Pat Pattle - Top African Ace and his African Kills

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 328

  • @showtime112
    @showtime112  Год назад +63

    Not all the aircraft types and variants, insignia and camouflage patterns are 100% historically accurate. Such things are caused by platform limitations and there's no need to comment them. Also, at 7:16 the Breda is hit in the starboard wing, not engine as it is a single-engine aircraft. Thank you for your understanding.

  • @ClickWasd
    @ClickWasd Год назад +90

    I know Pat Pattle from Roald Dahl’s book. He spoke very highly of his commander. Describing Pat as ace of Aces.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +19

      Yes, sources seem to agree that he was very respected. Thanks for the comment!

    • @B1Gdipper
      @B1Gdipper Год назад +4

      SAME here.
      THANKS RD, & PP.
      BECAUSE he was KIA in Greece, that's why we haven't heard of him more.
      NICE narration & graphics.

    • @indranimondal7664
      @indranimondal7664 Год назад +1

      Yeah i also read about him

    • @olesuhr727
      @olesuhr727 Год назад +4

      Pattles biography is called "Ace of aces" written by E.C.R Baker. It's definitely worth a read if you can get hold of it.

    • @indranimondal7664
      @indranimondal7664 Год назад

      @@olesuhr727 he flew a hurricane later on

  • @federicoalbertini2442
    @federicoalbertini2442 Год назад +29

    My grandfather was a pilot on CR-42 in Libya more or less in the same period and later in Crete and Rhodes, maybe they crossed paths

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +5

      It is possible. Did you have a chance to talk to him about his experiences?

    • @Briselance
      @Briselance Месяц назад

      Signore Albertini, sarebbe possibile di sapere i nomi del suo nonno pilota di CR-42, per piacere ?

  • @patrickcloutier6801
    @patrickcloutier6801 Год назад +36

    These actions are aerial combat gold, when one considers these were some of the last occasions, if not the last, when biplane fighters fought it out against other biplanes. Excellent narrative!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +7

      Thanks, once again! I wonder if Hs-123s ever fought any I-15s in Soviet Union. Those might be the last such cases ever.

    • @EneTheGene
      @EneTheGene Месяц назад

      ​@@showtime112Finnish I-153s battled Soviet I-153s in the continuation war.

  • @johnblackstock4092
    @johnblackstock4092 Год назад +22

    The story of an African Ace fits the discretion of one my ex-boss of some 40 years back told me.
    Dick Stacy was a South African; of English Ancestry, and was a Tank Commander. In a sad voice, told be of his dear friend, who matches your discretion. He said his friend died when his head hit tail of his plane when bailing out.
    During the African Campaign, Dick’s tank got hit, and he left leg was severely burned. He spent a year in a New Zeeland Hospital.
    He said they used maggots to clean his leg wounds. He also told me the stench of his wounds were horrendous. He then lifted the lower leg of his pants above the knee, and then said. LOOK NO SCARS.

  • @FrankMoodyPhoto
    @FrankMoodyPhoto Год назад +5

    I've shared the daylights out of this in some SA Aviation forums. Thanks for creating this on behalf of all SA Aviators.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      I appreciate it, thanks a lot!

  • @StreetBobber
    @StreetBobber Год назад +19

    Superb presentation as usual. Thank you for all the effort to bring these forgotten heroes into the limelight once again.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      They deserve it. Thanks for appreciating the content!

  • @robgraham5697
    @robgraham5697 Год назад +7

    Thanks once again for covering obscure corners of aviation history.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Thank you for watching! Many of those stories deserve to be told.

  • @bigw1552
    @bigw1552 Год назад +5

    Early WWII bi-plane vids are by far my favorite. The music is perfect too thanks so much!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      I'm getting to like them more and more too. The music felt like something they would have used had they made a movie about Pattle in the 1960s, Lawrence of Arabia kind of a thing.

  • @SilentSAM-xv5zv
    @SilentSAM-xv5zv Год назад +9

    I was hopping you'd do the Pattle video sometime and thank you for that. Most likely greatest biplane ace of WW 2 , greater than Mario Vizintini for sure. There's a book out there describing his squadron's fighting in Greece , very detailed..

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      Thanks a lot! He definitely deserves more attention and some of those battles will be covered in the future.

    • @Robin-x7r7r
      @Robin-x7r7r 6 месяцев назад

      The book you are talking about, could be, Ace of Aces by ECR Baker, I've read the book, very detailed,I've also started to build model aircraft of the Gladiator and the Hurricane he flew.

  • @yveaux500
    @yveaux500 Год назад +5

    A great contribution again! Thanks for making this.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Thank you for appreciating the content!

  • @raypurchase801
    @raypurchase801 Год назад +10

    A great man. Regarded by his contemporaries as the very greatest.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      He seems to have been held in high regard by those who knew him, according to the sources I could find. Thanks for the comment!

  • @mikemontgomery2654
    @mikemontgomery2654 Год назад +7

    Keep up the great work, man. The hard work you put into these videos, shows.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      I'm happy to hear it! The secret is that I'm really doing the videos I'd like to watch myself 😉

  • @juancarlosperezcortes9259
    @juancarlosperezcortes9259 Год назад +7

    Another great piece of World War II history. Thanks for your lessons

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Thank you for appreciating it!

  • @sandrotomasetto6322
    @sandrotomasetto6322 Год назад +1

    Great work! Thank you for sharing military aviation history in your great way!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Thank you very much for your repeated financial support!

  • @donparker1823
    @donparker1823 Год назад +4

    Well done again! And your pronunciation is steller! Great channel. I always look forward to Saturday.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +3

      Thank you very much, I'm glad you appreciate the content! Next Saturday is just around the corner :)

  • @crow7505
    @crow7505 Год назад +2

    Showtime your presentations are second to none!

