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Jagdgeschwader 300

Jagdgeschwader 300 (JG 300) was a Luftwaffe fighter-wing of World War II. JG 300 was formed on June 26, 1943 in Deelen as Stab/Versuchskommando Herrmann, from July 18, 1943 as Stab/JG Herrmann and finally renamed on August 20, 1943 to Stab/JG 300. Its first Geschwaderkommodore was Oberstleutnant Hajo Herrmann.

Jagdgeschwader 300
Active1943–45
Country Nazi Germany
BranchLuftwaffe
TypeFighter Aircraft
RoleAir superiority
SizeAir Force Wing
Nickname(s)Wilde Sau
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Aircraft flown
FighterBf 109, Fw 190

Genesis and Wilde Sau edit

JG 300 had its origins in April 1943, when Major Hajo Herrmann, a decorated bomber pilot, advocated the use of single-seat day fighters as night fighters against the Royal Air Force (RAF) bomber offensive. He suggested that single seat fighters could operate in the bombers' general target area using the light of target indicators, massed searchlights and the fires on the ground to spot their targets. These operations were tested over Berlin during May and June 1943 and codenamed Wilde Sau.[citation needed]

Recruiting a group of experienced bomber pilots and former instructors with the requisite blind-flying experience, a test unit was set up on June 26, 1943 in Deelen as Stab/Versuchskommando Herrmann to test Herrmann's theory. Standard Fw 190-As and Bf 109-Gs were used, initially 'borrowed' from their parent day units, principally Jagdgeschwader 1 and Jagdgeschwader 11.

Jagdgeschwader 300 employed the Wilde Sau tactic in single-engined fighters for the first time on the night of 3/4 July 1943, when 653 RAF aircraft attacked Cologne's industrial area on the east bank of the Rhine. The German fighters, taking advantage of the illumination from searchlights, target indicator flares and ground fires, claimed 12 aircraft shot down but had to share their claims with the anti-aircraft batteries who also claimed the 12 bombers. To avoid losses to friendly fire, anti-aircraft batteries were ordered to restrict the height of their flak barrage and the fighters operated above that ceiling.[1]

The test unit expanded into JG 300, its I. Gruppe officially formed on August 20, 1943. Sister units JG 301 and JG 302 were also formed on similar lines at this time, collectively brought together as 30. Jagd-Division under Herrmann's command. Special variants of the Bf 109 were later adapted for this night fighter duty; the Bf 109 G-6(N) and Bf 109 G-6(Y). The former was fitted with the FuG 350 Naxos Z passive homing detector and the latter with the "Y" interception radio system; initially the single-seat fighters used no radar or radio aids.[2][page needed]

Although 30. Jagd-Division was initially far from a fully established Jagdgeschwader, the formation process was sped up with RAF Bomber Command deployment in July 1943 of Window; radar-jamming tin-foil strips which had rendered the Luftwaffe radar control system ineffective. JG 300 and its sister units were the only interim counter measure, while Luftwaffe radar researchers strove to overcome this jamming.[2][page needed]

JG 300 night operations met with considerable initial success. Its first formal defensive operation on 27/28 July 1943 saw the unit claim four of the 17 bombers downed that night for one loss.[3] Some 13 (out of a Nachtjagd total of 56 claimed) bombers were claimed shot down by JG 300 on the night of 24 August,[4] while12 more were claimed on 27–28 August. 10 (from a total of 47) were claimed 1 September and another 18 on 5–6 September.[5]

The number of night accidents involving single-seat fighters caused by poor weather in the winter of 1943, led to unsustainable losses in pilots and aircraft. Thus by the end of 1943, JG 300 fielded 3 Fw 190 A-6 (Stab), 14 Bf 109 G-6 (I Gruppe), 4 Fw 190 A-6 (II Gruppe) and 1 Bf 109 G-6 (III Gruppe).[2][page needed] On 1 January 1944, parts of I./JG 300 was detached and used to form 1./Nachtjagdgruppe 10. By early 1944 the Nachtjagdgeschwaders has been equipped with the advanced and "window-proof" Lichtenstein SN-2 VHF airborne radar and JG 300 gradually evolved into a standard day fighter unit, flying operations against the USAAF 8th and 15th Air Forces over Western Europe as a part of Reichsverteidigung (Defense of the Reich).[2][page needed]

