Eagle Biography
Georgii Timofeevich Beregovoi
Georgii Timofeevich Beregovoi credits his proven success as a combat pilot, test pilot,
and pilot-cosmonaut to flying skill and good luck! The youngest of three brothers,
Beregovoi was born in 1921 and lived in Enakievo, Ukraine. He grew up at a time when
Soviet aviators were making spectacular flights, even blazing air routes over the North
Pole. Like other boys, Beregovoi became a skilled aircraft model builder and also thrilled
at the exploits of Soviet combat pilots.
In 1937, he joined an aero club and in 1938,
soloed in a Polikarpov biplane. Later that year Beregovoi entered a military flying school
at Voroshilovgrad and flew a variety of aircraft. Leaving school within 1 week of the
German attack on the USSR, he joined a combat unit equipped with a Yakovlev bomber and
trained as his squadron retreated. In late 1941, the squadron was withdrawn and sent to
retrain on a new aircraft, the Ilyushin Shturmovik ground attack bomber. He returned to
combat in the spring of 1942. On his sixth combat flight in the Shturmovik , the aircraft
was hit by flak; he coolly guided the bomber to a landing on Red Army held territory. His
squadron excelled in attacks on German rail transport and specialized in "locomotive
busting." During the Battle of Kursk in August 1943, his aircraft was hit again; when fire
began to burn his gunner's clothing, Beregovoi and the gunner jumped at less than l000
feet.
He was hit again in March 1943, and once more, just made it to friendly territory.
On 26 October 1944, after 108 combat sorties, Beregovoi received his nation's highest
award for valor, the Gold Star and title, "Hero of the Soviet Union." He ended the war as
a squadron commander with 185 combat sorties and had risen from sergeant to captain. When
the unit returned to the USSR, he became "navigator" of a Bell P-63 King Cobra
fighter unit. He later requested assignment to test pilot school, was accepted, and
graduated in 1948. For the next 16 years, he tested fighters including more than 60 types
developed by nearly all the Soviet design bureaus. Beregovoi rose to Colonel, became
Deputy Chief of the Test Department, and was named "Honored Test Pilot of the USSR."
In
1962, after sitting in the Vostok spaceship, he successfully requested assignment
to the Center for Cosmonaut Preparation. After the death of Vladimir Komarov in Soyuz
1, Beregovoi was selected to test Soyuz 3. He rocketed into space on 26 October 1968;
four days later he returned to Earth. He was named "Pilot-Cosmonaut of the USSR" and
received his second Gold Star as a "Hero of the Soviet Union." In 1972, as a Major
General, he became Director of the Center of Cosmonaut Preparation.
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In December 1940, the Soviets produced the first production Ilyushin 2.
This armored, single-seat Shturmovik would be modified to a two-seat
configuration in the heat of battle. As the Soviets moved their factories east
beyond the Volga, production of the Ilyusha climbed from a few
hundred in 1941, to several thousand in 1942, to more than 11,000 in 1943. The
crews (pilot and rear gunner) pressed home their attacks through lethal walls
of flak and swarms of Messerschmitt Me 109s and Focke Wulf FW 190s. In 1943,
when the Il-2M3, fitted with a more powerful engine and heavier armor, began
to operate in regimental and even divisional strength, the Luftwaffe no longer
had enough fighters to counter them!
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