From the author of A Separate Little War, a detailed history of the
British World War II aircraft and their brave crew. In 1940, the
defense of Great Britain rested with a handful of volunteer aircrew,
Churchill’s “few.” Overshadowed in later folklore by the more
famous Spitfire and Hurricane pilots, there were other pilots,
observers and air gunners—just as courageous—flying the Bristol
Blenheim MKIV-F. The future of the country and arguably that of the
free world depended also on their skill, morale, and sacrifice.
Remarkably little has been chronicled of these men and their
aircraft—the “Trade Protection” squadrons formed by Hugh
Dowding—allotted to 11 Group in October, 1939. The aircraft’s
range and endurance made it suitable for defense of coastal shipping
against attack on the southern and eastern shores of Britain, and for
operations further afield. Indeed, during bitter fighting casualties
among Numbers 235, 236, 248, and 254 Squadron Blenheims were high on
operations over Norway, Holland, France, Dunkirk, and then the Battle
of Britain where the Blenheims were completely outclassed by
Messerschmitt 109 and 110 fighters, and fell easy victims, scythed
from the sky. But the record of the aircraft and their crew was an
immensely proud one. Drawing on contemporary diaries, periodicals,
letters, logbooks, memoirs, and interviews with survivors, lauded
historian Andy Bird reassesses the vital role they played and
repositions it in history. In doing so, he justifiably embraces the
heroes we have left behind.
Les mer
Blenheims in Action from the Phoney War through the Battle of Britain
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781909808980
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter