 ай бұрын
Great article. Thanks Mark!
@jknowstheway14627 ай бұрын
How do you find 100's of these unheard of stories Mark? I consider myself something of a buff and relatively educated in WW2, especially the German side, and you continually offer content Ive unencountered.
@cior88377 ай бұрын
Many thanks for the history content Dr. Mark Felton!
@skeetrix55777 ай бұрын
interesting story, as always! thanks Dr. Felton!
@MyLateralThawts7 ай бұрын
I know the Kriegsmarine had a secret communications line with their personnel in allied captivity, which the allies eventually found out about. I suspect the Luftwaffe may have had something similar. Among the standing orders the senior officers were supposed to follow, was to court martial any personnel who failed in their duties. That would definitely include defectors. Whatever the British did, the cover story seemed to work and the sergeant survived his incarceration.
@JeffHenry-cq3is7 ай бұрын
Did he? No one knows what happened to him
@caw25sha7 ай бұрын
@@JeffHenry-cq3is I was wondering about that, and why Mark didn't mention what became of him. Maybe be was given a new identity to prevent any possible post war reprisals, by Werwolf for example, something the allies were excessively paranoid about.
@markrossow63037 ай бұрын
another Commenter mentions meeting him + family in post-War Germany -- so he survived but didn't return to (also-Occupied) Austria
@kevinjudia1227 ай бұрын
Mr Felton, keep these coming! I love the individual stories like this, stuff you don’t hear too often. Good work!
@Totek67 ай бұрын
It's always a great day when Mark uploads! Appreciate all your efforts that go into making these! 😊
@robertnessful7 ай бұрын
This was a lucky pilot. He was crossing the channel a couple of weeks before D-Day. Although he was flying a fighter type, being mistaken for a low level 7:24 recon flight would have ellicitted a response.
@More_Row7 ай бұрын
You sure?
@fredbloggs80727 ай бұрын
I suspect he was smart enough to figure out the best flight path to minimalise the risk pf being shot out the sky. Plus flying with his wheels down was a good ploy. Still needed luck on his side though.
@MoJo-eb4lt7 ай бұрын
..I love these small stories, gives real insight into the war.
@paulsmith44677 ай бұрын
Might be worth checking the RAF pilot who based in Wales seemingly had enough, and flew his Spitfire/Hurricane to Dublin. I read about it in the Irish Post Newspaper during the 1970's.
@caw25sha7 ай бұрын
I believe they put the engine in a Churchill tank.
@Franky46Boy7 ай бұрын
Any idea what happened to this man later?
@fredbloggs80727 ай бұрын
I'd love to know. It seems a bit risky sending him to a POW camp, even with a cover story. The Germans must have known he'd defected. If that intel reached the camp somehow, he'd have been in severe danger.
@Franky46Boy7 ай бұрын
@@fredbloggs8072 German POWs have killed defectors or traitors in other cases. In May 1945, they even executed defectors in a prison camp in the Netherlands with the consent of the Canadian guards who provided the rifles to carry out the executions. The Canadians allowed it to maintain order and discipline in the camp!
@Franky46Boy7 ай бұрын
@@fredbloggs8072 Here is part of the story ( maybe also interesting for Mr.Marc Felton ): ..."The two sailors were cross-examined and within fifteen minutes the matter was clear before the court-martial. Dorfer and Beek were sentenced to death for desertion during war; Major Pierce was informed of the events. The responsible German and Canadian military staffs were informed, after which the Canadians decided to let the Germans have their way. At Stein's request, Pierce provided a vehicle, eight rifles and sixteen cartridges for the German execution platoon, after which Dorfer and Beek were shot near Schellingwoude the same day at 5:40 PM and 5:45 PM. On May 17, 1945, the First Canadian Army issued further instructions regarding the further functioning of the German courts-martial. From May 26, 1945, the German courts-martial imposed the restriction that sentences of more than two years' imprisonment had to be submitted to the Allied authorities for approval. The shooting of Dorfer and Beek was no exception: in many places in Europe, after the German capitulation, German soldiers were sentenced to death by courts-martial and shot. It should be taken into account that during the Second World War 10,000 to 15,000 German soldiers were sentenced to death by German courts-martial and subsequently executed, so that the Wehrmacht was accustomed to these practices. Oberstabsrichter Wilhelm Köhn experienced no disadvantages from the "correctly" conducted court-martial hearing and made a prosperous career in the German judiciary after the war"...
