An illustrated study of the British Army's Anti-Aircraft (AA)
Command's performance against the Luftwaffe during the Battle of
Britain and the Blitz. When the Battle of Britain commenced in July
1940, the Luftwaffe committed more than 1,200 medium bombers, 300 Ju
87 Stukas and 760 Bf 109 and Bf 110 fighters to the campaign. The
response from British AA Command mustered 359 4.5in. guns, 666 3.7in.
guns and 226 3in. guns, as well as 3,538 light and medium AA guns to
tackle low-level Luftwaffe raiders, but was under-gunned and
overstretched, struggling to provide sufficient weapons for every key
site. Nevertheless, AA gunners shot down some 300 German aircraft by
the end of the Battle of Britain on 31 October 1940, upping this count
to 578 before the Blitz finished on 11 May 1941, and leading an
estimated 48 per cent of Luftwaffe bombers to turn back because of
heavy AA fire. In this action-packed study, World War 2 aviation
expert Donald Nijboer examines the capabilities of both sides, and
explores how British AA Command not only shot down so many enemy
aircraft, but also forced them to fly higher, broke up their
formations and decreased their accuracy. Tactical diagrams, maps,
archival photographs and newly commissioned artwork provide additional
insight and detail, helping to bring the bitter struggle over the
skies of southern England to life.
Les mer
Britain 1940–41
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472865786
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter