North American P-51 Mustang | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (2024)

Controlling the air proved key to controlling the ground. The long-range P-51 Mustang fighter was invaluable to the Allied victory, enabling resumption of strategic bombing after heavy losses suffered by unescorted bombers in 1943. Developed for export to Britain, models modified by the British to use Rolls-Royce Merlin engines became America’s most capable wartime fighters.

P-51 Mustang of the 332nd Fighter Group

The pairing of the legendary Merlin engine and the P-51 Mustang eventually resulted in the P-51D, which provided the US Army Air Forceswith a high-performance, high-altitude, long range fighter that could escort heavy bomber formations all the way to Berlin and back. The changes significantly reduced the unacceptable loss rates bomber crews had suffered since the daylight bombing campaign began in the summer of 1942.

Between 1941 and 1946, roughly 1,000 African American pilots were trained at a segregated air base in Tuskegee, Alabama. The most famous of the Tuskegee Airmen were the 332nd Fighter Group, also known as the “Red Tails” for the distinctive markings of their planes. The 99th Pursuit Squadron, later renamed the 99th Fighter Squadron, also distinguished themselves in combat. Together they flew more than 15,000 sorties and lost 66 men in the line of duty. This aircraft is painted in the markings of one of the aircraft known to have been flown by the squadron.

Made possible through a gift from the Ricketts Family

Statistics

Type: Fighter

Production

Date Introduced: 1944
Manufacturer: North American
Number Produced: 8,000

Specifications

Crew: 1 (Pilot)
Wingspan: 37 feet
Length: 32 feet
Maximum Speed: 437 miles per hour
Cruising Speed: 275 miles per hour
Maximum Range: 1,000 miles
Engine: Packard Rolls Royce Merlin V-1650-7 (1,695 hp)
Maximum Load: 2,000 pounds of bombs, or ten 5-inch rockets
Armament: Six .50 caliber machine guns

Lt. Colonel Thomas J. Hitchco*ck Jr., Champion of the P-51 Mustang

Perhaps no one man had a greater influence over the development and adaptation of the P-51 Mustang than the visionary Lt. Col. Thomas J. Hitchco*ck Jr. At 17, Hitchco*ck began his military career during World War I with the French Lafayette Flying Corps after being turned away by the US Army for being too young. Earning his wings with the French, Hitchco*ck scored three aerial victories before the Germans shot him down and captured him. After being held captive for six months, Hitchco*ck saw a chance to escape. He jumped from a moving train and walked more than 100 miles to the safety of Switzerland.

After the war, Hitchco*ck became one of the most famous and accomplished polo players of the day, worked as an investment banker, and lived the life of a socialite. His many close friends included writer F. Scott Fitzgerald, who loosely modeled his character Tom Buchanan in The Great Gatsby on Hitchco*ck. When the United States entered World War II, Hitchco*ck secured a commission in the US Army Air Force and desperately sought command of a fighter squadron. At 42, however, the US Army Air Force considered him too old for combat.

After his appointment as Assistant Military Air Attaché in London, Hitchco*ck reported to Washington on the results of British tests involving the North American-built P-51A airframe and the Rolls-Royce Merlin 61 engine. In April 1942, Rolls-Royce test pilot Ronald Hawker evaluated the Mustang—powered by the stock Allison engine—and was impressed by the aircraft’s performance at low and medium altitudes. But Hawker thought performance at higher altitudes could be vastly improved by installing the Merlin 61 engine. The British fitted five test aircraft with the Merlin engine, and the results were nothing short of astounding. Hawker’s assessment proved correct: the Merlin engine powered Mustangs reached speeds in excess of 430 miles per hour at 30,000 feet, almost 100 miles per hour faster than the Allison engine.

Unsurprisingly, Hitchco*ck’s report to Washington in fall 1942 recommended immediate development of the P-51A into a high-altitude fighter by replacing the Allison engine with the Merlin, which was already being produced for the British in the United States under license by the Packard Motor Company. Hitchco*ck also predicted the Merlin-powered Mustang would be the best fighter of 1943. The US Army Air Force placed an immediate order for 2,200 of the new P-51Bs, and by the following year the 354th Fighter Group became the first operational unit in the ETO equipped with the engines. The arrival of the P-51B could not have come at a better time. Without the protection of fighter escorts all the way to the target and back, heavy bomber crews suffered unacceptable losses, and deep penetration raids into Germany were suspended until a long range fighter escort was a reality. With the aid of external wing tanks, the Mustang had the range to stay with the B-17 and B-24 bomber formations all the way to targets deep inside Germany, and for the first time the bomber boys had a fighter escort all the way back home to England.

