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The Territorial Air Force - The RAF's Voluntary Squadrons, 1926 1957 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R482
Discovery Miles 4 820
You Save: R94
(16%)
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The Territorial Air Force - The RAF's Voluntary Squadrons, 1926 1957 (Paperback)
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List price R576
Loot Price R482
Discovery Miles 4 820
You Save R94 (16%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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To date, little has been written about the Territorial Air Force as
a voluntary military organisation and no sustained analysis of its
recruitment and social composition undertaken. Made up of three
different parts, the Auxiliary Air Force, the Special Reserve and
the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, these three separate and
different groups have not featured significantly in existing
literature. Current historiography of the AAF and SR is dominated
by the experiences of Nos. 600 and 601 Squadrons, which were based
in London, and presents a popular image of a gentlemen's flying
club, whilst that of the RAFVR presents an image of a much more
egalitarian institution, intended to be a citizens' air force. This
book will present the history of the Territorial Air Force from its
creation in the early 1920s until 1957\. It will consider the ideas
behind the formation of two different types of reserve for the RAF
and it will examine the way in which men were recruited for the
three different groups. Woven throughout the text will be an
analysis of how the volunteers joined, and what kinds of men were
accepted into the organisations as both pilots and officers. It
will also analyse the influences class and social status had on
recruitment in the run up to the Second World War. It will explore
the key differences between the Auxiliary squadrons and the SR
squadrons, as well as the main reasons for the idea of merging the
SR squadrons into the AAF squadrons. It will briefly discuss the
newly formed University Air Squadrons which were set up to promote
air mindedness and to stimulate an interest and research on matters
aeronautical. Military voluntarism continued to play a key role in
the defence of twentieth-century Britain, but the underlying
tensions and weaknesses associated with a class-based voluntary
culture meant that the TAF had to change in response to new
pressures. Class ceased to be the key determining factor in the
recruitment of officers as the organisations faced new challenges.
Within both the AAF and the RAFVR the pre-war impression of a
gentlemen's flying club finally gave way to a more meritocratic
culture in the post-war world.
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