gillnumil ®   19-Oct-2021 17:08

Royal Air Force: Coastal Command


Year: 2013
Language: english
Author: John Campbell
Publisher: Mereo
ISBN: 978-1-909544-73-4
Format: PDF
Quality: eBook
Pages count: 740
Description: Royal Air Force Coastal Command was the organisation charged with keeping the sea lanes clear around the coasts of Britain for the best part of half a century, from immediately after the First World War until the 1960s. In the decades after the Second World War, John Campbell served as a Coastal Command navigator and crew captain on Shackleton aircraft in the Maritime Patrol role. Having studied in great detail the history and development of Coastal Command, he has researched and written this lively and thorough account of its activities throughout its years of operation.
Additional info: A short history of the maritime air force which protected the United Kingdom's shipping during WW I and WW II.

Contents

Screenshots

Royal Air force Coastal Command_ A short history of the maritime air force which protected the United Kingdom's shipping during WW I and WW II.pdf

Download [5 KB]

Thank U
Reply
refresh list

Similar releases

British Guided Missile Destroyers: County-class, Type 82, Type 42 and Type 45 - Edward Hampshire…
British Lend-Lease Warships 1940–45: The Royal Navy's American-built destroyers and frigates -…
Empire Cruise: The Special Service Squadron, 1923-24 - Daniel Knowles [2024, EPUB]
Pirates and Privateers - Tom Bowling [2008, PDF]
Modern Royal Navy Warships - Paul Beaver [1987, PDF]
USS America in Detail and Scale, CVA-66/CV-66 - Bert Kinzey [1989, PDF]
Anchor of Resolve, a History of US Naval Forces Central Command Fifth Fleet - Robert J. Schneller…
The Struggle for Law in the Oceans: How an Isolationist Narrative Betrays America - John Norton…
Captain Cook, Explorer Navigator Hero - Alistair MacLean [2020, EPUB]
The Fleet Air Arm - The Cinderella Airforce with the RAF as the Ugly Sisters - Abnett K. [2024,…
LOAD MORE
  • Reply

The time now is: Today 00:46

All times are GMT + 3 Hours