Richard Rohmer (1924, Hamilton, Ontario), signed up in 1942 with the RCAF at the age of 18 and, in June 1944, flew a P51 Mustang Mk1 from RCAF No.430 Squadron over Normandy, France.
At 5:05 p.m. on July 17, 1944, while leading a section of four Mustangs on a low level reconnaissance, Rohmer spotted a 'huge' German staff-car with 'Brass' (High rank German officers).
"one in the right front seat, reading a map, and three in the back'. They knew i wouldn't attack so they kept going. "At that time, i didn't know it was Erwin Rommel but I could see it was Brass".
Field Marshal Erwin Rommel (Commander of German Defenses along Normandy), was located south east of Caen heading for Paris. Rommel was returning from visiting the headquarters of the I SS Panzer Corps.
Rohmer was not allowed to attack 'targets of opportunity' and called "Group Control Center" to report his sighting. Two Spitfires were sent in. A Spitfire piloted by either Charley Fox of 412 Squadron RCAF, Jacques Remlinger of No. 602 Squadron RAF, or Johannes Jacobus le Roux of No. 602 Squadron RAF strafed the staff car near Sainte-Foy-de-Montgommery.
The driver sped up and attempted to get off the main roadway, but a 20 mm round shattered his left arm, causing the vehicle to veer off of the road and crash into trees.
Rommel smashed with his head against the windscreen post and was thrown from the car, suffering severe injuries to the left side of his face from glass shards and three fractures to his skull. He was brought to a Luftwaffe hospital with major head injuries (assumed to be almost certainly fatal). (To this day it is not clear who of these pilots did actually hit the staff car)
Rommel eventually survived the attack but the incident forced him essentially out of the war and is considered by many as a turning point for the allies in Europe.
Rohmer later took part in the liberation of, Belgium and Holland. He returned to Canada after the war and studied law while still in the RCAF. He attained the rank of Major General after his retirement, as Chief of Reserves of the Canadian Armed Forces.
Rohmer currently lives in Collingwood, Ontario where he still flies and writes and has become one of Canada's most decorated citizens in history.