@arnoldbissen99216 ай бұрын
Indeed. I would love to know. I tried to google it, but couldn't find anything. Did he stay in Britain? Go back to Austria, Germany? Anybody??
@dennisswaim82107 ай бұрын
Another great story about WWII. Dr. Felton always brings the most interesting accounts to his channel. Definitely one of the best if not the best historical U- Tube sites!
@dp-sr1fd7 ай бұрын
I wonder what happened to him after the war. I hope things worked out well. Perhaps he felt it was best to keep a low profile when he got home.
@Willigula7 ай бұрын
More stuff we really didn’t know. Thanks, Dr. Felton!
@szykmenowic107 ай бұрын
Doctor Mark uploaded new video, just as I opened youtube. I've been watching your channel for so long I can finally predict when you upload sir!
@tomyeplcharger7 ай бұрын
Same story with René Darbois, french malgré-nous, defecting from Italy to US Sicilia in his 109...The plane is now to be oberved in Washington DC, Air and space museum. My grandfather has almost the same story as René Darbois (french malgré nous, LKS7 in Tulln Langenlebarn next to Vienna, then Jagdgeschwader, then surrender, then POW)
@perro6267 ай бұрын
Good lord! I read "Luftwaffe Pilot DEFECATED in Stolen Messerschmitt" and thought "The hell is Mark going to tell us about this time?"
@jacekpaszkowski20007 ай бұрын
This should be made into a movie. Awesome episode. What happened to Wimberger after the war, did he stay in England?
@Untersberg-lk6rc7 ай бұрын
Thank you for your historical review and the time you invest in sharing all of this with us❤
@ashively17 ай бұрын
As always, thank you Dr. Felton for another great story.
@rodvoorhies37537 ай бұрын
Never heard of this one! Thanks Mark!
@theknifedude18814 ай бұрын
Thank you Dr. Felton for another educating and entertaining video.
@htos1av7 ай бұрын
Fantastic story! Great work as always, Mr. Felton!
@CarLos-yi7ne7 ай бұрын
@ 6:48 the wing on the foreground has desert camo and the sign of the Italian airforce. So I guess all kinds of aircraft parts were gathered in that place..
@caw25sha7 ай бұрын
I think it's probably either Farnborough or Boscombe Down.
@userbosco7 ай бұрын
Question: Wasn't it common practice to have a defecting soldier or pilot's family get a visit from the Gestapo?
@kimwit13077 ай бұрын
Possibly, if they found out there was in fact a defection.
@terminallumbago64657 ай бұрын
@@kimwit1307I can’t imagine they wouldn’t have thought something was up considering he never came back.
@kimwit13077 ай бұрын
@@terminallumbago6465 in those days, especially in wartime, I dont think it was that uncommon for planes to just disappear.
@markrossow63037 ай бұрын
"routine training flight" could crash, but not "disapear" I would think... (a Great-Uncle by marriage _disappeared_ during WW2 in a 4-engine over Alaska)
@kimwit13077 ай бұрын
@@markrossow6303 crash without being found = disappear or going missing.
@mtathos_7 ай бұрын
I can't remember how long it's been but I remember the comments of the older videos that kept saying how much more recognition you deserve, I am very delighted to see that you have finally gotten that recognition!
@gjfreke7 ай бұрын
I find myself in a very dark time in my life, your words of wisdom and your historical facts. Give me the glimmer of hope to carry on you are a legend Mark Felton. Thank you.
@zen4men7 ай бұрын
Whatever it is, Face The Fear. No test in Life is ever greater than your ability to conquer it. /
@jeffterhune85737 ай бұрын
Great video, never knew they had a two seater. You never disappoint on your vast knowledge, thanks again. Dad was in the 11th airborne, Pacific theater.
