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Royal Observer Corps - The Eyes and Ears of the RAF in WWII (Paperback)
Loot Price: R398
Discovery Miles 3 980
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Royal Observer Corps - The Eyes and Ears of the RAF in WWII (Paperback)
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List price R478
Loot Price R398
Discovery Miles 3 980
You Save R80 (17%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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The key roles played by the Royal Observer Corps in the Second
World War have, all too often, been overshadowed by more glamourous
arms of the defence forces. The teams in the Sector Stations,
plotting the battles raging above, and the Spitfires and Hurricanes
swooping upon the formations of enemy fighters and bombers, present
easily-imagined and dramatic scenes. Yet between the radar
stations, detecting the German aircraft approaching over the
Channel, and the Sector Controls were the little sand-bagged posts
of the Observer Corps that provided over-land tracking of the enemy
formations. The Royal Observer Corps (the Royal' prefix being
approved in 1941) proved a vital link in the communication chain in
the defence of the UK, particularly in the Battle of Britain, as it
provided the only means of tracking enemy aircraft once they had
crossed the coastline. The highly-skilled Observers were also able
to identify and count the enemy aircraft, turning blips on a screen
into actual types and numbers of German machines. Even after the
threat from the Luftwaffe receded after the Battle of Britain and
the Blitz, the ROC again came to the fore when the V1s opened a new
reign of terror in 1944. Because these small, fast weapons were so
hard to detect the RAF's fighter controllers moved into the ROC's
operations rooms so that they could respond to the V-1 threat more
rapidly. In this official history of the ROC written shortly after
the war, the corps' operations throughout the conflict are set out
in great detail. This includes a section on the last flight of
Rudolf Hess, as well as one detailing the work of those who were
selected for employment as Seaborne Observers on ships during the
D-Day landings, where their specialist identification skills were
used to prevent the all-too prevalent instances of friendly fire'.
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