Night operations were still sometimes flown, as on the 24/25 March 1944, when I. and II./JG 300 claimed 7 RAF bombers for one loss. By this time Oblt. Klaus Bretschneider of 5./JG 300 had claimed 14 Wilde Sau victories, during 20 combats.[2][page needed]

By May 1944, JG 300 at last had numbers approaching a full establishment of aircraft, with I./JG 300 having 42 (14 operative) Bf 109 G-6 at Bonn Hangelar; II./JG 300 stationed at Dortmund with 25 (13) Fw 190 A-6 and III./ JG 300 with 46 (25 operative) Bf 109 G-6 at Wiesbaden/Erbenheim. Major Walther Dahl was appointed Kommodore of JG 300 on 27 June.[6][unreliable source?]

JG 300 lost several of its top aces in the summer of 1944. On 28 July 1944, Oblt. Ernst-Erich Hirschfeld (24 claims, 9 at night) of 5. JG 300 was shot down and killed in his Fw 190 A-8 near Erfurt, as was Leut. Gerhard Bärsdorf (7 claims) who collided with his wing man. On 29 July 1944, Oberfeldwebel Hermann Wischnewski (26 claims) of I./JG 300 shot down two B-17 bombers and a P-51 fighter but was then shot down and badly injured.[citation needed]

Sturmgruppen edit

 
shot Downed Consolidated B-24 Liberator of the 492d Bombardment Group after an aerial battle at Oschersleben on 7 July 1944

In the summer of 1944 Sturmgruppe units were raised, equipped with heavily armoured and armed FW 190 fighters and charged with breaking up the massed ranks of USAAF daylight bombers. Initially manned by volunteers, each pilot was trained to close with the enemy and engage in extremely short-range combat, attacking from the front and the rear in tight arrowhead formations, even to contemplate deliberately ramming enemy bombers when circumstances permitted.

II./ JG 300 became such a Sturmgruppe unit at this time and, equipped with the Focke-Wulf 190 A-8/R2 or R8 with two MK 108 30mm cannon, and two MG 151/20 20mm cannon, enjoyed initial success in downing bombers, but also suffered heavy losses to the massed fighter escorts. From June 1944 until the end of October 1944, II Gruppe suffered some 73 killed, 2 missing, and 32 wounded.

On 7 July 1944 a force of 1,129 B-17 Flying Fortresses and B-24 Liberators of the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) Eighth Air Force set out from England to bomb aircraft factories in the Leipzig area and the synthetic oil plants at Boehlen, Leuna-Merseburg and Lützkendorf. This formation was intercepted by a German Gefechtsverband comprising IV. (Sturm) Gruppe Jagdgeschwader 3, escorted by two Gruppen of Bf 109s from JG 300 led by Major Walther Dahl. Dahl drove the attack to point-blank range behind the Liberators of the 492nd Bomb Group, which at the time was temporarily without fighter cover, before opening fire. Within about a minute the entire squadron of twelve B-24s had been annihilated. The USAAF 2nd Air Division lost 28 Liberators that day, the majority to the Sturmgruppe attack. IV. /JG 3 lost nine fighters shot down and three more suffered damage and made crash landings; five pilots were killed.[7]

 
A 1944 drawing by Helmuth Ellgaard illustrating "ramming"

USAAF escort fighters were increasingly effective. On 11 September 1944 II. (Sturm)/JG 300 lost 13 Fw 190s to P-51 Mustangs, with 10 pilots killed and two wounded. They claimed nine Mustangs; actual Mustang losses was just one 339th Fighter Group P-51, damaged by Flak and shot down by an Me 262. I. /JG 300, flying top cover lost 13 Bf 109s without claiming a kill. One pilot was killed and one wounded.[8] Major Alfred Lindenberger, (a forty-seven-year-old Prussian World War I ace with 12 victories) was posted to II. /JG 300 in June 1944 and was made Gruppenkommandeur later in 1944. On 28 September 1944 he was shot down by P-51s and wounded. Owing to his age and inexperience with modern fighters he flew most sorties as a wingman. Lindenberger claimed two US four-engined bombers on 17 December 1944.

