Fleet Air Arm (UK) Naval Aviator whose crew crippled the Bismark, passes at 97

MikeD

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The pilot of the Royal Navy crew who crippled the German dreadnought Bismark, stopping it long enough to allow it to be engaged by RN surface forces, passes away. Amazing in the small Swordfish aircraft he was flying, that this then-21 year old Ensign braved seriously crap WX at night launching off the HMS Ark Royal.....battling that weather as well as enemy AAA fire, to make a low level torpedo attack at 50 AGL that would change the course of the war. WX conditions that the hardest freight dog would cancel over. Impressive.


http://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/news-an...-pilot-who-crippled-the-bismarck-dies-aged-97


Swordfish pilot Jock Moffat – credited with launching the torpedo which crippled the Bismarck in 1941 – has died at the age of 97.


The Scotsman, who always played down his role in the attack, was a lifelong champion of naval aviation and friend of the Fleet Air Arm.

2016 ends for Naval aviation as it began – with the loss of one of its greatest heroes.

After the passing of legendary test pilot Eric ‘Winkle’ Brown early in the year, the Fleet Air Arm community now mourns for LCdr John ‘Jock’ Moffat – the man credited with crippling the Bismarck.

The torpedo dropped by his Swordfish at dusk on May 26 1941 jammed the rudder of Hitler’s flagship.

Despite every effort by its crew, the battleship steamed in circles until the guns of the Royal Navy’s Home Fleet arrived the next morning to finish Bismarck off – and avenge the loss of the world-famous battle-cruiser Hood, which the German leviathan had blown up three days earlier.

The air strike carried out by the biplanes of HMS Victorious and Ark Royal at last light on May 26 had been Britain’s last hope of slowing or stopping the Bismarck before it reached the relative safety of waters off France.

With his crew of observer Sub Lt ‘Dusty’ Miller, and telegraphist/air gunner Albert Hayman, a 21-year-old Jock Moffat took off in Swordfish L9726 from the deck of Ark Royal and made for Bismarck, fighting against driving rain, low cloud and a Force 9 gale.

He flew in at 50 feet, barely skimming the surface of the waves, in a hail of bullets and shells, to get the best possible angle of attack on the ship and, at 9.05pm, dropped the fateful torpedo.
 
Took off in a gale, torpedoed arguably the most advanced battleship in the world in a biplane then landed at night. Yeah, I think he's in Valhalla.

Freight dogs everywhere, pay honor. :)

Well done job on his part. That he didn't crash on a night takeoff from a carrier in a gale, not get destroyed by the WX, not fly into the ocean after clipping a wave that low, not get lost navigationally going or coming, not get his ass shot down by the heavy AAA, and not crash land back on the carrier after returning; all in a plane that was very barely /X by todays equipment codes; is simply amazing.
 
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Not just Freight Dogs, Mike:)

In a different world, this man (with others) stood tall.

Amazing indeed, and honored.
 
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