What  a life story!  Please see comments at the end.
 

 
RIP -  Eric Melrose Brown
 

 

 

 
A  pilot, Eric Brown, was born in Scotland and his life story sounds like a 
 series of action novels. 
 

 
He  took his first flight, sitting on his former Royal Navy pilot father’s  
knee, when he was around 8 years old. 
 

 
In  1936, his father took him to the Berlin Olympics, where Brown met and  
befriended Ernst Udet, a German World War I fighter ace.  Udet took  Brown 
flying, said he had aptitude as a fighter pilot, and urged him to  take 
lessons. 
 

 
He  did, and in 1939 he returned to Germany at Udet’s invitation; by then,  
Udet was a Luftwaffe Major General, and Brown saw many of Germany’s  
aircraft - before being arrested by the SS because during the trip,  Germany 
and 
the U.K. had gone to war. 
 

 
Amazingly,  Brown was escorted to the Swiss border and allowed to leave.  
He  became a pilot with the Royal Navy with the 802 Squadron.  His escort  
carrier, HMS Audacity, was sunk by a torpedo and Brown was one of only two  
pilots in his squadron to survive. 
 

 
He had  shown great aptitude for carrier deck landings and was tapped to 
train  other pilots.  Brown still holds the world record for the most  carrier 
landings with 2,407. 
 

 
He was  the first pilot ever to land a twin-engine aircraft on a carrier, 
the  first to land a plane with a tricycle landing gear on a carrier, and the 
 first to land a jet on a carrier.  Brown still holds the world record  for 
the most distinct types of aircraft flown by a single pilot at 487 —  
though the number is actually significantly higher: the Spitfire and  Seafire, 
for instance, only counts as one, even though he flew 14  different variations 
of that aircraft. 
 

 
He  advised United States Army Air Forces General Jimmy Doolittle to adopt 
the  P-51 Mustang as the country’s fighter escort because he knew that was 
the  only American plane that could outrun German planes. 
 

 
Brown  preferred not to bail out of troubled aircraft and survived 11 
crashes,  mostly hard landings on carrier decks, as well as ditching aircraft 
at 
sea  — once while British Prime Minister Winston Churchill watched.  
 

 
Brown  was decorated so often that King George VI once said, “Not you  
again!”  It was Brown’s fourth royal honor and at that point he was  only 28 
years old.  
 

 
In  1970, Brown was designated as a Commander of the British Empire by 
Queen  Elizabeth II.  He was the most decorated pilot in the history of  
Britain’
s naval aviation service, the Fleet Air Arm.  Toward the end  of the war, 
Brown flew to a Nazi base in Denmark to inspect and fly a  German jet bomber. 
 He had been told the Luftwaffe had fled the base,  but when he landed he 
discovered it was still operational.   
 

 
Capt.  Brown, alone and armed with only a pistol, accepted the surrender of 
the  base’s commander — and 2,000 German soldiers, holding them for Allied 
 forces who arrived the next day. 
 

 
Brown  later was sent to the newly liberated Bergen-Belsen concentration 
camp  and, because he spoke fluent German, was tapped to interrogate the camp’
s  commandant, Josef Kramer, and his assistant, Irma Grese.  “Two more  
loathsome creatures it is hard to imagine,” Brown said later; they were  later 
tried and hanged for war crimes.  He was also tapped to  interrogate German 
rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, Luftwaffe commander  Hermann Göring, and 
German aircraft designers Willy Messerschmitt and  Ernst Heinkel.
 

 
After  the war, Brown went on to become the Royal Navy’s chief test pilot, 
flying  captured Italian, Japanese, and German planes to learn about their  
innovations.  
 

 
He  also did an exchange stint at the United States Naval Test Pilot School 
in  Maryland, where he not only flew dozens of American aircraft, but  
introduced the U.S. Navy to a British innovation: the steam aircraft  carrier 
catapult, which worked so well that he did it while the carrier  was still 
docked. 
 

 
After  31 years of service, Brown retired in 1970.  His last flight as 
pilot  was in 1994, but he continued to lecture on aeronautics into 2015. He 
died  February 21, at 97.
 

 

 
Addendum  
 

 

 

 
This  man has had more amazing experiences – and accomplishments – than  
any 20 men should have!  
 

 
As I  read this account, I got to thinking that this story almost had to be 
mere  “creative writing”, but NO!!!  It all checks out!  Mr. Brown was  
the Real Deal!  Chuck Yeager, Buz Aldrin, and the famous Vietnam War  F-4 
Squadron Commander and fighter pilot (whose name, unfortunately,  escapes me at 
the moment) with many “kills” in aerial combat ALL should  genuflect to 
this man.
 

 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Brown_(pilot)
 

 
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-sussex-35626854
 












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