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History
of the Fiesler Storch
It
was the fall of 1943 and the Axis Nations faced
a serious problem. Benito Mussolini—deposed dictator
of Fascist Italy-- had been captured by the new
allied government forces. The former dictator was
held in a remote ski lodge built atop a 6,500-foot
mountain that could only be reached by a narrow
cable railway. The top of the mountain was strewn
with boulders and a battalion of the new government’s
troops guarded their former leader.
Hitler
had issued a personal command that Mussolini was
to be recaptured and it was up to SS officer Otto
Skorzeny to accomplish this task. After an airborne
assault, ninety paratroopers and twenty commandos
wrenched Mussolini from his captors. By now, the
nationalist Italian troops had been notified of
the attack and were swarming at the base of the
mountain –the planned landing zone for the Fieseler
FI-156 Storch sent to rescue the dictator. The only
option available to Walter Gerlach, pilot of the
Storch, was to land the plane on the rock-studded
mountaintop that only had a flat surface of only
250 feet in any direction. Gerlach landed successfully
in less than one hundred feet and then Mussolini
and Skorzeny were loaded in the aircraft. Grossly
overloaded, the Storch struggled to take off amongst
the boulders on the mountaintop—one of which smashed
its left main landing gear on the takeoff roll.
Once in the air, the Fi-156 and its notorious occupants
headed for German forces awaiting their arrival.
This
story is about just one of the many thousands of
missions that Fieseler Storches accomplished throughout
the deserts of North Africa, the battlefields of
Russia, and throughout the rest of Europe during
the Second World War.
First
designed in the mid-thirties from a trainer-touring
design known as the F5, the Storch was really intended
to be a civilian sport aircraft. However, it was
not long before Germany became embroiled in World
War Two, and almost all of the 2,900 Storchs built
were put into military service.
The
truly remarkable aspect of the Storch was its ability
to act as a short-take-off-and-landing aircraft
(STOL). The FI-156 is capable of taking off in less
than two hundred feet flying at 25 MPH and landing
within fifty feet of touchdown. Such performance
was made possible through the employment of large
slats that were fixed to the leading edge of the
wing and extending trailing edge flaps. The slats
covered fifty-five percent of the wing's leading
edge, while the flaps added nearly forty percent
to the total wing area.
In
service, the Storch was used in a wide variety of
roles – serving as a reconnaissance platform, a
liaison aircraft, for artillery spotting, and as
an air ambulance. German commanders such as Field
Marshals Erwin Rommel and Albert Kesselring used
the Storches constantly for their personal transports
during their campaigns. When the war was drawing
to an end, a FI-156 was the last aircraft to land
in Berlin as part of an attempt to evacuate Hitler—an
offer he refused. After the war, Storches saw military
service with the Spanish and Swedish Air Forces
until the late 1950’s while wartime Czechoslovakian
and French factories produced the aircraft for the
civilian market.
Today,
it is a rare event when a Storch takes to the sky
and it is estimated that less than a dozen war-production
aircraft still survive. Of these survivors, the
Collings Foundation is proud to fly its FI-156C
as an example of one of the most versatile and amazing
aircraft of all times.
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