East Anglia Books

600545 - THE AVIATION HISTORIAN - Issue 45 - SNOW PATROL - An American in the RAF

Published Quarterly by The Aviation Historian

Taken from the Aviation Historian website:-

This year marks the 80th anniversary of the Battle of the Bismarck Sea, a brief but important air operation against Japanese shipping that has historically received comparatively little coverage, but which was vital in turning the tide of the war in the Pacific. In March 1943 Japan’s vital supply base at Rabaul on New Britain was neutralised by an outstanding combination of Allied airpower, American and Australian aerial forces demonstrating imagination and determination to thwart Japan’s movement of troops and materiel to New Guinea by sea. The Battle was not without controversy, the uncompromising brutality of "total war" rising to the surface on both sides – an aspect Australian historian Jarryd Cripps does not shy away from in the opening feature in this issue.

Continuing the international co-operation theme, Guy Ellis takes a look at the air operations undertaken by the Commonwealth Monitoring Force during the ceasefire and elections that saw the end of Rhodesia’s Bush War and the establishment of the new Republic of Zimbabwe in 1980, in which the British Army's helicopters played a major role.

The British Army also takes centre stage in Professor Keith Hayward's examination of Operation Convertible, a series of trials in the 1990s exploring the idea of using airships as surveillance platforms in the troubled areas of Northern Ireland. The economics were sound and the hardware was up to the job (despite offering a sizeable target for the paramilitaries), but – happily – a political solution was found instead, obviating the need for a low-speed hover-capable platform.

Meanwhile the advantages – and challenges – of standing still while airborne ("an unnatural act") became very clear to USAF pilot Col John W. Zink when he changed his day-job from flying high and fast in the mighty F-4 Phantom to operating from a hole in the woods in the much smaller Harrier GR.3 during his officer exchange posting to the RAF's No 1 (F) Sqn. His first-hand recollections form TAH45's cover story.

British military aviation of an earlier age owed much to the Vickers Mk I 0.303in machine-gun, which equipped the RAF's fighters from the First World War through to the beginning of the Second. In our series on significant UK aerial weapons, technical illustrator Ian Bott and armaments historian Mark Russell turn their attention to the details and development of this ubiquitous firearm.

Elsewhere in the current issue, we explore the curious apparent suicide in 1930 of a German widow who fell from an airborne Dornier airliner; an unbuilt design by the Cunliffe-Owen company for a multi-engined transatlantic airliner; a series of mid-1950s North American advanced military jet interceptor projects; flying the Gulfstream I turboprop; a plan for the Argentinian Navy to buy Supermarine Seafires from Britain; and dive-bombing exercises in the Hawker Sea Hawk.

All this – and much more – awaits you in Issue 45 of The Aviation Historian.

 Recent Issues:-

 

  • Issue 44: Rise & Fall: The Political Death of the TSR.2
    Issue 43: Small Is Beautiful: Teddy Petter and the Light Fighter Concept
  • Issue 42: Firestreak! The UK's First Frontline Air-to-Air Missile
  • Issue 41: Storm Front - The Typhoon & The RP-3 Rocket
  • Issue 40: Rio or Bust! Crossing The South Atlantic, 1922
  • Issue 39: The New Frontier - Comet: Too Important to Fail?
  • Issue 38: The Lion of Africa - Ethiopian Airlines - The Jet Age
  • Issue 37: Magnetic South - Sweden's Caribbean Connection
  • Issue 36: Read All About It!  Switzerland's "Hunter 80" Programme
  • Issue 35: Clippers of the Clouds - Pan Am's "Rogue" Atlantic Constellations
  • Issue 34: On A Wing And A Prayer - The 1971 Rolls-Royce Bankruptcy
  • Issue 33: A Very British Tale - 75 Years On - The Brabazon Committee

Issues 28 to 32 currently on special offer at £9.50 each.

Format Softback
Pages 130
Publication Date Not kept in stock but can obtain these issues
Pictures

profusely illustrated throughout in colour and b/w

Width (mm)

170

Height (mm) 245
Dust Jacket No
ISBN -
Price

£13.50 each

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