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Airlines at War - British Civil Aviation 1939 - 1944 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R498
Discovery Miles 4 980
You Save: R110
(18%)
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Airlines at War - British Civil Aviation 1939 - 1944 (Hardcover)
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List price R608
Loot Price R498
Discovery Miles 4 980
You Save R110 (18%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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The brave efforts of the pilots and crew of the RAF during the
Second World War are well-known but there was another body of
aviators that played a significant role in the conflict the men and
women of the civilian airlines. The British Overseas Airways
Corporation (BOAC) was formed shortly after the outbreak of war in
November 1939 by the amalgamation of Imperial Airways and British
Airways. During the war BOAC operated as directed by the Secretary
of State for Air, initially as the transport service for the RAF
and with no requirement to act commercially. The inaugural BOAC had
eighty-two aircraft, a large proportion of which were seaplanes and
flying boats. With 54,000 miles of air routes over many parts of
the world, ranging from the Arctic to South Africa, from the
Atlantic coast of America to the eastern coast of India, the
aircraft of the BOAC kept wartime Britain connected with its
colonies and the free world, often under enemy fire. Over these
routes, carrying mail, cargo and personnel, the men and machines of
BOAC flew in the region of 19,000,000 miles a year. There can
rarely have been a moment, throughout the war, when aircraft of the
British merchant air service were not flying somewhere along the
routes, despite losses from enemy action. This book explores much
of their war history between 1939 and 1944 (the year that marked
the 25th anniversary of British commercial aviation), something of
their lives and their achievements in linking up the battlefronts
at times cut off from any direct land or sea contacts with the Home
Front and in transporting supplies through the new, dangerous and
often uncharted regions of the air. With the Speedbird symbol or
the Union Flag emblazoned on its aircraft the BOAC really did fly
the flag for Britain throughout the wartime world.
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