  • @jimsaintamour2
    @jimsaintamour2 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Thank you so much for your continuous support!

  • @beowulf1312
    @beowulf1312 Год назад +4

    Incredible Ace, I had never heard of him.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      He does deserve more attention for sure.

  • @jameswebb4593
    @jameswebb4593 Год назад +10

    When an English South African excels he is one of them , otherwise the Afrikaans wouldn't be bothered to talk to him. Played golf in Pretoria with one of the locals , huge man in statue . He told me that he played Rugby for S.A. schoolboys . The only English in the Squad . and they all shunned him.
    No surprise that Prattle went to the UK in 1936 to join the RAF.
    Lt/Com Norman Hanson a RN fighter pilot , claims in his book that the British never went ashore singly in Cape Town , always in groups .
    Though its not so bad today , the Yarpies are getting over the Boer War , Have more serious problems to worry about.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      That is a very interesting insight, thanks!

    • @hanro7430
      @hanro7430 Год назад

      Well yeah who wouldn't shun someone who comes from a group who in recent history (at that time) put their wives and children in death camps ...

    • @winddictatesdirectionyar3802
      @winddictatesdirectionyar3802 Год назад

      ​@@showtime112Not really. Just more Anglo nonsense. These people cant understand how there is resentment towards English for starving our women and kids (and 70 000 Africans) in camps for gold mining rights in SA only 30 years later during ww2...to them its inconceivable, mind of psychopaths. And most SA pilots went to UK to help including Afr largely because SAAF didnt have the money or capacity to accomodate them - most notable is Sailor Malan and Jacobus le Roux. And UK rang its little servant bell which is another reason we resent them (proxy rule).
      He ran to some foreign Country to exploit the women there with currency exchange to British pound too it seems.
      Also, when a Irishman or Scotsman does well he is considered 'one of theirs' but if they do poorly they are referred to their heritage background. They starved the Irish too like our people. And today they stand on the corpses of 400 000+ Ukrainians because of Boris Johnson. Another proud Englishman.
      Sorry for the rant but I cant stand these scumbags running their mouths about us when we know their true nature that is supressed in a Anglo dominated media world. Good health to you Showtime and thanks.

    • @PhansiKhongoloza
      @PhansiKhongoloza Год назад +2

      The reverse is also true though. Any South African who rises to prominence gets claimed by the British as being one of theirs.
      Roger Bartlett, James Greathead and Tolkien come to mind. As are there many others.

    • @jameswebb4593
      @jameswebb4593 Год назад +2

      Roger Bartletts parents were both English . Tolkein ancestors arrived in England in 1770 , he considered himself English. Greathead was of English descent , moved to England was he was 15. Colin Cowdrey and Guy Gibson were born in India , Ted Dexter in Italy . Each would say they were English.

  • @johnford6967
    @johnford6967 Год назад +4

    My. Dad met him on an airfield in Greece whilst evacuating troops back to Egypt(Flt sergeant G.E Ford.216 Sqdn. Flying The Bristol bombayTwin engine bomber/Transport aircraft.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Thank you for sharing your personal experience. I hope to cover some of the fighting done by the RAF in Greece too someday.

  • @oveidasinclair982
    @oveidasinclair982 Год назад +6

    I never heard of Pat Pattle before.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +3

      He is often overlooked but I hope this video helped a bit. Thanks for another comment!

  • @flightlinemedia
    @flightlinemedia Год назад +2

    Thanks for sharing!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Thanks for watching and commenting!

  • @aleksandarljubenovic347
    @aleksandarljubenovic347 Год назад +4

    Obraticu ti se na "nasem" jeziku. Pratim tvoje priloge i migu reci da su odlicni! Bravo,
    cekam tvoj prilog o Petelovoj borbi iznad Grcke, Albanije i Jugoslavije.
    Samo napred!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Hvala na pozitivnom komentaru! Da, Pattle je ratovao u ovim krajevima i u planu mi je obraditi i tu temu. Nisam još točno siguran kada ali bit će.

  • @ryanschofield2018
    @ryanschofield2018 6 месяцев назад

    Honorable Pat Pattle came to my attention back in 2019 when randomly researching South African WWII involvement: his story disturbed me that he wasn't properly recognized or mentioned anywhere. Really glad to see more content online about this and really enjoyed the narrative on these war journals!
    RIP Hero

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  6 месяцев назад

      Thank you for the comment! He does deserve some more attention, that's for sure.

  • @harrypotterxl9326
    @harrypotterxl9326 Год назад +2

    Excellent video!

  • @jeannezehner9450
    @jeannezehner9450 Год назад +12

    That's very kind of you to speak about this pilot who is unknow from the second world war.
    He died above Athenes on his Hurricane against the Luftwaffe when the english had quit Greece after loosing the battle. We give him 50 victories maybe more, he overtakes the american pilot which has the best number of victories Richard Bong on P-38 with 40 kills. So, Pat Pattel is in fact the TOP ACE of the second world war.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +5

      On the Allied side, he seems to be bested only by a handful of Soviet pilots in the number of kills. I hope to cover at least some of his battles over Greece in the future. Thanks for another positive comment!

    • @jeannezehner9450
      @jeannezehner9450 Год назад +2

      @@showtime112
      Yes, I have forgotten the soviet pilot which I don't remember the name with 69 victories on P-39 Airacobra.

    • @jeannezehner9450
      @jeannezehner9450 Год назад +1

      @@showtime112
      It's a russian pilot, its name is IVAN NIKITOVITCH KOJEDOUB with 62 victories.
      this IS THE TOP ALLIED ACES, in reality he has shot down a ME-262 !!!

