At 13.50 p.m. on
17 September 1940, just after lunch, three Spitfires from 152 Squadron’s B
Flight took off from Warmwell and commenced a patrol over Portland Bill. They
were then vectored onto a formation of Junkers Ju 88s at 17,000 feet which was
flying north over Shepton Mallet. Ken Holland was Two, and was flying UM-J.
(Ken notes that this was Green Section but the squadron’s combined combat
report records it as Blue Section.)
Ken, Pilot
Officer Marrs (1) and Flying Officer O’Brian (3) sighted a lone enemy aircraft
about a mile away. They closed and carried out a No 1 attack. The Ju 88 dived
steeply into cloud cover at about 6000 feet to evade them. Ken, Marrs and
O’Brian broke up and chased the Ju 88 separately, each attacking as the
opportunity arose. Most of the battle occurred in the cloud cover.
They saw white
smoke coming from the starboard engine but the Ju 88 was far from totally
stricken; Marrs copped some machine gun fire from the top gun early in the
attack. His Spitfire seized. He then bowed out and headed for Colerne Aerodrome
where a bullet hole was found his Spit’s oil cooler.
Meanwhile, Ken
and O’Brian continued their attack. The Junkers was taking violent evasive
action, diving, slide slipping, throttling back and doing vertical banked steep
turns in alternate directions. Ken and O’Brian clung to it. It tried climbing
on one engine but still could not throw them. Ken and O’Brian continued to fire
on the starboard engine until it stopped and the smoke had almost ceased. Then O’Brian
struck with full deflection, concentrating his fire from below on the Ju 88’s right
wing. There was no return fire. Ken and O’Brian continued their attack,
concentrating on the enemy aircraft’s port rear quarter. Then they lost the Ju
88 as it headed through the cloud on a southerly course. It later crashed
almost intact.
By this stage
Ken’s engine was becoming hot so he landed at Yatesbury aerodrome where he
discovered that UM-J had taken machine gun fire through the glycol header, oil
pipe, starboard wheel bay and tyre. Yatesbury loaned him a Magister so he could
fly back to Warmwell while the ground crew worked on J. Ken was in the air
again later that afternoon; ‘another flap Bournemouth 15,000’ but he ‘saw nothing’.
In the final
wash up of the post-lunch effort, it was determined that Ken had fired 1650
rounds, in five two second bursts, while closing from 550 to 200 yards. The
section was credited with the destruction of the Ju 88, a 1/3 share each.
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