In this comprehensive pictorial record of the Do 17, the bomber’s
role throughout the period of the Battle of Britain is displayed in
the author’s unique collection of British and German photographs.
During Britain’s desperate struggle for survival that in the summer
of 1940, the Dornier Do 17 played a prominent part in raids designed
at neutralizing the RAF’s ability to resist and the British
people’s will to fight back. Having been built to outrun
contemporary fighters when introduced into the Luftwaffe in 1937, it
had become the Luftwaffe’s main light bomber, and for the attack
against Britain, three bomber wings, KG 2, KG3 and KG77, were equipped
with the Do 17. But by 1940, the Do 17 was nearing obsolescence and,
with its weak defensive armament, it fell prey to Fighter Command’s
Hurricanes and Spitfires. Its vulnerability was starkly revealed on 18
August 1940, when eight Dorniers were shot down and nine damaged in
attacks on RAF Kenley, and on 15 September – Battle of Britain Day
– when twenty were shot down and a further thirteen damaged. On that
day, Sergeant Ray Holmes rammed his Hurricane into a Do 17 that was
reportedly aiming for Buckingham Palace. Part of the bomber’s
wreckage fell to earth near Victoria Station. In this comprehensive
pictorial record of the Do 17, the bomber’s role throughout the
period of the Battle of Britain is displayed in the author’s unique
collection of British and German photographs. These photographs,
coupled with first-hand stories from those who flew and those who
fought against the Do 17, bring those desperate days and dark nights
back to life in the manner which only contemporary images and accounts
can achieve.
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The 'Flying Pencil' in the Spitfire Summer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781526781215
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter