John C. Pappy Herbst Military person

John C. "Pappy" Herbst (September 25, 1909 – July 4, 1946) was an American flying ace who was officially the second highest-scoring fighter pilot in the China Burma India Theater with 18 confirmed victories made during 7 months with the 23d Fighter Group. 23d FG Commander David Lee "Tex" Hill said of Herbst that he was "one of the greatest fighter pilots I ever saw. " Often described as "colorful", Herbst was one of the more successful aces of the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF). Herbst first fought with the Royal Canadian Air Force in Europe against German aircraft, possibly downing one. He joined the USAAF as an instructor training fighter pilots stateside. After two years of teaching and intelligence duties, Herbst was sent to China to fight the Japanese. For seven months he led the 74th Fighter Squadron on far-ranging independent missions, operating from advance airfields under crude conditions and in the face of Operation Ichi-Go; a successful Japanese pincer movement. Herbst scored the majority of his kills during so-called "administrative" flights after he had already completed the theater requirement of 100 combat missions. After the war, Herbst toured in an aerobatic demonstration team flying jets. One day after marrying his second wife he crashed during an aerobatic maneuver and died.

Personal facts

Alias (AKA)Pappy Herbst
Birth dateSeptember 25, 1909
Birth place
North County (San Diego area)
Date of deathJuly 04, 1946
Place of death
Del Mar California
Resting place
Forest Lawn Memorial Park Glendale

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Military person

award
Purple Heart
Silver Star
Air Medal
Distinguished Flying Cross (United States)
military operations
World War II
China Burma India Theater
military branch
Royal Canadian Air Force
United States Army Air Forces
military command
74th Fighter Squadron
445th Flight Test Squadron
Venice Army Airfield
service start1941
service end1941

John C. Pappy Herbst on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.pappyherbst.com/page2.html