and not to leave the italian boys out...
With twenty-six individual victories in aerial fight, Cap. Franco Lucchini was the top Italian scorer by the first World War and one of the few ones to inscribe himself of the title of Ace (5 or more victories) both in the Spanish civil war and in the Second World War.
He was born on December 24th 1914 in Rome, and he entered well soon the Aviation, achieving the military brevet in July 1936 at the Air school of Foggia as Reserve Officer.
During the war in Spain, enlisted him voluntary with the rank of Sottotenente, he was assigned to the 19a Sq. 23° Gr. “Asso di Bastoni”, with which on October 12th 1937 got his first victory flying a CR 32 fighter; he will conclude the war with 122 war missions, 5 individual victories, one silver medal and seven months of imprisonment after having been shoot down on July 22nd 1938.
Foggia Air School 1936. Lucchini sat on a training airplane.
To the enter of Italy in the WW2 in June of 1940, he is regular to the 90a Sq. within the 4° Stormo whose badge was an rampant horse, inheritance of the Greatest Italian ace of the Great war Francesco Baracca; perhaps the 4° Stormo will be not by chance the more victorious Italian wing of the war with almost 600 aerial planes shoot down, and well 32 aces, among which the best three: Martinoli, Lucchini and Ferrulli.
The 90a Sq., equipped with the new CR 42, was soon moved to northern Africa, where on June 11th 1940 Lucchini flown his first mission of the war, a flight of protection over Tripoli. Three days later Lucchini and others two pilots intercepted a formation of Gloster Gladiators near Bug Bug; they are the first English planes met by the pilots of 4° Stormo, and in the fight that follows a Gladiator is shoot down. From the official documents, kept in the Historical Office of AMI, it's very difficult to establish to what pilot is had to attribute the victory, above all because in the first years of the conflict officially the Regia Aeronautica assigned only collective victories, perhaps for don't exasperate rivalries inside the same squadron; it is sure however that at the same time, unofficially, both the single pilots and their commanders well kept track of the individual victories, as it is for instance read in the motivations of the awards assigned to the pilots.
On June 20th Lucchini together with three others pilots, took off from Tobruk, where the 90a Sq was based., to intercept an English Sunderland: after a long pursuit and repeated attacks (the fighter CR 42 had a maximum speed of around 430 km/h and was armed with only two 12,7 machine guns) the Sunderland is forced to ditch near Bardia, where the pilot , the only survival, was captured. Once more in the squadron's log book was written “a shared victory” but from the description of the fight it's easy to realize that the English four-engines is Lucchini's first victory in the WW2.
The takes off on alarm followed the flight patrols for the whole months of June and July, and in one of these missions, on July 24th, Lucchini gained his second victory against a Gladiator. Four days later it is the turn of two Blenheims intercepted after a take off on alarm and shoot down with two other pilots.
In the months that follows the intensity of the missions which the whole 4° Stormo was submitted, doesn't change, but in December a new enemy makes appearance on the scene: it is the English Hurricane, a fighter with 8 machine guns able to reach 530 km/h. The Hurricane is not the best fighter of the RAF, even if in the just won battle of Britain it has gotten more victories than the noble Spitfire, but towards the biplanes CR 42 technical superiority is clean. Despite everything however Italians fought well and several victories are also claimed.
To the beginning of January of 1941, the 90a Sq. is moved back to Italy to re-equip with the new Macchi C 200; Lucchini closed so the first turn of operations in Africa, during which he flew 103 missions of war and claimed 3 individual victories.
In the middle of June the 4° Stormo moved to Sicily: objective the island-fortress of Malta.
Activity is soon frantic and the Italian pilots are continually employed in missions of escort to the Cant Z 1007, recognitions and free hunting (that they always ended with the strafing of the Maltese airports). The defense of the island is entrusted to 6 RAF Squadrons equipped with Hurricane Mk I; this time however there aren't the obsolete CR 42s and the struggle against the more powerful C 200s of the 10° Gruppo (formed by 84a, 90a and 91a Sq.) is without doubt less uneven.
Lucchini, promoted Capitano in May, gained his first victory against an Hurricane on June 27th, while on September 4th in the official bulletin he is quoted for having individually shoot down two enemy fighters and other 22 (!) shared during two missions; it is clear that the well-known phenomenon of the “over claiming” common to all the Air Forces that fought in all the wars, is decidedly present in the italian claims. I think however that, all things considered, there is good faith in the claims of the pilots as they are brought in the official documents, extraneous to any propagandist tie: after all we are not speaking of the calculation of the goals in football-match, but of men that among thousand difficulties they had the obligation to shoot each other; this doesn't remove of course the importance to reconstruct the events underlining the true facts.
