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Old 05-16-2018, 10:37 AM
  #15833  
Ernie P.
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All;

I appreciate the various postings. Thanks! Here is the info I tried to post earlier, and the clues I used or would have used. Thanks; Ernie P.


What warbird pilot do I describe?

1. This pilot is, today, almost unknown. Yet he was, in many ways, one of the best there ever was.

2. He was born on a farm.

3. And entered military service at a young age.

4. And originally served, as seems natural, in a cavalry unit.

5. He first saw combat as part of a cavalry unit.

6. He switched his path and became a pilot a couple of years later.

7. He rose through the ranks quickly.

8. By the time he first engaged in air combat, he was already an experienced pilot.

9. He accomplished things in combat that have only been done by a very small handful of men.

10. And he did at least one thing no other pilot, before or since, has accomplished.

11. He did not become an ace on his first combat flight.

12. That had to wait for his second combat flight.

13. Against enemy aircraft considered to be pretty stiff competition.

14. Of course, both flights occurred on the same day.

15. He was the top scoring ace of his service.

16. And was compared to Baron von Richthofen himself.

17. He scored over 50 victories.

18. In a total combat career of three months.

19. It may be that he became too confident of his own abilities.

20. He was shot down and killed.

21. By enemy fighters.

22. After scoring three final victories.

23. While escorting a flight of bombers.

24. He was the highest scoring ace in his conflict.

25. And the highest scoring ace of his particular service.

26. He is one of the very few men who became an “ace in a day”, scoring five or more victories in a single day.

27. He is (I believe) the only pilot to become an ace on his first day in combat. I’m not entirely sure of that claim, though.

28. He is the only pilot to score a total of ten victories on his first day in combat.

29. Nine of those victories were fighters.

30. The other was a recon bird.

31. He is one of only a single handful of aces to score more than ten victories in a single day.

32. He scored eleven victories in one day, exactly one month after his first combat sortie.

33. And exactly two months later, he died.

Answer: Warrant Officer Hiromichi Shinohara Hiromichi Shinohara (篠原弘道Shinohara Hiromichi; 1913 – 1939) was the highest-scoring fighter ace of the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service (IJAAF). On 27 June 1939 he set a Japanese record by downing 11 planes on a single day. He was shot down and killed on 27 August 1939, having claimed 58 victories in only three months of combat. He scored all his aerial victories while flying a Nakajima Ki-27.
Early life

Hiromichi Shinohara was born in August 1913 on a farm in Suzumenomiya, near Utsunomiya in the Tochigi Prefecture. After finishing his formal education he went into military service, joining the 27th Cavalry Regiment in 1931. In that capacity he took part in the Japanese invasion of Manchuria and was involved in the Jiangqiao Campaign in April 1932.
Imperial Japanese Army Air Force career

In June 1933 he went to the Tokorozawa Flying School (Tokorozawa Rikugun Koku Seibi Gakkō), graduating in January 1934 and he became enlisted as a corporal in the 1st Chutai of the 11th Hiko Datai, posted in Harbin, Manchukuo (Manchuria). By the end of 1938 he had climbed through the ranks, becoming a warrant officer. He was 25 years old and had six years of flying experience by the time the Nomonhan Incident (Battles of Khalkhin Gol) began in May 1939.

During his first combat sortie, on 27 May 1939, Shinohara, flying a Nakajima Ki-27, downed four Soviet Polikarpov I-16 fighters. He became an ace within 24 hours, after he claimed six more victories, downing a Polikarpov R-Z reconnaissance plane and five Polikarpov I-15 biplane fighters. No other pilot in history scored 10 victories during his first day of combat. From then on his victories continued, culminating on 27 June 1939 in an Imperial Japanese Army Air Force record of eleven victories in a single day during an air battle over Tamsak-Bulak. Only top ace of all time Erich Hartmann (12), Emil Lang (18), Hans-Joachim Marseille (17), Erich Rudorffer (13 in 17 minutes), have surpassed him.

Shinohara's luck however ran out on him two months later when on 27 August 1939 he himself was shot down by Soviet Polikarpov I-16 fighters after claiming three victories during a bombing escort mission. His aircraft fell in flames into Mohorehi Lake, ten kilometres south of Abdara Lake. Warrant Officer Hiromichi Shinohara was posthumously promoted to the rank of second lieutenant, having claimed 58 victories in only three months of combat—the last three in the battle that would take him down—earning him the nickname of the Richthofen of the Orient.