As the year progressed the 30 Jagddivision was broken up, as JG 301 left for Ploiești in Romania while JG 302 flew combat over Hungary and Austria. Only JG 300 remained in the Reich. Major Dahl was dismissed from his command of JG 300 by Hermann Göring on 30 November 1944, for refusal to launch what he considered a suicidal interception mission.

During the Ardennes offensive in late 1944, JG 300 was one of the few units remaining on Reich defence duties, with most other fighter units sent to support attacking ground forces. The Geschwader took heavy losses in late 1944, particularly on 17 December when 100 aircraft of JG 300 intercepted USAAF bombers, claiming 33 shot down but losing 43 of their own number. Many of the pilots killed were irreplaceable Experten, including on 24 December 1944, the Staffelkapitän of 5. /JG 300 Oblt Klaus Bretschneider, who was shot down by 357th FG P-51s (who claimed 28 fighters for 2 losses).

On 14 January 1945 a mixed formation of JG 300 and JG 301 were attacked by USAAF escort fighters, during an interception against the USAAF 3rd Air Division, bombing oil targets over central Germany. The two Geschwader claimed 18 B-17s, 7 P-51s and one P-47 downed, although the mixed formation lost 89 aircraft with 52 killed and 18 wounded. (JG 300 lost 51 fighters, with 32 pilots killed and 10 wounded).The 357th Fighter Group claimed over 50 kills, and the 56th FG and the 20th FG also claimed victories.

On 14 February 1945, operations against the USAAF bomber streams by JG 300 and JG 301 led to I. and III. /JG 300 losing 3 Bf 109s and II. /JG 300 losing 6 Fw 190s.

Commanding officers edit

  • Oberstleutnant Hajo Herrmann, June – 26 September 1943
  • Oberstleutnant Kurt Kettner, 26 September 1943 – 27 June 1944
  • Oberstleutnant Walther Dahl, 27 June 1944 – 26 January 1945
  • Major Kurd Peters (acting), December 1944 – January 1945
  • Major Anton Hackl, 30 January – 20 February 1945
  • Major Kurd Peters (acting), March – April 1945
  • Major Günther Rall, 20 February – 8 May 1945

See also edit

Organization of the Luftwaffe during World War II

Notes and references edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ RAF History – Bomber Command 60th Anniversary 2008-08-28 at the Wayback Machine, Campaign Diary: July 1943 2009-05-04 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 21 July 2008
  2. ^ a b c d e Aders 1979.
  3. ^ Hinchcliffe 1996, p. 157.
  4. ^ Foreman, Mathews & Parry 2004, p. 106.
  5. ^ Foreman, Mathews & Parry 2004, p. 110.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-11-01. Retrieved 2009-11-07.
  7. ^ Weal 1996, p. 78.
  8. ^ Caldwell & Muller 2007, p. 233.

Bibliography edit

  • Aders, Gebhard (1979). History of the German Night Fighter Force, 1917–1945. London: Janes Publishing. ISBN 0-354-01247-9.
  • Bethke, Herbert and Henning, Friedhelm (2000). Jagdgeschwader 300: Wilde Sau: TEIL 1. ISBN 3-923457-55-3.
  • Bethke, Herbert and Henning, Friedhelm (2001). Jagdgeschwader 300: Wilde Sau: TEIL 2. ISBN 3-923457-58-8.
  • Caldwell, Donald; Muller, Richard (2007). The Luftwaffe over Germany: Defense of the Reich. London, UK: Greenhill. ISBN 978-1-85367-712-0.
  • Foreman, John; Mathews, Johannes; Parry, Simon (2004). Luftwaffe Night Fighter Claims 1939–1945. Walton on Thames: Red Kite. ISBN 978-0-9538061-4-0.
  • Hinchcliffe, Peter (1996). The Other Battle: Luftwaffe Night Aces vs Bomber Command. London: Zenith Press. ISBN 0-7603-0265-0.
  • Lorant, Jean Yves and Goyat, Richard (2005). Jagdgeschwader 300 "Wilde Sau" - Volume One: June 1943 – September 1944. Eagle Edition Ltd. ISBN 0-9761034-0-0.
  • Lorant, Jean Yves and Goyat, Richard (2007). Jagdgeschwader 300 "Wilde Sau" - Volume Two: September 1944 – May 1945. Eagle Edition Ltd. ISBN 0-9761034-2-7.
  • Weal, John (1996). Focke-Wulf Fw 190 Aces of the Western Front. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85532-595-1.