@jensenwilliam54347 ай бұрын
Thank you Mark.
@M1903a47 ай бұрын
Another fascinating tale!! The wing in the foreground of the collected wreckage is from an Italian aircraft.
@1969Risky7 ай бұрын
6:47 the Bf-109 G12 has Regia Aeronautica markings on it's wings in the photo as well as the camouflaged used by them as well. It has a mixture of German camouflage & Italian camouflage. A bit strange for a Luftwaffe fighter/trainer aircraft! Great Video as always. It's always a great surprise when something out of the odd comes up on this channel.
@nicolad88227 ай бұрын
I think that’s part of a different plane.
@petenztube85927 ай бұрын
Why would he deliberately land with the wheels up?
@shellman58447 ай бұрын
The idea probably was to slide in to a reasonably safe landing. Wheels down might have hit an obstruction flipping the plane over onto the cockpit. Just a guess.
@mikefranklin12537 ай бұрын
I know some German pilots flew planes to England to surrender late in the war. Did any Allied pilots fly to Germany to surrender?
@WALTERBROADDUS7 ай бұрын
Yes... There was an American pilot who stole a P-38. There also were a few who landed in neutral Sweden or Switzerland.
@jonbell30207 ай бұрын
Sorry Mr Felton, I was sure I’d subscribed ages ago … remedied now, fabulous historical resource.
@larryburwell85507 ай бұрын
interesting story for sure. thanks for sharing
@alekhidell70687 ай бұрын
Everybody wants an Operation Downfall episode, Mark!
@SevereWeatherCenter7 ай бұрын
Awesome video Mark! I had no idea this ever happened!
@TheRealBatCave7 ай бұрын
U haven't even watched it at this point, the video is 8 minutes old ur comment is 8 minutes old......
@UnusSedLeo-w5l7 ай бұрын
That was a daring flight. From Zerbst! Another new part of history revealed by Mark Felton. Very fascinating, again!
@TankerBricks7 ай бұрын
Mark. Thanks for providing my Wednesday night entertainment!
@debbiestyer4537 ай бұрын
What happened to him?
@iansummers69457 ай бұрын
If only the remains of the plane had been stored away over the years and become a museum piece with this amazing story attached…
@davidvaughn77527 ай бұрын
Wow, another riveting untold story thst I thoroughly enjoyed! Thank You, Dr.!
@mrveritas7007 ай бұрын
Can you please do a video on Rudolf Hess, and his flight into Scotland for peace. David Irving's book about the story of Rudolf Hess was an incredible one to say the least, His flight and prison sentence, should be made into a movie. I have wondered for decades why this has not happened yet...
@Occident.7 ай бұрын
Because the British regime still wants to hide the facts of the Hess flight. They murdererd the poor bugger in 1987 to silence him for ever, as he was due to be released. Another stain on British history.
@caw25sha7 ай бұрын
I think Mark made a video on him some time ago. Regarding Irving, let's say you might find better sources of information.
@lawrencebarnes68937 ай бұрын
Good research. I'm sure that takes a lot of time. Always interesting.
@wayneantoniazzi27067 ай бұрын
Great story! And I couldn't help but notice the wing of an Italian airplane in the foreground at around the 6:50 mark. I wonder what the story on that one was? Another good one Doctor Felton! Thanks!
@binaway7 ай бұрын
After delivering their weapons Cargo ships required ballast to return their home ports. Destroyed weapons make the best cargo as most parts can be recycled. Aluminium/aluminum is very easy and cheep to recycle and relatively expensive to extract from bauxite. The metal form lots of Italian downed Italian aircraft would have been recycled into say Spitfires. The Germans would have recycled thousands of large allied bombers into ME109 and FW190's. Interesting aircraft were carefully examined before being melted down.
@wayneantoniazzi27067 ай бұрын
@@binaway I figured that's what it was all about.
@GeistInTheMachine7 ай бұрын
I'm surprised his plane didn't automatically explode after ten seconds when he left the mission area.
