Yakov Vernikov

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Nativename
Яков Ильич Верников
Born31 October 1920
Died30 September 1993 (aged 72)
Allegiance Soviet Union
Yakov Vernikov
Native name
Яков Ильич Верников
Born31 October 1920
Died30 September 1993 (aged 72)
Allegiance Soviet Union
Branch Soviet Air Force
RankGeneral-major of Aviation
Battles / warsWorld War II
AwardsHero of the Soviet Union

Yakov Ilyich Vernikov (Russian: Яков Ильич Верников; 31 October 1920 30 September 1993) was a Soviet flying ace during the Second World War who went on to become a major-general of aviation and test pilot, working for the Gromov Flight Research Institute as well as the Ilyushin Design Bureau. During his career he mastered piloting an estimated 140 aircraft and glider types.

Vernikov was born on 31 October 1920 to a working-class Jewish family in Spas-Demensk,[1] although he and his family moved to the city of Smolensk shortly thereafter in 1921. In addition to completing ten grades of school he attended the city aeroclub, which he graduated from training in 1938 and subsequently became a flight instructor there for a short while before entering the Red Army in October. In May 1940 he graduated from the Odessa Military Aviation School of Pilots, after which he was assigned to a unit in the Belorussian Military District.[2]

World War II

From the beginning of the German invasion of the Soviet Union, Vernikov engaged in combat against the ensuing onslaught as part of the 124th Fighter Aviation Regiment, but soon transferred to the 234th Fighter Aviation Regiment; there he gained his first aerial victory after shooting down an He 111 over Kursk, and eventually rose to the position of squadron commander. From 1942 to 1943 he accumulated the majority of his shootdowns, piloting either a LaGG-33 or Yak-7 at the time. In April 1944 he transferred to the 147th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment and was appointed navigator, and later that year he was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union for his aerial victories; earlier that year in July he gained his last aerial victory when he shot down a Ju 88 in the vicinity of Opochka. Before the end of the war he was promoted to assistant commander of the air rifle service. Throughout the war he flew 424 sorties, engaged in 68 aerial battles, and gained an estimated 13 to 16 solo plus one shared aerial victories.[3][4]

Postwar

Awards

References

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