jagdgeschwader, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 2008,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Jagdgeschwader 300 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jagdgeschwader 300 JG 300 was a Luftwaffe fighter wing of World War II JG 300 was formed on June 26 1943 in Deelen as Stab Versuchskommando Herrmann from July 18 1943 as Stab JG Herrmann and finally renamed on August 20 1943 to Stab JG 300 Its first Geschwaderkommodore was Oberstleutnant Hajo Herrmann Jagdgeschwader 300Active1943 45Country Nazi GermanyBranchLuftwaffeTypeFighter AircraftRoleAir superioritySizeAir Force WingNickname s Wilde SauCommandersNotablecommandersHajo Herrmann 26 June 1943 26 September 1943 Gunther Rall 15 June 6 August 1944 Aircraft flownFighterBf 109 Fw 190 Contents 1 Genesis and Wilde Sau 2 Sturmgruppen 3 Commanding officers 4 See also 5 Notes and references 5 1 Citations 5 2 BibliographyGenesis and Wilde Sau editJG 300 had its origins in April 1943 when Major Hajo Herrmann a decorated bomber pilot advocated the use of single seat day fighters as night fighters against the Royal Air Force RAF bomber offensive He suggested that single seat fighters could operate in the bombers general target area using the light of target indicators massed searchlights and the fires on the ground to spot their targets These operations were tested over Berlin during May and June 1943 and codenamed Wilde Sau citation needed Recruiting a group of experienced bomber pilots and former instructors with the requisite blind flying experience a test unit was set up on June 26 1943 in Deelen as Stab Versuchskommando Herrmann to test Herrmann s theory Standard Fw 190 As and Bf 109 Gs were used initially borrowed from their parent day units principally Jagdgeschwader 1 and Jagdgeschwader 11 Jagdgeschwader 300 employed the Wilde Sau tactic in single engined fighters for the first time on the night of 3 4 July 1943 when 653 RAF aircraft attacked Cologne s industrial area on the east bank of the Rhine The German fighters taking advantage of the illumination from searchlights target indicator flares and ground fires claimed 12 aircraft shot down but had to share their claims with the anti aircraft batteries who also claimed the 12 bombers To avoid losses to friendly fire anti aircraft batteries were ordered to restrict the height of their flak barrage and the fighters operated above that ceiling 1 The test unit expanded into JG 300 its I Gruppe officially formed on August 20 1943 Sister units JG 301 and JG 302 were also formed on similar lines at this time collectively brought together as 30 Jagd Division under Herrmann s command Special variants of the Bf 109 were later adapted for this night fighter duty the Bf 109 G 6 N and Bf 109 G 6 Y The former was fitted with the FuG 350 Naxos Z passive homing detector and the latter with the Y interception radio system initially the single seat fighters used no radar or radio aids 2 page needed Although 30 Jagd Division was initially far from a fully established Jagdgeschwader the formation process was sped up with RAF Bomber Command deployment in July 1943 of Window radar jamming tin foil strips which had rendered the Luftwaffe radar control system ineffective JG 300 and its sister units were the only interim counter measure while Luftwaffe radar researchers strove to overcome this jamming 2 page needed JG 300 night operations met with considerable initial success Its first formal defensive operation on 27 28 July 1943 saw the unit claim four of the 17 bombers downed that night for one loss 3 Some 13 out of a Nachtjagd total of 56 claimed bombers were claimed shot down by JG 300 on the night of 24 August 4 while12 more were claimed on 27 28 August 10 from a total of 47 were claimed 1 September and another 18 on 5 6 September 5 The number of night accidents involving single seat fighters caused by poor weather in the winter of 1943 led to unsustainable losses in pilots and aircraft Thus by the end of 1943 JG 300 fielded 3 Fw 190 A 6 Stab 14 Bf 109 G 6 