@trent8477 ай бұрын
The very last photo had a German marked Bf 109 fuselage with wings in the foreground that had Italian Regia Aeronautica camouflage and markings.
@benbaker29657 ай бұрын
This is another vignette. A gem of Dr. Felton sharing even the small but interesting events if WWII. I wonder whatever became of this lilot at war,'s end?
@NoahSpurrier7 ай бұрын
How many Luftwaffe defection incidents were there over the war?
@thomasfrench20127 ай бұрын
In my dad's fighter group book, there is a section and a couple of photos about the day a young Luftwaffe pilot landed at their airfield to surrender.
@KonradAdenauerJr7 ай бұрын
A very gutsy move by the Austrian pilot. There was a similar story on the Eastern Front: a Romanian Royal Air Force Junkers 88D-3 pilot defected to the West by flying his aircraft from Crimea to Cyprus. The aircraft is on display at the USAF National Museum in Dayton, Ohio.
@johnryder17137 ай бұрын
Thanks Mark for this one, as he already covered the defection of another Luftwaffe pilot believed to be a mole inserted in German prior to the war who defected with a high value bomber/ surveillance plane.
@sanrell857 ай бұрын
Nightfighter?
@johnryder17137 ай бұрын
@@sanrell85 I forget I think it may have been as it was a while back but there if you search for it
@johnryder17137 ай бұрын
@@sanrell85 It was OberLeutenant Herbert Schmidt in a Ju88
@sanrell857 ай бұрын
@@johnryder1713 yes sir that is the one
@dad_jokes_4ever2267 ай бұрын
For a second there I thought it said " Defecated" instead of "Defected " 😅😅😅
@gmotuel7 ай бұрын
I would imagine he ended up at Queen Victoria Hospital East Grinstead rather than Lingfield. It's where all of the injured pilots went to for surgery, burns treatment etc.. It developed as a specialist burns unit under the leadership of Sir Archibald McIndoe, and became world-famous for pioneering treatment of RAF and allied aircrew who were badly burned or crushed and required reconstructive plastic surgery. It was also where the Guinea Pig Club was formed in 1941
@FRIEND_7117 ай бұрын
An interesting story but question, what's the wings of that Italian aircraft next to trainer bf-109 in the final shot?
@charlesrabideau34747 ай бұрын
As always, new and interesting stories from the good Doctor 👍
@alkitzman91797 ай бұрын
Wow Dr. Felton a 2 seater 109 . If I live to 500 I might know a tenth of what you know. Great video
@larryjohnson75917 ай бұрын
First, I have ever heard of this flight. Thanks for making me a little smarter Mark.
@DrumsByDennis7 ай бұрын
I always follow your excellent fascinating WW2 content Dr. Felton
@jaws8487 ай бұрын
Maybe he had a premonition and that gave him the insight to know how things would end up for Germany and decided to get out of dodge while he could?
@olivere54977 ай бұрын
'In 40 years from now, all of europe will be united with Germany at its center.... ja ja das is eine guy premonition!' 'Vvait... ich habe more premonitions...' 'Und everyone in Europa ist watching Eurovision mit der epic sax guy??!' 'Und everyone is eaten kerbab???' 'Nein! Das premonition ist eine kaput premonition!'
@jaws8487 ай бұрын
@@olivere5497 english.
@olivere54977 ай бұрын
@@jaws848 bro its comedy German! Anyone can read it.
@jaws8487 ай бұрын
@@olivere5497 well duh...ever hear of sarcasim🤣🤣🤣🤣
@murrayeldred35637 ай бұрын
The Felton= another interesting episode. ...... as always.
@andreitaga59887 ай бұрын
A romanian pilot also defected in 1943 with a Junkers 88D which is now in an American Museum. I think it would be interesting to look it up
@bobsakamanos44694 ай бұрын
Interesting story. Somewhat less dramatic than Faber's defection in a FW 190, in 1942.
@greyfox45777 ай бұрын
Makes you wonder how many fascinating similar WWII stories of soldiers, airmen, sailors, etc. that defected to other countries for whatever reasons are still out there.