    • @dominiqueroudier9401
      @dominiqueroudier9401 Год назад

      Pilote peu connu dans un théâtre d'opérations peu médiatisé a l'époque. On se demande comment en sous effectif il a réussi à en abattre tant. Surtout c'était biplan contre biplan au début et italien. Le 109 est arrivé plus tard.
      Pour les as thomas Mac Guire était au même niveau que Bong.
      Et on oublie un as inconnu Finlandais Eimo Juutilainen. 94 victoire homologué et avec des zincs ", hétéroclites

    • @jeannezehner9450
      @jeannezehner9450 Год назад

      @@dominiqueroudier9401
      Le problème est bien la médiatisation.
      Guynemer on en parle Fonck beaucoup moins alors qu'il a 75 victoires et qu'il est sorti vivant du conflit il a même obtenu une place de député à al sortie de la guerre.
      Le B-17 on en parle beaucoup alors qu'il y a plus de B-24 produits pendant la dernière guerre mondiale.
      Thomas Mac Guire connait pas et le finlandais encore moins sauf que ce n'est pas un allié mais quand même faut le faire dans les deux cas.
      Les as féminines russes on en cause encore moins de notre côté.

  • @blandoworthlessness
    @blandoworthlessness Год назад +2

    Great video! I love the cinematography.

  • @EastGames-uy6mc
    @EastGames-uy6mc Год назад +9

    I have heard of him but I had no idea he was that successful

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +3

      Yes, he did really well but was then completely forgotten until about 1960s.

    • @Robin-rk4tm
      @Robin-rk4tm Год назад +2

      Read his book "Ace of Aces" by ECR Baker.

    • @EastGames-uy6mc
      @EastGames-uy6mc Год назад

      @@Robin-rk4tm Thanks for the advice!

  • @iandemontfort4276
    @iandemontfort4276 Год назад +6

    I love the way you describe Pat Pattle as an Aftican ace. He was a South African who was white. I know it is not woke to celebrate our whiteness nowadays but he was a South African hero who happened t be born in a nation founded by Europeans long before the Bantu invasions.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +3

      I'd say, if he was born and raised in Africa and he was a citizen of an African country, that makes him an African of European origin. Thanks for the comment!

    • @PhansiKhongoloza
      @PhansiKhongoloza Год назад +1

      Much like Elon Musk who is a true African American

    • @robert-trading-as-Bob69
      @robert-trading-as-Bob69 6 месяцев назад +1

      He was African.
      Nowadays I simply say he was from one of the white tribes.

    • @benwilson6145
      @benwilson6145 Месяц назад

      @@PhansiKhongoloza The Space Karen!

    • @PhansiKhongoloza
      @PhansiKhongoloza Месяц назад

      @@benwilson6145 I'm not with you? Explain......

  • @antartis73
    @antartis73 Год назад +3

    Superb content, detail and presentation. The only thing I would like if possible would be if you add details of the game used (which I know is mentioned in other comments is War thunder) if any add ons ? Again brilliant work…

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the very positive feedback! I'm experimenting a bit with YT video classification and trying to move the content away from just gaming (because, it's more history than gaming). If you see biplanes, it is definitely War Thunder :)

  • @funkwallah
    @funkwallah Год назад +1

    good one mate - greeting from SA

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Thanks, I'm glad you liked it!

  • @spitefulwar
    @spitefulwar Год назад +6

    It's kind of ironic when Gladiators shot down planes marked with the fasces. Wonder if the irony escaped the Italians?
    I AM SPARTACUS!

  • @alk3326
    @alk3326 Год назад +42

    Finally, the few times i can be proud of my country and once able air force😂😅
    Hope you could do some Rhodesian War (70s) vids as they had amazing pilots with decaying equipment in a difficult and one sided war with some interesting aircraft
    Thanks again🤌🤟
    (Edit)
    There was an invasion of Madagaskar in ww2 with britain and south africa vs vichy france and kinda japan if thats also a vid idea

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +8

      Thanks for the comment! Rhodesia is potentially interesting, I have some general idea about it and we have some of the aircraft they used in War Thunder. There isn't exactly a proper map for the region I guess.
      As for your other suggestion, I'm not sure but it does sound potentially interesting. I'll have to research it a bit.

    • @StalinLovsMsmZioglowfagz
      @StalinLovsMsmZioglowfagz Год назад +3

      Those would be AMAZING.

    • @crow7505
      @crow7505 Год назад +5

      Mate without the contributions from commonwealth countries early in the war i don't think the British could have succeeded in north africa and the middle east. Be proud of your countries efforts and contributions.

    • @alk3326
      @alk3326 Год назад +3

      @@crow7505 bruh I'm talking about now
      ANC has taken the rand from at worst R3-4 (when SA was sanctioned) to damn R18-9
      Most of our fighters are either unable or too dangerous to fly
      And one of the biggest causes of this being a reality Zuma got released from prison ¯⁠\⁠_⁠(⁠ツ⁠)⁠_⁠/⁠¯ why should I be proud?

    • @crow7505
      @crow7505 Год назад +2

      @@alk3326 Yeah fair call mate i'm not full bottle on SA politics.I do often wonder what might have been if Aus and SA developed our defense industries cooperatively you guys make /made some wonderful kit in the 2000s.

  • @Ingulf_The_Mad
    @Ingulf_The_Mad Год назад +7

    Pat Pattle! And biplane furballs over the desert! You are the best 🙂

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Thanks a lot, I'm happy that you appreciate the video!

  • @RealDarko
    @RealDarko Год назад +1

    Top notch video as always!!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Thanks a lot, I'm happy to see you've been subscribed for a while!

    • @RealDarko
      @RealDarko Год назад

      @@showtime112 Is a new tradition for saturdays, your videos and a coffe mug.

