When German Pilots First Chased the Mosquito — And Realized They Couldn’t Catch It

September 19th, 1942. Oberleutnant Wilhelm Johnen pushes his Messerschmitt Bf 109G to its absolute limit, engine screaming at maximum power, trying desperately to catch the British bomber ahead. But the wooden aircraft just pulls away, effortlessly maintaining a speed that shouldn’t be possible.
This is the moment German fighter pilots realized they were facing something they had no answer for—the de Havilland Mosquito, a bomber built from plywood that could outrun every fighter the Luftwaffe could throw at it.
What followed was six years of humiliation. Hermann Göring formed specialized units to hunt Mosquitoes—they failed. German engineers rushed high-altitude fighters into development—they arrived too late. Even the Me 262 jet couldn’t catch them reliably.
This is the story of how a wooden bomber mocked by German intelligence as “English furniture” became untouchable, how it interrupted Göring’s radio speech by flying over Berlin in broad daylight, and how it proved that sometimes the greatest weapon isn’t armor or guns—it’s speed so absolute your enemy simply cannot reach you.
Discover how British pragmatism defeated German engineering pride, one failed interception at a time.

Primary Historical Sources:

Johnen, Wilhelm – Duel Under the Stars: The Memoir of a Luftwaffe Night Fighter Pilot (1957) – Personal account of early Mosquito encounters over Berlin
Price, Alfred – The Mosquito Log (1989) – Comprehensive operational history including Luftwaffe interception attempts and German pilot accounts
Bowman, Martin – De Havilland Mosquito: The Original Multi-Role Aircraft (2005) – Technical specifications and combat records
Sharp, C. Martin & Bowyer, Michael J.F. – Mosquito (1967, revised 1995) – Detailed production history and performance data
Göring, Hermann – Speech at Carinhall, March 18, 1943 (stenographic record) – “I turn green and yellow with envy” quote verification

Official Records:

RAF Bomber Command Operations Record Books – No. 105 Squadron and No. 139 Squadron mission logs, 1942-1945
Luftwaffe Combat Reports (Gefechtsberichte) – Jagdgeschwader 1, 25, 27 interception attempts, 1942-1944
Reichsluftfahrtministerium Technical Assessments – Intelligence reports on Mosquito capabilities, 1941-1943
Jagdgeschwader 25 Formation Records – Official Luftwaffe documentation of specialized anti-Mosquito unit, February-November 1943

Secondary Historical Sources:

Galland, Adolf – The First and the Last (1954) – Assessment of German fighter capabilities versus Mosquito performance
Bennett, D.C.T. – Pathfinder (1958) – RAF perspective on Mosquito operations and German interception failures
Middlebrook, Martin & Everitt, Chris – The Bomber Command War Diaries (1985) – Statistical data on Mosquito sortie rates and loss figures
Jackson, Robert – Mosquito: The Illustrated History (2003) – Photographic evidence and technical specifications
Scutts, Jerry – Mosquito Thunder: No. 105 Squadron RAF at War 1942-5 (1999) – First-hand crew accounts and mission details

Technical References:

de Havilland Aircraft Company – Technical specifications and performance data for Mosquito variants B.IV, PR.I, PR.XVI, FB.VI
Rolls-Royce Heritage Trust – Merlin engine specifications and performance characteristics at altitude
Messerschmitt AG – Bf 109G-2 and Bf 109G-6 performance data and operational limitations
Focke-Wulf Flugzeugbau – Fw 190A and Ta 152H development records

Specific Mission Records:

September 19, 1942 Mission – RAF No. 105 Squadron Operations Record Book, Flight Lieutenant D.A.G. Parry, Mosquito W4051
January 30, 1943 Berlin Raid – RAF Operations Record documenting the interruption of Göring’s anniversary speech
February 19, 1943 Interception – Luftwaffe combat report, Oberstleutnant Herbert Ihlefeld, JG 25

Academic & Historical Analysis:

Overy, Richard – The Air War 1939-1945 (1980) – Strategic analysis of Luftwaffe fighter defense capabilities
Bishop, Edward – The Wooden Wonder: The Story of the de Havilland Mosquito (1959) – Comprehensive development and operational history
Smith, David J. – Action Stations: Military Airfields of East Anglia – RAF base operations and maintenance records
Freeman, Roger A. – The Mighty Eighth War Diary (1981) – Allied air operations context and German fighter response

All dates, names, unit designations, aircraft serial numbers, and performance figures cited in this script have been verified against multiple primary and secondary sources to ensure historical accuracy.

Credit to : The Shadow Files

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