I Gruppe 4 Fw 190 A 6 II Gruppe and 1 Bf 109 G 6 III Gruppe 2 page needed On 1 January 1944 parts of I JG 300 was detached and used to form 1 Nachtjagdgruppe 10 By early 1944 the Nachtjagdgeschwaders has been equipped with the advanced and window proof Lichtenstein SN 2 VHF airborne radar and JG 300 gradually evolved into a standard day fighter unit flying operations against the USAAF 8th and 15th Air Forces over Western Europe as a part of Reichsverteidigung Defense of the Reich 2 page needed Night operations were still sometimes flown as on the 24 25 March 1944 when I and II JG 300 claimed 7 RAF bombers for one loss By this time Oblt Klaus Bretschneider of 5 JG 300 had claimed 14 Wilde Sau victories during 20 combats 2 page needed By May 1944 JG 300 at last had numbers approaching a full establishment of aircraft with I JG 300 having 42 14 operative Bf 109 G 6 at Bonn Hangelar II JG 300 stationed at Dortmund with 25 13 Fw 190 A 6 and III JG 300 with 46 25 operative Bf 109 G 6 at Wiesbaden Erbenheim Major Walther Dahl was appointed Kommodore of JG 300 on 27 June 6 unreliable source JG 300 lost several of its top aces in the summer of 1944 On 28 July 1944 Oblt Ernst Erich Hirschfeld 24 claims 9 at night of 5 JG 300 was shot down and killed in his Fw 190 A 8 near Erfurt as was Leut Gerhard Barsdorf 7 claims who collided with his wing man On 29 July 1944 Oberfeldwebel Hermann Wischnewski 26 claims of I JG 300 shot down two B 17 bombers and a P 51 fighter but was then shot down and badly injured citation needed Sturmgruppen edit nbsp shot Downed Consolidated B 24 Liberator of the 492d Bombardment Group after an aerial battle at Oschersleben on 7 July 1944In the summer of 1944 Sturmgruppe units were raised equipped with heavily armoured and armed FW 190 fighters and charged with breaking up the massed ranks of USAAF daylight bombers Initially manned by volunteers each pilot was trained to close with the enemy and engage in extremely short range combat attacking from the front and the rear in tight arrowhead formations even to contemplate deliberately ramming enemy bombers when circumstances permitted II JG 300 became such a Sturmgruppe unit at this time and equipped with the Focke Wulf 190 A 8 R2 or R8 with two MK 108 30mm cannon and two MG 151 20 20mm cannon enjoyed initial success in downing bombers but also suffered heavy losses to the massed fighter escorts From June 1944 until the end of October 1944 II Gruppe suffered some 73 killed 2 missing and 32 wounded On 7 July 1944 a force of 1 129 B 17 Flying Fortresses and B 24 Liberators of the United States Army Air Forces USAAF Eighth Air Force set out from England to bomb aircraft factories in the Leipzig area and the synthetic oil plants at Boehlen Leuna Merseburg and Lutzkendorf This formation was intercepted by a German Gefechtsverband comprising IV Sturm Gruppe Jagdgeschwader 3 escorted by two Gruppen of Bf 109s from JG 300 led by Major Walther Dahl Dahl drove the attack to point blank range behind the Liberators of the 492nd Bomb Group which at the time was temporarily without fighter cover before opening fire Within about a minute the entire squadron of twelve B 24s had been annihilated The USAAF 2nd Air Division lost 28 Liberators that day the majority to the Sturmgruppe attack IV JG 3 lost nine fighters shot down and three more suffered damage and made crash landings five pilots were killed 7 nbsp A 1944 drawing by Helmuth Ellgaard illustrating ramming USAAF escort fighters were increasingly effective On 11 September 1944 II Sturm JG 300 lost 13 Fw 190s to P 51 Mustangs with 10 pilots killed and two wounded They claimed nine Mustangs actual Mustang losses was just one 339th Fighter Group P 51 damaged by Flak and shot down by an Me 262 I JG 300 flying top cover lost 13 Bf 109s without claiming a kill One pilot was killed and one wounded 8 Major Alfred Lindenberger a forty seven year old Prussian World War I ace with 12 victories was posted to II JG 300 in June 1944 and was made Gruppenkommandeur later in 1944 On 28 September 