  • @antonioiozzi9171
    @antonioiozzi9171 7 месяцев назад

    I am a WW1 aviation historian ( author with two others of the biography of italian WW1 aces). I have, on the other side, a rather good knowledge also of WW2 ops, and know many italianunit book published book about WW2 warfare. I am also a glider pilot knowing well what flying in extreme condition mean. In all wars (even in now ongoing russian ucranian war) there is always been a greath exaggeration about claims, both sides. I say claims and not "confirmation" because they were based only on post battle report of highly excited pilots. Sometimes the difference between real losses and claims are incredible.

  • @olesuhr727
    @olesuhr727 9 месяцев назад +2

    For anyone that wants to know more about Pat Pattle, I can recommend his biography "Ace of Aces" by E.C.R.Baker. it's a fascinating read even by todays standards.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  9 месяцев назад

      Yes, a very interesting read.

  • @antimimoniakos
    @antimimoniakos Год назад +1

    Great video as usual.

  • @ariannescharfi9366
    @ariannescharfi9366 Год назад +9

    Pat Pattle is such an interesting character or at least had an interesting story in North Africa, Balkan and Greece. Hopefully we can see more of him, 20 min are not enough to cover him! :D

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      I certainly plan to make another episode or two about him. Thanks for the feedback!

  • @sim_lover_hr5532
    @sim_lover_hr5532 Год назад +1

    Vrlo zanimljiva epizoda!

  • @renatoandricevic8638
    @renatoandricevic8638 Год назад +1

    Moram si izgraditi maketu Gladiatora, elegantan je🛩️
    Jako uzbudljiv video, svaka čast.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Hvala na komentaru! Slažem se da bi Gladiator sigurno bio zahvalna tema za izgradnju.

  • @christopherskipp1525
    @christopherskipp1525 9 месяцев назад

    This is a good channel.

  • @leandroblanco3336
    @leandroblanco3336 Год назад +1

    Beatifull work......
    When You make a work about IA-58 Pucará and hes missions ?
    Thanks ,,and greatings from Argentina.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Thanks! I intend to cover the Pucara operations in the 1982 conflict. I found some sources but I need to find time to study them. Also, I don't have the period correct skins for the aircraft mod, it might take time to produce. But I think you might find the next video particularly interesting.

    • @leandroblanco3336
      @leandroblanco3336 Год назад

      Ok.,,thanks For Your time and dedication.
      We love arcraft 🤷🏻‍♂️.

  • @nevermore300
    @nevermore300 4 месяца назад

    I read a superb book back in the seventies about Pat Pattle. It was called Ace of Aces by E.C.R. Baker.
    My paperback is long gone now, but i got a hardback copy a few years ago. Available on kindle.

  • @wolfganggugelweith8760
    @wolfganggugelweith8760 Год назад +3

    Brave Italian pilots! 😎👍

  • @Briselance
    @Briselance Месяц назад

    17:32
    I don't get it. How was air-pressure important for the Gladiator's machine-guns to work, please?

  • @paulstanton7153
    @paulstanton7153 Год назад +3

    Very good indeed.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      I appreciate your positive comment!

  • @Ensign_Cthulhu
    @Ensign_Cthulhu Год назад +3

    I knew his score was hinted at 40+, but I'd never seen an estimate of fifty before.
    North Africa seems to have been very much the last biplane vs biplane war.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      There still isn't (and never will be) an official credit and the score can be debated. But all victory claims are debatable to some extent, even confirmed ones. African theater was probably the last one although Greece before the German invasion saw plenty of biplane combat too.

  • @Kaiser_Kenny
    @Kaiser_Kenny Год назад +2

    Wow War Thunder holds up pretty good for this type of stuff. I know it has a ton of planes so hopefully it lets you cover more vehicles not included in DCS. EDIT: Oh you've used it lots before and I never noticed, but today I was playing that same desert map and it clicked lol. great video I promise to sub on patreon as soon as I'm done moving.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Exactly! DCS (and even IL-2) are quite limited when it comes to WWII, and especially the early period. Thank you very much for considering becoming a Patreon supporter!

  • @vanlampham2557
    @vanlampham2557 Год назад +3

    Postman Pat sure was good, but he never told anyone about this after the war

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      He didn't tell anyone because he was killed in a battle early in the War.

  • @janniemeyer9951
    @janniemeyer9951 Год назад +1

    Thank you!

  • @bravo2zeroCAN
    @bravo2zeroCAN Год назад +2

    Another great vid.
    A+ history

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Thanks a lot for the positive comment!

  • @eduardodeandres3864
    @eduardodeandres3864 Год назад +3

    Espectacular. Muy bueno, muy bueno. Me ha encantado.
    Gracias

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Thank you very much for your positive comment!

  • @peregrinemccauley5010
    @peregrinemccauley5010 Год назад +1

    That was great . Thanks .

  • @theymusthatetesla3186
    @theymusthatetesla3186 Год назад +2

    ....is this done on DCS? If so, I'd no idea that all these planes were modelled!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      No, this was done in War Thunder. DCS is quite limited in WWII.

  • @Ruweisat
    @Ruweisat Год назад +1

    Great video. War Thunder?

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      Thanks! Yes, it is WT. The best selection of WWII airplanes.

  • @jonathanwiggill8242
    @jonathanwiggill8242 Год назад +4

    Even in theatres were records still exist SAFFER's exploits successes and sacrifices, were and still are, conveniently overlooked even now some thirty years after the end of Apartheid. Thank you for bringing this story to light.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Thanks for the comment!

    • @johnsmith-ht3sy
      @johnsmith-ht3sy Год назад

      Living in England, the victors write the history, and the full on propaganda machine narrative is this myth " We stood alone, nobody helped us" said with a working class cockney accent. Plucky Brits won the war single handed.

  • @FromtheBattlefields
    @FromtheBattlefields Год назад +1

    Bravo kolega!!!

