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Ralph K Hofer

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Nickname(s)
  
"The Kidd"

Battles and wars
  
Role
  
Pilot

Name
  
Ralph Hofer

Battles/wars
  

Ralph K. Hofer wwwamericanairmuseumcomsitesdefaultfilesstyl

Born
  
June 22, 1921(age 23), Salem, Missouri (
1921-06-22
)

Awards
  
Distinguished Flying Cross (United States) (7)

Service/branch
  

Nationality
  
American

Died
  
July 2, 1944 (aged 23) Mostar, Yugoslavia

Similar
  
John Trevor Godfrey, Bud Anderson, John B England

Buried
  
Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery

Allegiance
  
Canada, United States

Years of service
  
1941–1944

Rank
  
Lieutenant

Unit
  
4th Fighter Group

Lt. Ralph K Hofer (22 June 1921 – 2 July 1944) was an American fighter pilot with the United States Army Air Forces in World War II.

Contents

Ralph K. Hofer httpss3uswest2amazonawscomfindagravepr

With his long hair and football jersey, "Kid" Hofer stands out as one of the most memorable characters in the 8th Air Force. After serving in the RCAF, Hofer transferred to the 4th Fighter Group in September 1943 and promptly destroyed an Bf 109 on his first mission. Hofer was known for not maintaining radio discipline, incurred the wrath of group commander Col. Don Blakeslee on more than one occasion. One of his more memorable R/T quotes was "Gee ain't the Alps pretty?" Hofer was also one of the top strafers in the 8th AF with 14 confirmed enemy aircraft destroyed on the ground. He scored his first two victories in P-47s but is usually associated with P-51B 42-106924 QP—L, nicknamed Salem Representative.

Ralph K. Hofer ralph hofer Tumblr

Death

Ralph K. Hofer Ralph Kidd Hofer American Air Museum in Britain

On July 2, 1944 the 352nd and 325th fighter groups participated in a fighter sweep over Budapest, Hungary, flying from bases in Foggia, Italy. Over the Budapest area, they encountered a force of Bf 109s. In the tough battle that followed four P-51s were shot down. Of the four downed pilots, two were made prisoners of war, and two were killed. The last was Hofer. His body was found in the wreckage of P-51B, QP-X some 500 kilometers away at a Luftwaffe airfield in Mostar, Yugoslavia. Hofer is buried in a mass grave at Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri.

Decorations

Ralph K. Hofer 334 Fighter Squadron Mustang P51B 436746 QPX 1Lt Hofer Debden

Among Hofer's decorations are the Distinguished Flying Cross (United States) with six oak leaf clusters and 3 Air Medals.

References

Ralph K. Hofer Wikipedia