- Home >
- Postwar British Military Aircraft: A Colour Photographic Record from 1945-1970
In the two decades that followed World War 2, British designed and constructed military aircraft were still at the forefront of aviation technology. Today there is huge interest in this postwar, Cold War era, when Britain still had a strong military aviation industry which produced aircraft not only for the RAF and Royal Navy but for air forces around the world.
Tony Buttler has been collecting rare color photographs of these aircraft over many years and this book will provide a complete photographic survey of all the manufacturers and the major aircraft in a variety of markings as well as many rare types and prototypes that flew.
The photographs date from the late 1940s through to the 1960s, many of them taken at the airshows of the period, but also include air-to-air photographs. Aircraft shown include piston and jet, fighters and bombers, and range from the Mosquito, Lincoln, Spitfire, York and Beaufighter in the late 1940s or early 1950s to the Tempest, Fury, Shackleton, Hunter, Javelin, Sea Vixen, Swift, Hornet, Vulcan, Victor, Valiant, Vampire, Sunderland, Firebrand, Warwick, Saunders Roe flying boat, Firefly, the Black Arrows and so on. The book has an introductory text for each manufacturer, alongside documents giving official color descriptions of the aircraft. It includes a variety of previously unpublished color photographs with detailed captions, making this a work of reference, which will be of great interest to aviation enthusiasts and historians.
Pages: 128
Size: 8.75 X 11 (inches)
Format: Hardback
Illustrations: color photos
Publisher: Crecy Publishing
ISBN: 9781857803297
Product Code: MC329
Tony Buttler
Tony Buttler was born in 1956 and joined High Duty Alloys in Redditch in 1974 as a metallurgist. For nearly 20 years he was closely involved in the testing of aluminium and titanium airframe and engine components for many of the world's most important aircraft and it was during this period that his great interest in military aircraft grew from a hobby into a passion, particularly in regard to their design and development since the mid-1930s.
In 1994 he earned a Masters Degree in Archives and Library Studies at Loughborough University, and since 1995 has worked as a freelance aviation historian. Author of 23 books he has also written numerous titles in the Warpaint series of modelling books and a large number of articles for most of the popular historical aviation magazines. He also regularly presents lectures to the Royal Aeronautical Society and other historical aviation groups.