List of aviators who became ace in a day explained

The term "ace in a day" is used to designate a pilot who has shot down five or more aircraft in a single day, based on the usual definition of an "ace" as one with five or more aerial victories.

World War I

Ace in a day on two occasions

A Bristol F2B crew – Canadian pilot Captain Alfred Atkey and English observer Lieutenant Charles Gass – became "ace in a day" twice in the same week. On 7 May 1918, they shot down five German planes in a single sortie over Arras. Two days later, on 9 May, they were credited with another five enemy machines in the course of two sorties. Atkey and Gass survived the Great War. Atkey credited with a total of 38 victories, making him the most successful two-seater pilot and Gass with 39 claims was the most successful observer ace of all time.

René Fonck, the top scoring French Aéronautique Militaire and Allied ace of the war, scored six in a day on both 9 May and 26 September 1918.

Ace in a day

The first aviators to ever achieve "ace in a day" were pilot Julius Arigi and observer/gunner Johann Lasi of the Austro-Hungarian air force, on 22 August 1916, when they downed five Italian planes.

The first single pilot (as opposed to double aviators, as is the case with the previously mentioned Arigi and Lasi) was World War I German flying ace Fritz Otto Bernert. Bernert scored five victories within 20 minutes on 24 April 1917. He had a total of 27 kills during the war, even though he wore glasses and had a useless left arm.

World War II

Triple-ace in a day

To achieve this a pilot must have destroyed 15 enemy aircraft in a single day. This has been achieved by only five pilots, all from the Luftwaffe:[1]

Double-ace in a day

To achieve this a pilot must have destroyed ten enemy aircraft in a single day. This has been achieved by twelve pilots, three of whom repeated their achievement a second time within weeks.

although claiming only nine aircraft shot down, he destroyed ten RAF bombers on 21 February 1945.

Multiple times ace in a day

Eighteen-time ace in day

Seventeen-time ace in day

Thirteen-time ace in day

Twelve-time ace in day

Ten-time ace in day

Nine-time ace in day

Eight-time ace in day

Seven-time ace in day

Six-time ace in day

Five-times ace in day

Four-time ace in day

Three-time ace in day

Two-time ace in day

1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945

Ace in a day

1940

1941

1942

1943

1944

1945

Indo-Pakistani War of 1965/Ace in a Minute.

During the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965, Muhammad Mahmood Alam of Pakistan Air Force claimed to have downed five aircraft in a single sortie on 7 September 1965 all in less than a minute to establish an aerial record. Alam is also the only ace-in-a-day achieved by a jet pilot.[64] [65] [66]

Russo-Ukrainian War

On 13 October 2022, the Ukrainian government claims that Ukrainian pilot Vadym Voroshylov shot down 5 Shahed 136 drones before being forced to eject from his MiG-29 aircraft after it was hit by debris from the last Shahed-136 that had shot down. Voroshylov had shot down two Russian cruise missiles the day prior, though this has yet to be officially verified by independent sources.[67] [68]