1944 he was shot down by P 51s and wounded Owing to his age and inexperience with modern fighters he flew most sorties as a wingman Lindenberger claimed two US four engined bombers on 17 December 1944 As the year progressed the 30 Jagddivision was broken up as JG 301 left for Ploiești in Romania while JG 302 flew combat over Hungary and Austria Only JG 300 remained in the Reich Major Dahl was dismissed from his command of JG 300 by Hermann Goring on 30 November 1944 for refusal to launch what he considered a suicidal interception mission During the Ardennes offensive in late 1944 JG 300 was one of the few units remaining on Reich defence duties with most other fighter units sent to support attacking ground forces The Geschwader took heavy losses in late 1944 particularly on 17 December when 100 aircraft of JG 300 intercepted USAAF bombers claiming 33 shot down but losing 43 of their own number Many of the pilots killed were irreplaceable Experten including on 24 December 1944 the Staffelkapitan of 5 JG 300 Oblt Klaus Bretschneider who was shot down by 357th FG P 51s who claimed 28 fighters for 2 losses On 14 January 1945 a mixed formation of JG 300 and JG 301 were attacked by USAAF escort fighters during an interception against the USAAF 3rd Air Division bombing oil targets over central Germany The two Geschwader claimed 18 B 17s 7 P 51s and one P 47 downed although the mixed formation lost 89 aircraft with 52 killed and 18 wounded JG 300 lost 51 fighters with 32 pilots killed and 10 wounded The 357th Fighter Group claimed over 50 kills and the 56th FG and the 20th FG also claimed victories On 14 February 1945 operations against the USAAF bomber streams by JG 300 and JG 301 led to I and III JG 300 losing 3 Bf 109s and II JG 300 losing 6 Fw 190s Commanding officers editOberstleutnant Hajo Herrmann June 26 September 1943 Oberstleutnant Kurt Kettner 26 September 1943 27 June 1944 Oberstleutnant Walther Dahl 27 June 1944 26 January 1945 Major Kurd Peters acting December 1944 January 1945 Major Anton Hackl 30 January 20 February 1945 Major Kurd Peters acting March April 1945 Major Gunther Rall 20 February 8 May 1945See also editOrganization of the Luftwaffe during World War IINotes and references editCitations edit RAF History Bomber Command 60th Anniversary Archived 2008 08 28 at the Wayback Machine Campaign Diary July 1943 Archived 2009 05 04 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 21 July 2008 a b c d e Aders 1979 Hinchcliffe 1996 p 157 Foreman Mathews amp Parry 2004 p 106 Foreman Mathews amp Parry 2004 p 110 Aces of the Luftwaffe Walther Dahl Archived from the original on 2007 11 01 Retrieved 2009 11 07 Weal 1996 p 78 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 233 Bibliography edit Aders Gebhard 1979 History of the German Night Fighter Force 1917 1945 London Janes Publishing ISBN 0 354 01247 9 Bethke Herbert and Henning Friedhelm 2000 Jagdgeschwader 300 Wilde Sau TEIL 1 ISBN 3 923457 55 3 Bethke Herbert and Henning Friedhelm 2001 Jagdgeschwader 300 Wilde Sau TEIL 2 ISBN 3 923457 58 8 Caldwell Donald Muller Richard 2007 The Luftwaffe over Germany Defense of the Reich London UK Greenhill ISBN 978 1 85367 712 0 Foreman John Mathews Johannes Parry Simon 2004 Luftwaffe Night Fighter Claims 1939 1945 Walton on Thames Red Kite ISBN 978 0 9538061 4 0 Hinchcliffe Peter 1996 The Other Battle Luftwaffe Night Aces vs Bomber Command London Zenith Press ISBN 0 7603 0265 0 Lorant Jean Yves and Goyat Richard 2005 Jagdgeschwader 300 Wilde Sau Volume One June 1943 September 1944 Eagle Edition Ltd ISBN 0 9761034 0 0 Lorant Jean Yves and Goyat Richard 2007 Jagdgeschwader 300 Wilde Sau Volume Two September 1944 May 1945 Eagle Edition Ltd ISBN 0 9761034 2 7 Weal John 1996 Focke Wulf Fw 190 Aces of the Western Front Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 595 1 Portal nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jagdgeschwader 300 amp oldid 1206322833, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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