  • @ngauruhoezodiac3143
    @ngauruhoezodiac3143 Год назад +2

    The Gladiator was obsolete but so we're most of the Italian aircraft

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      True, thanks for the comment!

    • @nukamarxa5203
      @nukamarxa5203 Год назад

      Italians made a few good aircafts
      But allies had better stuff

  • @alphaaquilla1359
    @alphaaquilla1359 Год назад +3

    can you do a dogfight between a p47 and p51 in south america?

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      Which conflict do you mean? There were clashes between P-51s and Corsairs in the Hundred Hours War between Honduras and Salvador.

    • @alphaaquilla1359
      @alphaaquilla1359 Год назад +3

      @@showtime112 Costa rican P51 vs Nicaraguan P47

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      @@alphaaquilla1359 It is a potentially interesting story. If I manage to find enough details about it, I'll probably cover it.

    • @alphaaquilla1359
      @alphaaquilla1359 Год назад +2

      @@showtime112 TY :)

  • @eric-wb7gj
    @eric-wb7gj 7 месяцев назад +1

    TY 🙏🙏

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  7 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for watching these older videos!

  • @garywilson9629
    @garywilson9629 10 месяцев назад +1

    Superb video, as ever. Sadly Pat Pattle was a victim of Churchill's ill-advised decision to divert forces to fight in Greece (After being advised numerous times not to).

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you for the comment! In Churchill's defense, this was a lose-lose situation. At that time, it still looked like the Axis could be stopped in that part of Europe and some countries were still not decided. Had he not sent forces to aid Greece, he would have probably been criticized for abandoning British allies.

    • @garywilson9629
      @garywilson9629 10 месяцев назад

      @@showtime112 true enough although I think his main motivation was to show to the world at large (i.e. America) that Britain was still capable of fighting an offensive war and taking the fight to the enemy. But I suppose it's easy to criticise from 80 years later, so perhaps I should go a bit easier on him :)

    • @bobsakamanos4469
      @bobsakamanos4469 Месяц назад

      Churhill inherited a shambles regarding the Brit industrial-military preparedness. Tough decisions on a daily basis for him.

  • @dominiqueroudier9401
    @dominiqueroudier9401 Год назад +1

    Hello showtime. Just finished ...paperwork after end of holidays 😭.
    This battle was not well know because at same Time in Europa ended the battle of France and the beginning of battle of Britain. Historians and medias prefers this.
    It was the unique battle biplan vs biplan in ww2 i think. RAF vs Reggia aeronautica. Fortunately Luftwaffe was not here.
    Media was better in this area in 1942 for Al-Alamein.
    Like said Jeanne zehner . Many unknow top aces .
    I permit to add the finnish top ace Elmo Juutilainen. 94 kills with ..motley planes( Buffalo,P36 Hawk, hurricane..bf 109G)

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Welcome back! 😁 You are probably right about the Home Front being in the focus at that time.
      And I really need to do more videos about Finns (your comment reminds me of that)

    • @dominiqueroudier9401
      @dominiqueroudier9401 Год назад +1

      @@showtime112 Ilmavoimat was full of obsolète but.... efficient planes. Like Buffalo. In USA and UK this plane was not at good place at good moment except in Finland

    • @ryanschofield2018
      @ryanschofield2018 6 месяцев назад

      @@showtime112 Finland was an Axis country and then flipped late into the war. In aerial combat reference, the Axis powers did have superior pilots with much more experience. South Africa had no Air Force prior to WWII with hand-me down planes from WWI (Biplanes). That said, Mr. Pattle immerged.

  • @sailordude2094
    @sailordude2094 2 месяца назад +1

    His favorite dish was meatballs. Thanks for the reenactments!

  • @olelarsen7688
    @olelarsen7688 Год назад +1

    That shows what flying in close formation is worth for fighters. Five Fiat CR 42 was shot down before the rest of the formation knew what was happening. The pilots have to concentrate on holding the place in the formation, only the leader can look around. And several planes can easily be hit in an attack. Unfortunatly people want to see many planes in a small space in movies.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      I often get comments (which I find a bit annoying) saying something like 'yeah right, and they didn't see the attackers?'. Of course they didn't! Having a good SA is extremely hard with all that flying, navigating and formation keeping. You can't just look back all the time. Italian fighters had no radio, they relied on hand signals and basically, you needed to watch your leader almost all the time if you didn't want to miss a signal. Thanks for making that point.

  • @RonaldoCamaro
    @RonaldoCamaro Год назад +1

    Great video. COngratulations.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Thanks a lot! Glad you liked it!

  • @bjornsmith9431
    @bjornsmith9431 Год назад +2

    One of the forgetting Aces of World War II.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      Yes, only decades after the war was his combat record brought to people's attention.

    • @mikemontgomery2654
      @mikemontgomery2654 Год назад

      Early in the war, too. Others came in pretty quickly to fill the void.

  • @TyroneSayWTF
    @TyroneSayWTF Год назад +1

    What combat sim (e.g. War Thunder, World of War Planes, etc.) was this video made with?

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      It's War Thunder. Not exactly a sim 😁

  • @ratagris21
    @ratagris21 Год назад +6

    Thanks for this interesting and important part of avaition history. Those who make great contributions to the fight are often overlooked and are lost to time. Thanks for all you do! ♠️🎩🎯🎱🇺🇲🏁🇺🇦🔱🌸🌼🏵️❤️‍🩹🏹

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      I quite agree. Thanks for another inspired comment!

  • @branka1980
    @branka1980 Год назад +4

    👍

  • @kahhowong3417
    @kahhowong3417 10 месяцев назад +1

    Gladiator probably the most beautiful of Biplanes.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, it's not a bad looking thing.

