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Donald Blakeslee, Decorated World War II Flying Ace, 90, NY Times
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DGH  
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 More options 3 Oct 2008, 15:40
Newsgroups: alt.obituaries
From: "DGH" <perin...@eudoramail.com>
Date: Fri, 3 Oct 2008 09:40:18 -0500
Local: Fri 3 Oct 2008 15:40
Subject: Donald Blakeslee, Decorated World War II Flying Ace, 90, NY Times
-

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/03/us/03blakeslee.html?ref=obituaries

Col. Donald Blakeslee, Decorated World War II Flying Ace, Dies at 90

By DENNIS HEVESI [New York Times]

Col. Donald Blakeslee, one of the most decorated fighter pilots of World War
II and the commander of the first American fighter squadrons to reach Berlin
[Germany] as the Allies ground down the German Luftwaffe, died September 3
[2008] at his home in Miami [Florida]. He was 90.

The cause was heart failure, said his daughter and only immediate survivor,
Dawn Blakeslee. Ms. Blakeslee said she did not announce her father's death
last month because of his reluctance to talk about his achievements.

As commander of the Fourth Fighter Group of the Eighth Fighter Command,
Colonel Blakeslee led three squadrons of 16 single-seat, single-engine P-51
Mustangs, each equipped with six machine guns mounted in the wings and
sighted so that the bullet streams could converge on the Messerschmitts and
Focke-Wulf fighters that were trying to down Allied bombers.

By war's end, the Fourth Fighter Group was credited with destroying 1,020
German aircraft, 550 shot out of the air and 470 hit while on the ground.
That total surpassed the 992 German planes taken out by the 56th Fighter
Group, led by another fighter ace, Col. Hubert Zemke.

Walter J. Boyne, a former director of the National Air and Space Museum at
the Smithsonian Institution, said on Tuesday that Colonel Blakeslee was one
of the cadre of commanders who "blunted the edge of the Luftwaffe" and "went
on to lead the progressive destruction of the German air force."

In his four years in the European theater, Colonel Blakeslee flew nearly 500
missions and had about 1,000 combat hours to his credit, believed to be more
missions and hours "than any other American fighter pilot of World War II,"
said Barrett Tillman, a former executive secretary of the American Fighter
Aces Association.

On March 6, 1944, Colonel Blakeslee's fighter group became the first to fly
above the fleet of Boeing B-17s and Consolidated B-24s as they each dropped
up to 4,000 pounds of bombs on Berlin. As German fighters tried to intercept
the bombers, Colonel Blakeslee's planes swooped down.

Of the aerial combat, the colonel later told reporters: "There's nothing
unusual in the missions. They all follow the same pattern. Either you get on
Jerry's tail or he gets on yours. That's all."

"We got low enough to see Berlin only once," he said. "We were down to
around 10,000 feet and we could see that blocks and blocks of Berlin had
been bombed absolutely flat."

On April 8, 1944, the Fourth Fighter Group set a record for the European
theater, shooting down 31 planes in one day. Then, in late June, Colonel
Blakeslee led his fighters on one of their most arduous missions, escorting
shuttle-bombers to Russia.

"When the war had progressed to a certain point where American bombers had
the range to over-fly German-held territory," Mr. Boyne said, "the idea was
to land them in the Soviet Union, then return and bomb on the way back. You
double the utilization of your bombers."

"This required, particularly on the part of the fighters," Mr. Boyne
continued, "great endurance and navigation abilities. It strained the plane
and strained the pilot."

In a ceremony in England on March 6, 1944, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the
supreme commander of Allied forces in Europe, awarded the Distinguished
Service Cross to Colonel Blakeslee. Beside the colonel was Capt. Don
Gentile, a member of his flight group, who was receiving the same
decoration, for destroying 30 German planes.

In all, according to Mr. Tillman of the fighter aces association, Colonel
Blakeslee received two Distinguished Service Crosses, seven Distinguished
Flying Crosses, two Silver Stars, six Air Medals and the British
Distinguished Flying Cross. A decade later, for his Korean War service, he
received the Legion of Merit, another Distinguished Flying Cross and four
Air Medals.

Donald James Mathew Blakeslee was born on September 11, 1917, in Fairport
Harbor, Ohio. As a child, he became fascinated with planes while watching
the Cleveland [Ohio] National Air Races. In the mid-1930s, he and a friend
bought a Piper Cub. In 1940, after his friend crashed the plane, Mr.
Blakeslee went to Canada to join the Royal Canadian Air Force.

After pilot training, he was sent to Britain, where he flew combat missions
for the Royal Air Force, mostly with American Eagle squadrons composed of
American volunteers. In September 1942, he was transferred to the United
States Army Air Forces and assigned to the Fourth Fighter Group. He became
group commander in January 1944. That year, the colonel married Leola Fryer;
she died in 2003. He retired from the Air Force in 1965.

Colonel Blakeslee was a taciturn man with a no-nonsense presence that
commanded respect from his fighters. A New York Times article described how,
on Sept. 11, 1944, he was "ill at ease" in front of photographers and
reporters while being interviewed about his exploits.

"It's more fun facing a squadron of Jerries," he said.

J M


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