Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Bomber Commander, Air War and SOE Strategist, Dambuster Planner [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 20 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Apr-2015
  • Kirjastus: Pen & Sword Aviation
  • ISBN-10: 1473827515
  • ISBN-13: 9781473827516
  • Formaat: Hardback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 20 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Apr-2015
  • Kirjastus: Pen & Sword Aviation
  • ISBN-10: 1473827515
  • ISBN-13: 9781473827516
John Collier's war began on day one, flying Hampdens in 83 Squadron with his friend Guy Gibson, in a hunt for the battleship Admiral Scheer. By the summer of 1940 he was bombing the Dortmund-Ems Canal at low-level, then Bordeaux and the Scharnhorst at Brest, which led to his DFC and Bar. Given command of 420 (RCAF) Squadron at 25, Collier was hand-picked to direct 97 Squadron, whose Lancasters made a spectacular debut with the 1942 Augsburg Raid. In Gibson's opinion "Joe" Collier's 97 was the best unit in Bomber Command. After 63 missions Collier was awarded the DSO and was selected to join the Directorate of Bomber Operations (B Ops 1) at the heart of the air war: co-ordinating with the USAAF, issuing directives to Bomber Command, and arguing for precision attacks on vital enemy industries and weaponry. In B Ops 1 John Collier was closely involved in planning the Dambuster Raid with Barnes Wallis, drafted the attack on Peenemunde's V-weapons research station, and managed to delay the "buzz-bomb" and rocket assault on London. As target selector for the specialist 617 Squadron, he and Leonard Cheshire VC made imaginative use of Wallis's Tallboy "earthquake bomb". 617 were also linked to Collier's role with SOE's "Blackmail Committee" that gave French industrialists a stark choice: sabotage your own plant or be bombed flat. By the time he moved to India in 1945 as Deputy Director of Combined Ops, John Collier had been involved in most of the major initiatives of the bomber war. His unpublished memoir of B Ops 1 and his logbooks and letters home give direct authority to this the first biography of this remarkable flyer, one of the most significant young RAF officers of the war.
Introduction vi
Acknowledgements ix
Official Recommendations x
Letter of Condolence to Mark Collier xii
Frontispiece: Squadron Leader John Collier DFC and Bar xi
On the London Underground, June 1944 xiii
Part I Airfields
1(82)
Chapter 1 Wings
3(12)
Chapter 2 Bombers: 83 Squadron at War
15(26)
Chapter 3 Bombers: 44 and 420 Squadrons
41(20)
Chapter 4 Bombers: 97 Squadron
61(22)
Part II War Room
83(130)
Chapter 5 B Ops 1
85(10)
Chapter 6 Round-the-Clock War
95(33)
Chapter 7 The Blackmail Committee
128(13)
Chapter 8 Specialist Squadrons
141(24)
Chapter 9 Buzz-bombs and Rockets
165(28)
Chapter 10 The Siegfried Dams
193(20)
Part III The Wider World
213(37)
Chapter 11 India and Japan
215(15)
Chapter 12 Flying Home
230(20)
Appendix: High-level Mining Technique 250(3)
Sources and Bibliography 253(2)
Index 255
Simon Gooch studied and worked as a graphic designer and illustrator until travel writing tempted him to stray. Many trips abroad followed, especially to Eastern Europe and the USSR. In recent years he has researched numerous family histories and privately published the definitive study of Holwood, William Pitt the Younger's country estate in Kent.