See also

References

Bibliography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jan J. Safarik: Air Aces Home Page; Germany – Most Kills Scored in One Day, One Night & One Mission.
  2. Web site: David S. McCampbell. Military Times.
  3. Web site: Battle of Britain London Monument – Sgt. R F Hamlyn . www.bbm.org.uk . 28 April 2021.
  4. News: Swede Vejtasa: In Memoriam . Naval Aviation News . . 2013-05-09 . 2017-10-05.
  5. Web site: James Elms Swett. Military Times.
  6. Web site: Arthur Bernard Cleaveland. Military Times.
  7. Web site: Richard E. Duffy. Military Times.
  8. Web site: MacArthur Powers. Military Times.
  9. Web site: Archie Donahue. Military Times.
  10. Web site: Murray Joseph Shubin. Military Times.
  11. Web site: Elmer Melvin Wheadon. Military Times.
  12. Web site: Harry Troy Hanna. Military Times.
  13. Web site: William Lawrence Leverette. Military Times.
  14. Web site: Carl John Luksic. Military Times.
  15. Web site: Robert James Rankin. Military Times.
  16. Web site: Herbert Brooks Hatch. Military Times.
  17. Web site: Lloyd Glynn Barnard. Military Times.
  18. Web site: Charles Walter Brewer. Military Times.
  19. Web site: George Raines Carr. Military Times.
  20. Web site: Alexander Vraciu. Military Times.
  21. Web site: Wilbur Butcher Webb. Military Times.
  22. Web site: Fred Joseph Christensen. Military Times.
  23. Web site: George Earl Preddy. Military Times.
  24. Web site: John William Wainwright. Military Times.
  25. Web site: Harold Nathan Funk. Military Times.
  26. Web site: Carl Allen Brown. Military Times.
  27. Web site: Kenneth George Hippe. Military Times.
  28. Web site: William John Masoner. Military Times.
  29. Web site: Roy Warrick Rushing. Military Times.
  30. Web site: James Alexander Shirley. Military Times.
  31. Web site: Eugene Powell Townsend. Military Times.
  32. Web site: Thomas Joseph Conroy. Military Times.
  33. Web site: Donald Septimus Bryan. Military Times.
  34. Web site: John James Voll. Military Times.
  35. Web site: William Thomas Whisner. Military Times.
  36. Web site: J. S. Daniell. Military Times.
  37. Web site: William Johnston Hovde . Military Times.
  38. Web site: Robert Harold Anderson. Military Times.
  39. Web site: David Barnes Archibald. Military Times.
  40. Web site: Paul Edward Olson. Military Times.
  41. Web site: David Carl Schilling. Military Times.
  42. Web site: Ernest Edward Bankey . Military Times.
  43. Web site: Swopes. Bryan. Dick Audet Archives. 2021-12-30. This Day in Aviation. en-US.
  44. Web site: William Arthur Shomo. Military Times.
  45. Web site: Felix D. Williamson . Military Times.
  46. Web site: Alexander Louis Anderson. Military Times.
  47. Web site: Patrick Dawson Fleming. Military Times.
  48. Web site: Gordon Howard McDaniel. Military Times.
  49. Web site: Marshall Ulrich Beebe. Military Times.
  50. Web site: Sidney Sterling Woods. Military Times.
  51. Web site: Robert Alexander Elder . Military Times.
  52. Web site: Wayne K. Blickenstaff . Military Times.
  53. Web site: Bruce Ward Carr. Military Times.
  54. Web site: Archie Glenn Donahue. Military Times.
  55. Web site: Valor awards for Eugene Valencia. Military Times. 2022-12-04.
  56. Web site: Jefferson David Dorroh, Jr. . Military Times.
  57. Web site: George Clifton Axtell, Jr. . Military Times.
  58. News: Jeremiah O'Keefe, Ace in His First World War II Battle, Dies at 93 . Grimes . William . August 27, 2016 . The New York Times.
  59. United Press, "Army Flier Bags Five Japs In Single Fight", The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Monday 4 June 1945, Volume 51, page 1.
  60. Web site: Herbert James Valentine . Military Times.
  61. Web site: John Edward Vogt. Military Times.
  62. Book: Army Air Force Victories. Arthur Wyllie. 6 April 2009. Lulu.com . 978-0-615-15549-4.
  63. Web site: Oscar Francis Perdomo. Military Times.
  64. Web site: Air Cdre M Kaiser Tufail. Air Cdre M Kaiser Tufail. Alam's Speed-shooting Classic. 15 November 2011. Defencejournal.com.
  65. Book: Fricker, John. Battle for Pakistan: the air war of 1965. 1979. 15–17. I. Allan . 978-0-7110-0929-5.
  66. Book: O' Nordeen, Lon. Air Warfare in the Missile Age. Smithsonian Institution Press. 1985. 978-0-87474-680-8. Washington, D.C.. 84–87. registration.
  67. Web site: Ukraine Claims MiG-29 Pilot Downed Five Drones Before Ejecting . .
  68. Web site: Inside Ukraine's Desperate Fight Against Drones with MiG-29 Pilot "Juice" . 13 December 2022 .