    • @kahhowong3417
      @kahhowong3417 10 месяцев назад

      @@showtime112 👍

  • @jonboy9912
    @jonboy9912 Год назад +1

    What could he have done in the Hurricane?

  • @willbraxton1843
    @willbraxton1843 Год назад +1

    Does anyone know how he met his fate?

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      He was killed in a battle against Luftwaffe fighters over Piraeus harbor.

  • @Eddewardeke
    @Eddewardeke Год назад

    Where do you see a starboard engine on a breda?

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      You're right, that is supposed to be wing. I guess the wheel nacelle made it look like an engine from a distance and I mispronounced it. I apologize for the mistake.

  • @lllordllloyd
    @lllordllloyd Год назад +2

    Everyone knows how Hitler made many military blunders, but it is not so well recognised how much damage Churchill did to the Allied war effort with his amateurish schemes. The campaign in Greece was especially stupid. Its timing is especially important, coming just after the British had whalloped the Italians in North Africa but before they finished them off.
    Without it, the British would have taken all North Africa before Rommel even arrived. Crete could have been properly fortified and held. Greece cost the British and Commonwealth many ships, sorely-needed elite divisions, aircraft and of course many experienced men.
    It would be 18 months before the British had an army and leaders capable of defeating the Germans.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      I suppose that had some political sense back then. Some European countries were not yet allied with Germany and Italy and sending troops to Greece gave a message 'we will support you if you are attacked'. Of course, that didn't help much but there's that benefit of a hindsight.

  • @istvanszoke381
    @istvanszoke381 Год назад

    So 46 kills or even more just got unnoticed?

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      Not unusual when you look at the circumstances. Half of his kills were achieved when he was the CO of No 33 Squadron in Greece during April of 1941. The Squadron records were destroyed, Pattle was killed and the British forces pulled out of Greece which was a secondary (if not a tertiary) theater for them. That's not where the attention was.

  • @janlindtner305
    @janlindtner305 Год назад +1

    👍👍👍

  • @donjames7971
    @donjames7971 Год назад +1

    I would question his aircraft-servicemen, knocking-out the lot of 'em after each return; bastards .. how did his politics play into his allotment .. ?

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      If you mean because of gun jams, it looks like this was a common problem with the Gladiator. Not necessarily caused by bad mainteinance.

  • @enzoflyer7522
    @enzoflyer7522 Год назад +1

    👌

  • @eugenemurray2940
    @eugenemurray2940 Год назад

    Are those Gladiators
    'Faith', 'Hope' & 'Charity' ?

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      No, those nicknames refer to the Gladiators which fought over Malta in 1940. There's more info here: ruclips.net/video/tz6y-uU_fvo/видео.html

    • @olesuhr727
      @olesuhr727 9 месяцев назад +1

      "Faith", "Hope" & "Charity were Sea Gladiators stationed on Malta.

  • @cartersmith8560
    @cartersmith8560 Год назад

    If memory serves me correctly this man was killed over Pireus because he neglected to check his tail before attacking a German aircraft, thus giving a Me-110 a perfect shot

    • @mikegreenfield5102
      @mikegreenfield5102 Год назад +4

      He was sick and insisted no flying combat despite being grounded

    • @mikegreenfield5102
      @mikegreenfield5102 Год назад +2

      ...ON flying combat....!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      He was killed over Piraeus battling German 110s, true.

    • @joshua6244
      @joshua6244 Год назад +5

      @@mikegreenfield5102 He was sick and broke his own golden rule about a particular manoeuvre, in order to come to the aid of a fellow RAF pilot.

    • @hawnyfox3411
      @hawnyfox3411 6 месяцев назад +1

      Two of the lads here HAVE rightfully mentioned he was ill & properly sick
      He was running a high fever & his body temperature was off the scale.
      Sqdn M.O actually ordered him to stay in bed & Pattle was physically LOCKED IN
      Pattle climbed out the top window, so as not to be seen welching out OR even letting his mates down as he knew they were at a HUGE numerical disadvantage
      He went to the assistance of his mate 'Caesar Hull' who was being attacked by several cannon armed Me.110's ("E" variant) who shot Hull down & killed him anyway.... As he did so, about x 6 Me.110's boxed him in & whichever direction he turned he would've been hit anyway - Much in the same way that German ace Gunther Rall was attacked & shot-down by Robert Rankin's flight(s) of P.47 Thunderbolts of the legendary 56th Fighter Group.
      Pattle's mistake (after being physically restrained & THEN 'locked in' to the airfield's own medical block), was, jumping out of the top window "to escape" & then putting himself in grave danger & attempting air-combat with a raging fever & his own body in a physically "F&&KED UP STATE" whilst shaking & trembling from the high fever & local virus that he'd gone down with.
      Flying a Hawker Hurricane whilst outnumbered 7-1 is NOT a good idea when you are vomiting & shivering hot & cold due to an overwhelming virus that might've even killed other people, before they even got off the ground.
      Such a shame we lost him so early in the war & on such a futile campaign (Greece)
      Ironically, my Grandad's Brother WAS there = Greece, B.E.F
      He was withdrawn from Greece by HMS Hotspur of all things "TO CRETE"
      Out of the frying pan & literally, into the fire !!!!!!
      Amazing escape story, but, I'll save that for another time...

  • @ngauruhoezodiac3143
    @ngauruhoezodiac3143 Год назад +1

    So he never engaged Hans Joachim Marseille. How would that have turned out?

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +1

      We can only speculate. I suppose a lot would depend on the tactical situation.

  • @JJ73100
    @JJ73100 Год назад

    Who had vedio cameras then

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      What exactly is a vedio camera? 😁😁😁

  • @waveranger4974
    @waveranger4974 Год назад +1

    This presentation is truly the work of a master or team of masters. Impressive

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      I'm happy to hear you think so! Feel free to check other videos if you haven't already.

