m a r k e r i c k s o n p a i n t i n g s Lt. Ernest Anders Erickson Air Corps 1942 - 1945
Click to view Lt. Ernest Anders Erickson's complete thirty five mission list and twelve B-17 Flying Fortresses flown between March 27th thru August 26th, 1944 out of Horham Airfield, England.
My father Ernest Anders Erickson at the time a Cadet at Kelly Field near San Antonio, Texas purchased these two issues of Aeronautics Aircraft Spotters Guide in late 1942. A nice price of twenty five cents for each. Ernest was preparing to be a pilot and no doubts the information in these two were a helpful part of the training. When he was flying combat in 1944 he had these stowed away in his footlocker in the barracks. The books are incredible documents of the late 1930s and early 1940s aviation. Featured along with the covers of the books are two pages of the B-17 Flying Fortress. One cover has Ernest's signature on the front. Ernest had joined the Air Corps in March of 1942 in Minneapolis, Minnesota and left Bismarck, North Dakota in April seeking his pilot wings. Ernest was 19 and 20 years old at this time. He had only been as far as Washington state from his home in Bismarck before that day in 1942 when he stepped down onto the train station in San Antonio, Texas to see if he had what it took to pilot of a fighter plane or bomber. Attached below are two photographs of my father at Kelly Field and Curtis Field in 1942 and 1943. Ernest graduated from Blackland Airfield in October of 1943 and received his wings and became a B-17 pilot. He then made a beeline for a visit to his family in Dakota before he was sent overseas for combat flying. Ernest left the states in January of 1944 and was permanently stationed at Horham Airfield in England with the 95th Bomb Group (Heavy) through October of 1944. Lt. Ernest Anders Erickson flew thirty five missions over German occupied Europe with the 334th Squadron and came home without a scratch yet had many life changing experiences and memories that he dealt with well over the rest of his life. Growing up with him as his son I was fortunate to hear many of his Air Corps tales and the rest were left for me to discover in his archives. Ernest's letters and mission notes told another fascinating level of his story that is both compelling and awe inspiring. Many of these can be found on various pages of this website. I invite you to peruse the site and read some of these letters. A humorous photograph below of Ernest taken when he was a Cadet and another after a solo flight during his Flight Training for the Air Corps. He is standing alongside a P-19 on White Field adjacent to Curtis Field in Brady, Texas in April of 1943. |
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