Winton, John. Hurrah for the Life of a Sailor. Life on the lower-deck of the Victorian Navy. London, Michael Joseph, 1977. 24 cm x 16 cm. 320 pages. With many black-and-white illustrations throughout the book. Original Hardcover with original dustjacket in protective collector's mylar. Very good condition with only minor signs of external wear. Includes for example the following The British Tar - the early nineteenth-century Navy / From Burma to Navarino - the Navy of the 1820s / From Acre to Borneo - the Navy of the 1840s / Captain and Eurydice - two mid-Victorian naval tragedies etc etc.
John Winton Boeken






The Forgotten Fleet: The Story of the British Pacific Fleet, 1944-45
- 544bladzijden
- 20 uur lezen
The Submariners: Life in British Submarines, 1901-1999
- 312bladzijden
- 11 uur lezen
Air Power at Sea, 1939-45
- 152bladzijden
- 6 uur lezen
An authoritative examination of the role of the aircraft at sea during World War II. Perfect for fans of Max Hastings, Craig L. Symonds, Richard Freeman and Peter Gretton. Aircraft played a vital part in the war at sea during the Second World War. From the first tentative manoeuvrings of the British Home Fleet carriers in 1939 to the final triumphant strikes of the U.S. Fast Carrier Task Force against mainland Japan in 1945, the aircraft proved itself the most powerful, most flexible, longest-ranging weapon ever used at sea. John Winton examines in powerful detail the influence of the aircraft, its successes and its failures, over the whole span of the Second World War at sea, from the struggle against the U-boats during the Battle of the Atlantic and the pursuit and destruction of the Bismarck, to the defence of Malta and the great Allied advance across the remote islands of the Pacific. Air Power at Sea 1939-45 reveals the seemingly limitless roles aircraft could play: torpedo strike, fighter defence above fleet and convoy, close support to the assault troops in an amphibious landing, long-range reconnaissance, mine-laying, air-sea rescue, and meteorology. The art of flying was constantly being refined. There were new aircraft, new weapons and new techniques, as well as a new type of sea captain, one who fully understood the power of aircraft at sea. 'a highly effective writer on naval subjects' - The Telegraph
For Those in Peril: Fifty Years of Royal Navy Search and Rescue
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- 15 uur lezen
Down the Hatch
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- 8 uur lezen
Jellicoe
- 462bladzijden
- 17 uur lezen
Hurrah for the Life of a Sailor!: Life on the Lower-deck of the Victorian Navy
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- 16 uur lezen
Air Power at Sea, 1945-1989
- 176bladzijden
- 7 uur lezen
From Korea to the Falklands, Vietnam to Suez, the decades of the Cold War saw many occasions of ferociously hot military action.Through in-depth research of these global conflicts, drawing information from military sources as well as interviews with participants allows John Winton to examine how aerial warfare has developed since the 1940s.Air Power at Sea, 1945-89 continues where the first volume Air Power at Sea, 1939-45 ended and provides thorough insight into how the naval forces of the United States, Britain, the Soviet Union, and many other countries continued to utilise aerial warfare during the decades when the threat of nuclear warfare seemed ever present. -Back cover.
Convoy: The Defence of Sea Trade 1890-1990
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- 21 uur lezen