One of the most significant warship designers of the twentieth
century, Sir Stanley Goodall rose through the ranks of the Royal Corps
of Naval Constructors to become its head in 1936. The Corps was
responsible for every aspect of the design and construction of British
warships, and its head, the Director of Naval Construction, was the
principal technical advisor to the Board of Admiralty. Although
Goodall was succeeded in this post in January 1944, he remained the
Assistant Controller Warship Production until October 1945 so was
probably the single most influential figure in British naval technical
matters during the war years. His private diary was never intended for
publication – indeed it seems to have been a vehicle for venting
some of his professional frustrations – so his opinions are candid
and unrestrained. His criticisms of many in the Admiralty and the
shipyards are enlightening, and taken as a whole the diary provides
new and unique insights into a wartime construction program that built
nearly a thousand major warships and a myriad of landing craft and
coastal forces. Dr Ian Buxton, a well-known authority on British
shipbuilding, has edited the entries covering Goodall’s war years,
identifying the various personalities and ships referred to (sometimes
cryptically), while setting out the context in a number of
introductory essays. As an insider’s view of a complex process, this
book offers every warship enthusiast much new material and a novel
perspective on an apparently familiar subject.
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Sir Stanley Goodall
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781399082716
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter