Halifax Squadrons of World War 2
By (Author) Jon Lake
Illustrated by Chris Davey
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
15th July 1999
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
Second World War
Modern warfare
Aircraft and aviation
Air forces and warfare
Weapons and equipment
War and defence operations
Military uniforms / insignia
940.544941
Paperback
116
Width 184mm, Height 248mm, Spine 7mm
430g
The second of Britain's four-engined bombers to enter frontline service, Handley Page's Halifax has forever lived in the shadow of Avro's superb Lancaster. However, it was a Halifax which became the first RAF 'heavy' to drop bombs on Germany when No 35 Sqn raided Hamburg on the night of 12/13 March 1941. Between 1941-45, the Halifax completed some 75,532 sorties with Bomber Command alone [compared with the Lancaster's 156,000], not to mention its sterling work as both a glider tug and paratroop carrier with the Airborne Forces, maritime patrol mount with Coastal Command and covert intruder with the SOE.
Jon Lakes most recent work for Osprey was the well-received Combat Aircraft volume on the Blenheim. Jon Lake is one of Britains leading journalists and historians, and secretary of the Freelance Aviation Journalists Association. An airbrush artist with years of experience, Chris has become Osprey's principal illustrator of RAF aircraft, having produced the profiles for over a dozen books since 1994. His most recent work includeds Aces 27 and 30, and Combat AIrcraft 14 and 19. He is particularly adept at 'big' aircraft like the Halifax and Sunderland.