by Guy Robbins (Author)
The beginnings of the aircraft carrier were difficult. Guy Robbins' detailed history tells of the early days in World War One, when seaplanes had to be lowered from the ship to take off from the sea, and whinched aboard again on their return. These impracticalities led eventually to aircraft that could take off and land from a long, flat deck. The author examines Royal Navy, American, and Japanese progress in career development and strategy through the interwar years, showing how naval powers gradually shifted their thinking to favour the carrier. Together with sharply reported accounts of wartime engagements, both successes and failures, this book offers a valuable new account of the most significant weapons platform to have emerged in the mid-20th century.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Edition: 1st ed
Publisher: Cassell
Published: 13 Sep 2001
ISBN 10: 0304353086
ISBN 13: 9780304353088
Book Overview: The first operational history to range from experimental designs to the through deck carrier. Fully international in scope. Every important deployment noted. Superb range of photographs including design and weaponry detail Certain to attract general defence, naval and aviation historians/students.