By early 1944, the Mustang’s arrival, along with new aggressive tactics, was beginning to change the tide of the air war in the Allies’ favor. During “Big Week,” a weeklong bombing offensive in February 1944 that targeted German fighter aircraft production facilities, Mustang pilots destroyed 17 percent of the Luftwaffe’s experienced fighter pilots in air-to-air combat. In spite of the new aircraft’s wild success, the Mustang was experiencing some troubles with its external wing tanks, as the weight of the fuel had the tendency to destabilize the aircraft while in a dive. Now shepherding the Mustang project as Deputy Chief of Staff of the 9th Air Support Command in charge of tactical research and development, Hitchco*ck insisted on pinpointing the problem himself rather than risking the lives of his men. Hewas unable to pull his Mustang out of a dive during a test flight on April 18, 1944, and died in the subsequent crash near Salisbury, England.

Hitchco*ck did not live to see how the P-51 Mustang contributed to the Allied air supremacy, which was a prerequisite for the successful invasion of Normandy just two months later. But by March 1944, with Mustangs escorting the first US daylight bombing raids on Berlin in the skies over the Nazi capital, Hitchco*ck saw the fighter he had championed achieve the potential he had envisioned for it all the way back in 1942.

North American P-51 Mustang | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (2024)

FAQs

How many P-51 Mustangs were shot down in WWII? ›

By 8 May 1945, the 8th, 9th, and 15th Air Force's P-51 groups claimed some 4,950 aircraft shot down (about half of all USAAF claims in the European theater, the most claimed by any Allied fighter in air-to-air combat) and 4,131 destroyed on the ground. Losses were about 2,520 aircraft.

What is a P-51 Mustang worth? ›

1944 NORTH AMERICAN P-51 MUSTANG

P-51D MUSTANG - US$2.65M Excellent, 2-seat, extremely well cared for. TT1650 hrs.

How many P-51 are still flying? ›

During WWII approximately 15,000 P-51 Mustangs were produced. Today, however, there are around 150 airworthy aircraft remaining, and they're located around the world either in museums, flying, or are being restored.

Was the P-51 better than the Spitfire? ›

In most cases, the Spitfire had better performance as an all-purpose fighter. The all-important climb rate for a P51D sat at 3200ft per minute whilst the Spitfire could climb at an impressive 3650ft per minute. The maximum speed of a P51D was 437mph whilst the Spitfire was slightly faster at 448mph.

Was the P-51 a good dogfighter? ›

The P-51 was very fast in level flight and in a dive. It was excellent at high and low altitudes and could defeat – or at least hold its own – in dogfights with German fighters.

Does Tom Cruise own a P-51? ›

The Original Top Gun Inspired Cruise's Love Of Flying

The P-51 Mustang used in Top Gun: Maverick was built in 1946 and Cruise has owned the plane, which has an estimated value of $4 million, since 2001.

How much does it cost to ride in a P-51 Mustang? ›

P-51 MUSTANG ($2,295)

Who is the most famous P-51? ›

P-51 Gunfighter Colonel Larry Lumpkin (P-51 Gunfighter) Gunfighter is one of the world's most famous P-51 Mustangs, having appeared on the airshow circuit and providing rides for over 35 years. The aircraft is a P-51 "D" model, serial number 44-73264.

Was the P-51 hard to fly? ›

Warbird Alley: P-51 Mustang Pilot Report. The P-51D, which I flew, was a very straightforward airplane in every way. By that I mean it wasn't difficult to fly or hard to handle, as long as you remembered a few basic things. First and foremost, you never forgot for a minute that it could bite hard if you got careless.

Was the P-51 bad? ›

The British accepted the plane into service, and gave it its famous “Mustang” nickname. However, the P-51 did have issues. While the American-built Allison engine was fine at lower altitudes, it suffered a drastic drop-off in performance at higher ones.

What made the P-51 so fast? ›

Their design, dubbed Mustang by the British, had a low-drag laminar-flow wing and an efficient low-drag engine cooling system that gave it exceptional speed and range.

Which was a better plane the P-51 or the Corsair? ›

Is the P-51 the king of the hill? Many Navy and Marine Corps aviators will tell you the Corsair was, hands down, the better fighter.

How many B-17s were shot down in WWII? ›

Of the 12,731 B-17s built, about 4,735 were lost during the war.

What did German pilots think of the P-51 Mustang? ›

It was too big. The co*ckpit was immense and unfamiliar. After so may hours in the snug confines of the 109, everything felt out of reach and too far away from the pilot. Although the P-51 was a fine airplane to fly, because of its reactions and capabilities, it too was disconcerting.

How many B29 were shot down in WWII? ›

The USAAF lost about 360 B-29 Superfortresses during WW2 to all causes, ie. enemy action, operational accidents, et al. The Japanese shot down under half of that number, approximately 160 plus. Incredibly the rest were due to accidents, crashing upon take off or more rarely on landing.

How many US bomber crews died in WWII? ›

Casualties. Bomber Command crews suffered an extremely high casualty rate: 55,573 killed out of a total of 125,000 aircrew (a 44.4 per cent death rate), a further 8,403 were wounded in action and 9,838 became prisoners of war. This covered all Bomber Command operations.

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