Royal Naval Air Service Pilot 1914–18

Royal Naval Air Service Pilot 1914–18
Author: Mark Barber
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 121
Release: 2012-03-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 1780965400

In 1914 the Naval Wing of the Royal Flying Corps was subsumed into the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS). With the bulk of the Royal Flying Corps engaged in France, the aircraft and seaplane pilots of the RNAS protected Britain from the deadly and terrifying Zeppelin menace. In 1915 the RNAS sent aircraft to support the operations in the Dardanelles, and also gave increasing support to the Royal Flying Corps units engaged on the Western Front, conducting reconnaissance, intelligence gathering and artillery spotting, bombing raids, and aerial combat with German pilots. This book explores all of these fascinating areas, and charts the pioneering role of the RNAS in military aviation.

Royal Naval Air Service Pilot 1914–18

Royal Naval Air Service Pilot 1914–18
Author: Mark Barber
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 66
Release: 2012-03-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 1846039509

In 1914 the Naval Wing of the Royal Flying Corps was subsumed into the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS). With the bulk of the Royal Flying Corps engaged in France, the aircraft and seaplane pilots of the RNAS protected Britain from the deadly and terrifying Zeppelin menace. In 1915 the RNAS sent aircraft to support the operations in the Dardanelles, and also gave increasing support to the Royal Flying Corps units engaged on the Western Front, conducting reconnaissance, intelligence gathering and artillery spotting, bombing raids, and aerial combat with German pilots. This book explores all of these fascinating areas, and charts the pioneering role of the RNAS in military aviation.

With the Flying Squadron

With the Flying Squadron
Author: Harold Rosher
Publisher:
Total Pages: 116
Release: 2010-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780857063038

A war in the skies above the waves As early as 1908 the Royal Navy understood the potential for the use of aircraft in naval warfare. By 1914 the Royal Naval Air Service consisted of 93 aircraft, 6 airships, 2 balloons and 727 personnel. By 1918 when the RNAS was combined with the RAF it had nearly 3,000 aircraft and more than 55,000 personnel. Aircraft working in concert with the Royal Navy and against enemy shipping and coastal installations had come to stay. This interesting book looks at the RNAS from a much more personal perspective-that of one young navy pilot, Harold Rosher. The book tells the story of Rosher's war, based around Dover and engaged in patrolling over and across the English Channel and attacking enemy held coastal defences such as Zeebrugge, principally through letters to his family and provides vital insights into the First World War in the air as experienced by an early naval pilot. Available in softcover and hardcover with dust jacket.

Royal Flying Corps Handbook 1914-18

Royal Flying Corps Handbook 1914-18
Author: Peter G. Cooksley
Publisher: The History Press
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2007-05-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 0752496239

Explores the contributions made by the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Naval Air Service during World War I. This work also covers aircraft, an array of other subjects including organization, pay, rank, uniforms, motor vehicles, the womens branches, attitudes, and even songs popular in the mess.

IN THE ROYAL NAVAL AIR SERVICE

IN THE ROYAL NAVAL AIR SERVICE
Author: Harold Rosher
Publisher: Echo Library
Total Pages: 104
Release: 2016-12-19
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781406881943

On the day of the declaration of the First World War, Rosher (1893-1916) applied for a commission in the Royal Naval Air Force. He progressed rapidly in the craft of flying and soon obtained his aviator's licence. This collection of letters to his family were written between August 1914 and his death at the age of 22 in February 1916, and give an insight into the life of an airman during the first years of WWI when the Air Force was in its infancy.

The Struggle in the Air, 1914-1918

The Struggle in the Air, 1914-1918
Author: Charles Cyril Turner
Publisher:
Total Pages: 326
Release: 1919
Genre: World War, 1914-1918
ISBN:

" ... This is not an attempt to write a complete history of the aerial war, or to record all the wonderful and brave deeds of our airmen. A book that would include all these would be valuable as a work of reference, but it would be essentially different from the aim of this small effort. A certain number of the incidents here related have been toldelsewhere, and in some cases there has been no need to go beyond the official reports. Some have been published for the first time, and to some I have been able to add hitherto unpublished details ..."--The Preface, page vi

In the Teeth of the Wind

In the Teeth of the Wind
Author: C. P. O. Bartlett
Publisher: Pen and Sword
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2013-10-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 1473815487

So rapid have been the advances in the science of aeronautics since the end of the First World War that it requires a considerable feat of imagination to cast one's mind back over the comparatively short period of seventy years to the days when Flight Commander Bartlett of the Royal Naval Air Service was flying some of the world's first bombers over the Western Front.An equal adjustment for those more used to accounts of the nerve-chilling existence of bomber crews in the Second World War is called for when tuning in to the extra ordinarily happy-go-lucky atmosphere which seemed to prevail among these early pilots. Not for them the nail-biting tension as they head over the trenches - rather the schoolboy exuberance of a jolly outing.Philip Bartlett's account is a unique and fascinating record of a pilot's life in the dawn of aerial warfare and, as history, of the first use of the bomber in war, strangely, by the Navy's aircraft.Flying by day and night alone, without navigational aids, the author moves from attacks on the U-boat bases to bombing the German Gothas as they prepared to raid London, and then to the support of Haig's drive to the coast which ended in the mud of Passchendaele. The climax in March, 1918, is reached when the author's squadron finds itself directly in the path of Ludendorff's massive thrust, which broke the British Vth Army and nearly decided the War. Attacked by Richthofen's aces, No 5 Squadron RNAS flew continuous and desperate missions against the advancing troops from aerodomes which were over-run time after time. At a time when the life of a pilot was reckoned in weeks, the author flew 101 missions, enduring the rigours of flying without heating or oxygen, with hesitant engines, no parachutes and the attention of German fighters. Yet there is continual evidence of the pure joy of flying and wonder at the sheer beauty of the the sky.

A History of No. 10 Squadron

A History of No. 10 Squadron
Author: Mike Westrop
Publisher: Schiffer Military History
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2004
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

"No.10 Squadron of England's Royal Naval Air Service was formed at St. Pol, a suburb of Dunkerque, in February 1917, as part of the rapid naval aviation expansion programme required by the Royal Naval Air Service's commitment to assist the Royal Flying Cor"