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BOB HOOVER. Shot In A Spitfire, Escaped In A Focke-Wulf Fw 190, And Test Flew Over 300 Aircraft 

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The life and stories of Bob Hoover, the legendary American pilot that was able to escape a POW camp and fly to safety in a German aircraft, the Fock-Wulf Fw 190. Bob Hoover was also one of the greatest test pilots who ever lived, earning the praises of Chuck Yeager.
Robert Anderson Hoover (January 24, 1922 - October 25, 2016) was an American fighter pilot, test pilot, flight instructor, and record-setting air show aviator.
Hoover flew Spitfires in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II and was shot down in 1944 off the coast of France. He was held for over a year in a German POW camp before eventually escaping and flying to safety in a stolen enemy aircraft. He then worked as a United States Air Force and civilian test pilot after the war, flying chase for Chuck Yeager's Bell X-1 supersonic flight in 1947, and as a flight instructor for North American Aviation during the Korean War.
He is best known as an air show display pilot, who flew for nearly 50 years until his retirement in 1999. Referred to as the "pilot's pilot", Hoover revolutionized modern aerobatic flying and has been described in many aviation circles as one of the greatest pilots of all time. He received the Distinguished Flying Cross and Wright Brothers Memorial Trophy and was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1988 and Aerospace Walk of Honor in 1992, along with several other military and civilian awards and accolades. In 2013, Flying magazine ranked him 10th on its list of the 51 Heroes of Aviation.
Hoover learned to fly at Berry Field in Nashville, Tennessee while working at a local grocery store to pay for the flight training. He enlisted in the Tennessee National Guard and was sent for pilot training with the United States Army.
During World War II, Hoover was sent to Casablanca, where his first major assignment was flight testing the assembled aircraft ready for service. He was later assigned to the Supermarine Spitfire-equipped 52d Fighter Group in Sicily. On February 9, 1944, on his 59th mission, his malfunctioning Mark V Spitfire was shot down by Siegfried Lemke, a pilot of Jagdgeschwader 2 in a Focke-Wulf Fw 190 off the coast of Southern France, and he was taken prisoner. He spent 16 months at Stalag Luft 1, a German prisoner-of-war camp in Barth, Germany.
One night due to the conditions in the camp there was a riot and fight involving several thousand inmates and Hoover used this opportunity to scale the fence and escape, despite the fact that Dwight Eisenhower had issued the order for prisoners to no longer attempt to escape due to the rapid advance of the Allies. He was joined by two other POWs and together they made their way down a dirt road to a German farmhouse where a lone woman made the starving men some food. As they were leaving Hoover wrote a note for her to give to the American army in the coming weeks stating that she had assisted the three of them, and to treat her kindly. The woman also gave the trio a handgun with several extra magazines.
The men then obtained bicycles and rode for several miles before they came across a seemingly abandoned airfield. Hoover being a pilot began inspecting the planes but they all seemed damaged and incapable of flight. He eventually found a reconnaissance plane, a Focke-Wulf Fw 190, with some damage, but a full tank of fuel. A German mechanic stunned the trio sneaking up on them and demanding they halt but almost immediately had a gun pointed at him as Hoover demanded he starts the engine of the plane that he was investigating. With the engine started Hoover made the deal that since the aircraft only had room for one occupant the other two POWs would keep the gun to aid in their escape. He did not even taxi towards the runway he simply hit the throttle heading straight out across a field to take off.
Hoover did not have a parachute and was in an enemy aircraft flying towards Allied lines knowing he would be an easy target for an American or British fighter pilot. He did not even have the means to tell whether he had safely reached Allied territory; he simply knew to look for the windmills of Holland and land when he saw them. After flying all the way across The Netherlands to Zuider Zee he finally spotted windmills and landed in a field, at which point he was surrounded by angry Dutch farmers armed with pitchforks who were under the impression they had just captured a German. Eventually, a British supply truck came by at which point Hoover was able to explain who he was.

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28 июн 2023

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Комментарии : 17   
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Click the link to watch more aircraft, heroes, and their stories, and missions: www.youtube.com/@Dronescapes
@TheGravitywerks
@TheGravitywerks Год назад
Had the good fortune to watch him fly many times......bucket list level. Thanks!
@dickdowdell5813
@dickdowdell5813 Год назад
My father was a Naval aviator assigned to the Office of Naval Research (ONR) in the early 1950s in Pasadena, CA. He had many friends among the military and corporate test pilots of that exciting period. Apparently, Bob Hoover was considered, among his peers, to be the best stick and rudder pilot of them all.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Bless your Dad
@jyellowhammer
@jyellowhammer 3 месяца назад
Agreed!
@RandallSoong-pp7ih
@RandallSoong-pp7ih Год назад
Thank you!!
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
Welcome!
@mastathrash5609
@mastathrash5609 Год назад
Love listening to these OGs and their stories. Absolute LEGENDS
@retydeere1111
@retydeere1111 Год назад
Top Tier pilot! Oh and the Shrike Aeroobatics……👍👍👍
@jyellowhammer
@jyellowhammer 3 месяца назад
Mr. Hoover, the consummate gentleman. If ever there was a person that could wear a shirt that says “been there done that”, he can. But he would never be caught out and about without his sports coat and tie. Class act inside and out. Men like Mr. Hoover, Robin Olds, Chuck Yeager, Gabby Gabreski, “Boots” Blesse, and I cannot forget Mr. Anderson and his old Crowe! These men were my role models growing up. Certainly not a rock singer or a professional ball player. Why don’t we have men like this anymore?
@kh40yr
@kh40yr Год назад
Art Scholl and his Super Chipmunk, His dog Aileron, in the back seat. I flew a Super Chipmunk in Cox .049 Model size.,,lol. Art was another legend that didn't get his just. I miss Uncle Bob. He would spit hot nails if he knew this was the last year of Reno. "Gentlemen, YOU HAVE A RACE!!!".
@alexanderpintado8883
@alexanderpintado8883 Год назад
Great pilot
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Год назад
One of the best that ever lived
@jyellowhammer
@jyellowhammer 3 месяца назад
The Master!
@raymondyee2008
@raymondyee2008 Год назад
Oh yeah Bob Hoover I remember him in “Sky Fire” as the P-51 chase pilot / game warden. Didn’t know his WW2 life was just as colorful.
@paulmcneil5529
@paulmcneil5529 Год назад
I saw Bob Hoover fly more than a dozen times and hes every bit. The pilot that they said he was..
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