Books > History > World history > From 1900 > Second World War
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British Motor Gun Boat 1939-45 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R336
Discovery Miles 3 360
You Save: R53
(14%)
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British Motor Gun Boat 1939-45 (Paperback)
Series: New Vanguard
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Was R389
Loot Price R336
Discovery Miles 3 360
You Save R53 (14%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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During World War II, few groups within the Royal Navy fought a
harder, more intense war than the men of Coastal Forces. Their job
was to operate the Motor Torpedo Boats (MTBs), Motor Launches (MLs)
and Motor Gun Boats (MGBs) that protected coastal convoys, attacked
enemy ones, and performed a myriad of duties, which include the
dropping of agents and commandos on a hostile shore, raids on enemy
ports, and near-suicidal attacks on larger enemy warships. While
the MTBs were the "bombers," delivering their payload of high
explosive torpedoes, the crew of the MGBs used their machine guns
and small-calibre guns to sink, burn or destroy their enemy
counterparts. For that reason they saw their frail, sleek craft as
the "Spitfire of the Seas."
Motor Gun Boats were similar to Motor Torpedo Boats, only their
decks were crammed with as many guns as they could carry - and to
man these weapons, they required a larger crew. During the early
years of the war, they were used to counter the threat posed by
German E-Boats in the English Channel, but by 1941 they were in use
offensively, conducting sweeps along the enemy coast in search of
prey. By 1942 British MGBs were seen in the Mediterranean,
interdicting Axis supply routes to North Africa, and later
supporting the Allied invasion forces as they landed in Sicily,
Italy and the South of France.
The majority of these small wooden craft were built in Britain by
the British Power Boat Company or Fairmile Marine. They came in a
variety of shapes and sizes, but in late 1942 the Fairmile "D" MGB
made its appearance - a boat which would come to dominate coastal
operations during the last years of the war. Known as "Dog Boats"
by their crew, they were fast, powerful and versatile. By the end
of the war, over 200 of these small boats had been built and they
represented the pinnacle of wartime British motor boat design.
This New Vanguard title tells the story of these fragile but deadly
little warships.
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