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History of No.6 Squadron: Royal Naval Air Service in World War I (Hardcover, illustrated edition)
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History of No.6 Squadron: Royal Naval Air Service in World War I (Hardcover, illustrated edition)
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Despite No.6 Squadron RNAS being the first British fighter squadron
to deploy a production twin gun scout on the Western Front (beating
the Royal Flying Corp's elite 56 Squadron by a couple of weeks) and
the first squadron to take the notoriously unreliable Siddeley Puma
powered D.H.9 into battle, almost nothing has been published about
the activities of this important Royal Naval Air Service squadron.
The lack of published information can perhaps be explained by the
fact that a large block of the squadron's daily reports are
inexplicably missing from their box in Britain's National Archives.
After much effort and time, Mike Westrop discovered the missing
documents in a Royal Flying Corps War Diary. This pilots' log
books, and many previously unpublished photographs has enabled the
author to produce the first in-depth look at the activities and
accomplishments of this forgotten squadron. The Royal Naval Air
Service had a reputation for fielding the most colorful Allied
machines in France and Belgium, and the reputation was upheld by
the Nieuport scouts of No.6 Squadron. A collection of superb new
colour profiles from Mark Miller depicts the squadron's Nieuport
17Bis scouts to perfection.
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