by Michael C. Fox
Solihull, Eng.: Hellion / Philadelphia: Casemate, 2014. Pp. xviii, 296.
Illus., tables, notes, biblio., index. $69.95. ISBN: 1909384143
The Birth of British Air Power
In this volume, the first in what promises to be an very serious look at the history of the British fighter, aviation historian Fox looks at the birth of
the British fighter forces,
before there even were fighter aircraft. Although naturally primarily concerned with the British side of the story, Fox adequately addresses developments by other nations,
as these often influenced, or were influenced by trends in Britain.
Fox
opens with the origins of military aviation, from the invention of the balloon and its early use by
various
armed forces to the introduction of powered “dirigibles” through the development of the proper airplane by the Wrights, who were quickly followed by a number of other talented innovators.
He
then looks at early military trials of the airplane and the first often surprisingly prescient glimmerings of the concept of “air power,
”
often by men now wholly forgotten such as
Col. John Davidson Fullerton,
a remarkable visionary.
Fox
then covers the formation of the first “air forces” and the early use of airplanes in
maneuvers and in
war.
He
concludes
the book
with a look at the state of Britain’s Royal Flying Corps and Royal Naval Air Service on the eve of the Great War,
with chapters on the origins of the Air Ministry and the question of the air defense of Britain.
Fox naturally devotes a lot of attention to technology, not only of the numerous types of airplanes developed in the period, but also experiments in radio communications, the development of infrastructure, and the rise of administrative institutions.
To Rule the Winds
is a
n excellent read for anyone interested in the origins of military aviation or in the state of aviation on the eve of the Great War.
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