On September 27th during an escort to the Italian bombers against an English convoy to Malta, some airplanes, among which that of Lucchini, after two hours of flight are forced for the bad weather, to effect an emergency landing of Ustica. In the ditch Lucchini badly wounded his face, and he immediately was transported in Sicily with an hospital ship; he will come back in action only two months later just to fly his last two missions with 90a Sq. on November 21st and 23rd.
In December Lucchini is promoted commander of the 84a Sq and few days later the unit was transferred to Udine, together with the whole 10° Gruppo, to re-equiping with the new C 202 “Folgore"
During the operations against Malta Lucchini collected 55 war missions and 5 individual victories.
The 4° Stormo returned to Sicily at the beginning of May of 1942 full equipped with the Macchi C 202;
Lucchini, commanding the 84a Sq., is again hocked in operations against Malta, that however in the meantime had seen his own squadrons change the Hurricanes with the more powerful Spitfires Mk V.
In barely twenty days Lucchini flown other 14 missions and above all added to his score two Spitfires and others two probably destroyed.
On May 22nd the whole 4° Stormo moved to Martuba in northern Africa where the offensive of Rommel against the English troops is became; the fights are soon harsh and Lucchini is almost daily engaged. On June 6th he shoot down a P-40 (an american production fighter in strength to some RAF Squadrons as N°112 and N°250) and damaged others four during an action of free hunting above Bir Hacheim; on June 11th he was awarded with the fifth silver medal for military merit.
On July 16th above the sky of El Alamein Lucchini, and 3 others pilots, shoot down a P-40 but also his plane was damaged and forced to land at Kotefia an airport used by the Germans; two days later he was again in action shooting down together with Serg. Buttazzi another enemy fighter.
On October 20th Lucchini destroyed another P-40 but in the afternoon, during a dogfight with Spitfires and P-40s he is forced to an emergency landing after a precise enemy burst took away a propeller blade of his plane. Four days later still a take off on alarm against a formation of 25 Mitchell bombers and 40 P-40 fighters; with two other pilots Lucchini shoot down a P-40, damaged two B-25s and one P-40, but he was also stricken and despite he had a bullet in an arm and another in a leg, he reached the base of El Daba where crash landed; later the day he come back to Fuka, where the unit was based, but he was immediately sent to Italy for a long convalescence. Lucchini ended his second African tour, where during five months he completed 94 war missions and gotten 10 individual victories.
1943 year saw the withdrawal of the Axis troops from their positions in Africa tightened by now by the vice of Montgomery's troops that went up from Libya and those Americans that advanced from west through Algeria.
The 4° Stormo returned in Italy by the beginning of January to be lined up in June in Sicily, that represented by now the first line of the front; the attacks to the island were more and more frequent in sight of the imminent Anglo-American landing.
Lucchini rejoined the unit in March of 1943, and by June 20th was appointed at the command of the 10° Gruppo partly equipped with the new Macchi C 205s.
On July 5th Lucchini after being taken off on alarm with six pilots, intercepted a large formation of USAAF B-17s at the height of 5000 meters, escorted by 50 Spitfires; after having shoot down a fighter, his victory number 26, he launched himself against the formation of B-17s; it is the first time he faced these powerful four-engines, everyone armed with 10 machine guns, all tightened one to the other close so much to represent a real wall of fire. Lucchini with his small C 202 and his only two 12,7 guns succeeded in damaging 3 bombers, then surely stricken he fell down crashing to dead near Catania.
As Group commander, Lucchini flown only 5 war missions; in his log book in date 5/7/1943 it is read, where the holder usually affixed his signature, a melancholic “not re-entered ”.
In February 1952 he was awarded with the highest italian honour the Medaglia d'oro al valor militare (M.O.V.M.)
Combat record of Capitano Franco Lucchini
According with official documents, Lucchini gained 5 individual victories during the Spanish Civil War, 21 individual and 52 shared victories during WW2. The latter figure however is very inflationated; it was common for the Regia Aeronautica credit shared claims every pilots involved in the action without any further details, even if some one didn't shoot a single bullet.
I quoted Lucchini's shared victories only when I can assume he surely shoot; all the other kills were in his log-book simple because he was in action.
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