Description

Book Synopsis
Often overshadowed by the fighters that either protected or threatened them, two-seater reconnaissance aircraft performed the oldest and most strategically vital aerial task of World War 1 - a task that required them to return with the intelligence they gathered at all costs. Bomber sorties were equally important and dangerous, and the very nature of both types of mission required going in harm's way. A remarkable number of British, French and German two-seater teams managed to attain or exceed the five victories needed to achieve the acedom popularly associated with their single-seat nemeses, and in this book, with rich illustrations and first-hand accounts of the veterans themselves, they receive their long-overdue recognition. Many high-scoring single-seat fighter aces also began their careers in two-seaters, particularly in the early stages of the conflict, and their exploits as either pilots or observers are detailed here too.

Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Not Exactly Helpless /Chapter 2: Britons in Harm’s Way /Chapter 3: French Aces – Fighting Their Way Home /Chapter 4: Germans Under Fire /Chapter 5: Austria-Hungary’s Old Reliables /Chapter 6: Aggressive Americans /Appendices -List of all two-seater aces -Plates commentary

Reconnaissance and Bomber Aces of World War 1

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    A Paperback by Jon Guttman, Harry Dempsey, Mark Postlethwaite

    1 in stock

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      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
      Publication Date:
      ISBN13: 9781782008019, 978-1782008019
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Often overshadowed by the fighters that either protected or threatened them, two-seater reconnaissance aircraft performed the oldest and most strategically vital aerial task of World War 1 - a task that required them to return with the intelligence they gathered at all costs. Bomber sorties were equally important and dangerous, and the very nature of both types of mission required going in harm's way. A remarkable number of British, French and German two-seater teams managed to attain or exceed the five victories needed to achieve the acedom popularly associated with their single-seat nemeses, and in this book, with rich illustrations and first-hand accounts of the veterans themselves, they receive their long-overdue recognition. Many high-scoring single-seat fighter aces also began their careers in two-seaters, particularly in the early stages of the conflict, and their exploits as either pilots or observers are detailed here too.

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1: Not Exactly Helpless /Chapter 2: Britons in Harm’s Way /Chapter 3: French Aces – Fighting Their Way Home /Chapter 4: Germans Under Fire /Chapter 5: Austria-Hungary’s Old Reliables /Chapter 6: Aggressive Americans /Appendices -List of all two-seater aces -Plates commentary

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