  • @Golden-dog88
    @Golden-dog88 Год назад +1

    WW2 Ace flyin a WW1 era split wing plane….. WHAT A LEGEND

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Great pilots can achieve a lot even when their equipment is not state of the art. Thanks for commenting!

  • @christopherskipp1525
    @christopherskipp1525 9 месяцев назад

    What kind of guns did the Brits have?

    • @LevPicaresco
      @LevPicaresco 9 месяцев назад

      On the Gladiators: four .303 caliber machine guns (mm 7,7)

    • @christopherskipp1525
      @christopherskipp1525 9 месяцев назад

      @@LevPicaresco Thank you.

  • @archimedesfromteamfortress2
    @archimedesfromteamfortress2 3 месяца назад

    If only he had surirved the entire war, he may have been up there with the best German aces. Or be relegated to a flight instructor and be forgotten to time...

  • @therealaim-9xmissile
    @therealaim-9xmissile 7 месяцев назад

    Keep in mind these English chaps were most likely wearing shorts and t shirts or at least short sleeved or rolled up shirts while dogfighting in the hot sky of Africa 😂

  • @PappaBear_yt
    @PappaBear_yt Год назад +1

    I guess he earned his pay, huh? 😉
    👍🏻💪🏻👏🏻🍻🍻🙋🏼‍♂️

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      The SAAF must have been kicking themselves for not taking him. Kinda like Decca not signing up the Beatles in 1962 😁

    • @PappaBear_yt
      @PappaBear_yt Год назад

      @@showtime112 😂👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻🍻🍻

  • @GregWampler-xm8hv
    @GregWampler-xm8hv 7 месяцев назад

    Bad start Pat was the #1 ace of Britain and all the colonies. Please make the correction as he earned that right, mate.

  • @benvandermerwe4934
    @benvandermerwe4934 7 месяцев назад +1

    👏🏻🍻🇿🇦

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  7 месяцев назад

      Thank you for commenting!

  • @stevehuffman7453
    @stevehuffman7453 7 месяцев назад

    bi-planes in WW2?!?
    Not boody likely. Bi-Wings were SLOW, LOW ALTITUDE (could be AND WERE shot down by service rifles on the ground! ... Remember the Red Baron? He was shot down by a guy in the trenches with a .303 Enfield bolt action rifle, as he flew over.) obsolete, out of service, and sold as surplus (without the guns) to "Barn Stormer's" and crop duster's by 1921/1922, replaced by mono-wings.
    There was also significant advancements in rotary engines. WW1 rotary engines were effectively gyroscopes. The HEAVY block and cylinder assembly rotated. The crankshaft was stationary.
    Some Post WW1/Pre-WW2 military aircraft were even powered by inline and "V" block cylinder engines.
    A bi-wing would be an easy target for any of the faster and more agile WW-2 mono wing fighters.

    • @robert-trading-as-Bob69
      @robert-trading-as-Bob69 6 месяцев назад

      You REALLY need to do some research BEFORE making silly comments.
      The British deployed 2 well-known biplanes during WWII: The Gloster Gladiator and the Fairey Swordfish.
      As far as I can tell, the last biplane to see military service is the Soviet/Russian AN-2 biplane, which entered production in 1947, and that line continued until the 2000's.
      Sometimes low and slow suits the purpose as far as the AN-2 is concerned.
      Google the Battle of Taranto, where obsolete British Swordfish tackled the Italian Navy in WWII.

  • @antonioiozzi9171
    @antonioiozzi9171 7 месяцев назад

    There is only one possibility to verify and it is crossing info with the other side. Pilots reports are largely inaccurate due to exicitement, adrenaline, poor oxygenation, and the stress of high speed manouvres. Pattle was surely a very good pilot but crediting him with 30 to 50 "confirmed" ( who confirmed?) is pure fantasy. The same thing apply to most WW2 pilots, both sides.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  7 месяцев назад +1

      'Confirmed' kill essentially means that your superiors believed your claims. Or that they chose to believe them. As opposed to a 'probable' kill. And yes, almost all claims are exaggerated. I'm currently working on the second part of CAI operations in the British campaign. On 11 November 1940, RAF claimed destroying nine Italian bombers (out of ten which participated in the raid). Only three were actually lost. But the point of this video was to show that Pattle is unfairly overlooked compared to other Allied pilots. And if his claims are overblown, so are probably those of others and Pattle still deserves more recognition as his score is very high by any measure.

    • @antonioiozzi9171
      @antonioiozzi9171 7 месяцев назад

      @@showtime112 In WW2 "superiors" of all country accepted almost without doubt all tge mist fantastic and incredible claims they submitted. This is true not only for british pilots but also (and much more) for US ones. The 325th fighter group claims over Sardinia are incredible (in south Sardinia in 1943 there was only the 51 stormo of italian airforce) as example but also itakians abd gernabs overclaimed largely. In WW1 the action that lead to VC given to Billy Bishop is by now almost proved to be totally fake. Unfortunatly in every war propaganda was (and is even now) largely used. I have made research in WW1 archives for 20 years (only italian front ) and I can assure you that there are lot of "aces" that have not shot down a single aircraft. It funny to see that why some are quite reliable other are not.

  • @Nghilifa
    @Nghilifa Год назад +1

    Africa has never had any aces as far as I'm aware of. Pattle was/is European as far as his ethnicity is concerned and South African as far as his nationality was/is concerned. Hopefully there will never be an African ace in the foreseeable future (no wars means no aces, and no wars are definitely a good thing).

    • @hanro7430
      @hanro7430 Год назад +2

      If his nationality was south african then he is african. You wouldn't say a black citizen of France isn't french.....

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      He was born and raised in Africa and a citizen of an African country. I guess that kinda makes him an African.

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      He was born and raised in Africa and a citizen of an African country. I guess that kinda makes him an African.

  • @ALA-uv7jq
    @ALA-uv7jq Год назад +1

    If he was British he would have got the VC and everybody would know him.

  • @1joshjosh1
    @1joshjosh1 Год назад

    Pattle and his buddies need better guns.
    Stop f***** jammin. !!!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад

      Yes, that apparently was a very serious issue. A pretty big one too :)

  • @racermike1946
    @racermike1946 Год назад

    I BELIEVE RICHARD BONG HAD 50 KILLS

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      His score was actually 40.

    • @michaeltelson9798
      @michaeltelson9798 Год назад +3

      Pattle had most of his kills over Greece in horrible living conditions flying Hurricane II’s. Most of the pilots and staff were suffering fro dysentery and other diseases. It is said that the squadron doctor forbade him to fly but he did with a 103 fever. They had few if any pilots then that could fly at all.

    • @hawnyfox3411
      @hawnyfox3411 Год назад

      @@showtime112 & M.Telson9798 = I also read (in a very detailed account, many years ago now..) that the Squadron's own Chief Medical officer had ORDERED Pattle & DEMANDED that he do not fly (due to his fever/temperature) & that they actually locked him inside a medical room, that unfortunately had glazed window frames. Pattle felt awful about letting down his fellow pilots, so, he escaped from the locked room & ran to an ALTERNATE Hurricane that had been readied for the fight BUT NOT HIS REGULAR ONE
      Am told his regular(ly used Hurricane) was used & taken into combat by someone else instead, given that Pattle was 'confined under orders' & NOT supposed to be going up in combat at all - It's also said.....
      When he saw his former Sqaudron mate "Caesar Hull" being shot-down & attacked by 2 x Me.110's he is reputedly seen by eyewitnesses to "go to his aid & assistance" (again, despite his high-fever) & in doing so, got attacked by the top-cover flight (again, I was told it was ME.110's) who set about him, something in the region of 6-1 against - He never stood a chance & was shot-down into the 'Bay of Eleusis'
      (Excuse the spelling of the latter - I'm typing from pure memory alone, as I learned of this in the 1980's)
      By chance, my Gradad's next youngest Brother ALSO fought in Greece, in the 'ill-feted' Greek campaign**
      **( known as Churchill's folly - purely because of the logistic impossibility of it all )
      Gordie (Gordon) my relative, was evacuated from Greece by HMS Hotspur - Not sure of the date
      By pure chance & $hit-bad-luck, he was 'evacuated to Crete' onboard the destroyer mentioned above.
      Caught defending one of the airfileds (I was told but cannot remember "if" it was Heraklion or Maleme) he was shooting the German Fallschirmjeager as they jumped from their Ju.52's, long before ANY attempted to land - He described it as "a Turkey shoot" although he was only using his service rifle, an 0.303 Lee-Enfield
      Bizarrely, when or rather as Crete 'fell' he WAS ordered to go to Sphakia (Bay) for naval extraction (again !)
      Seeing the bay had (like) "A Gazillion men there" he said "F&&K THAT" & took his squad of men in his truck further, much further across the Southern coastline, hoping to find an alternative - it happened too !!
      They came across a Royal Navy Motor Launch down in a bluff / cove area, whilst their truck was on a cliff
      Two men ran down to 'greet the Navy' & ask for help, only to be told - "We're meeting TWO high ranking officers here, that's WHY We're here" (so basically, "You can Buzz off")
      Two lower ranking guys walked towards them & said "Never mind him" adding "We're due to leave @ 17:15"
      "Be here by then & "if" those two bozos DO NOT arrive, we're casting-off anyways"
      (we'll smuggle you on board, they added) - That's exactly what happened & Gordie & his squad WERE saved
      The motor launch made it's way out to sea, out to it's Mother-Craft, which happened to be "HMS Hotspur"
      ( Again !!!!! )
      This time, to Alexandria & relative safety - He later fought in the 8th Army, survived Tunis & Italy
      I last saw him in 1987 the year he died, but he looked fit & healthy when I saw him....
      He kept on buying me pints of "Webster's Yorkshire Bitter" & spent postwar years as a Coach driver

    • @bobsakamanos4469
      @bobsakamanos4469 Месяц назад

      LOL, Bong couldn't hold a candel to Pat Pattle. Bong was flying a fighter superior to the enemy, Pattle flew obsolete aircraft and was out numbered.

    • @bobsakamanos4469
      @bobsakamanos4469 Месяц назад +1

      @@michaeltelson9798 no, Hurricane I's, Merlin III engine. Underpowered and outdated. But that only elevates the level of Pattle's skills.

  • @aldolamberti3855
    @aldolamberti3855 Год назад

    You are telling a story upside down. I am a native of Asmara. In that place the first air battles took place. Maybe you missed one name above all . This is Captain Mario Visentini, the first Italian ace of the Second World War. I remind you that this ace has 16 kills in his palmares including Blenhain and wullington, the other victories were obtained against Gloste and Hurricane. The 17th victory was not counted as the heavily damaged aircraft managed to land, but could not be repaired. Moreover he destroyed 34 planes on the ground alone or with wingman , another Ace , Sergeant Baron ! Document yourselves better and not always for the one and only part. This information can also be found in Wikipedia!

    • @showtime112
      @showtime112  Год назад +2

      🙃 And this emoji too is 'up side down' 🙃 Check the other two identical comments for a reply.

    • @ryanschofield2018
      @ryanschofield2018 6 месяцев назад

      2nd reply for 2nd identical post: I'd like to make a correction, the greatest Italian 800m runner in Italian history is in fact South African. Respect to Marcello Fiasconaro

  • @dante666jt
    @dante666jt Год назад

    Chad biplanes > Virgin Fighters