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Republic P47 Thunderbolt.
Aviation art prints of US Air Force fighter Republic P47 Thunderbolt of the US Ninth Air Force and Thunderbolt fighter aircraft of Colonel
Herbert Zemke. Aviation prints by Robert Taylor and David Pentland.
Duxford Pair by Ivan Berryman These Republic P-47D Thunderbolts were operational with the 82nd FS,
78th FG based at Duxford during the final months of the war in Europe.
Zemke's First Fan by David Pentland On the 12th May 1944, Col. Hubert Zemke tried his new "fan"
tactic, designed to engage Luftwaffe fighters. Unfortunately on this
occasion his aircraft was bounced by German ace Major Gunther Rall in
his ME109 G-6(AS), and escaped only by sending his P47-D Thunderbolt
into a gut wrenching dive.
Return From Bremen by Simon Smith Francis ' Gabby' Gabreski, 26th November 1943. |
| Herkys Big Day by Stan Stokes. The Republic P-47 Thunderbolt, or Jug7 as it was more popularly called, was the mount of many of the American aces of WW 11. The P-47 represented the crowning achievement from two aircraft designers, Alexander Kartvelli and Alexander De Seversky, both immigrants from Russia. It came on the heels of two other aircraft, the P-35 and P-43, which were satisfactory pre-war designs, but not up to the new standards required to compete against Bf-109 fighters in Europe or Mitsbushi Zeroes in the Pacific. The P-47 was the largest and heaviest single seat American fighter of the War. Powered by a huge 2000-HP radial engine, more than 15,000 Jugs were produced. The first production variant was the P-47B which had a razorback fuselage. During tests the aircraft attained a speed of 429-MPH with a maximum range at 10,000 feet of 835 miles. Later variants included a C and D model with the razorback fuselage. Belly tanks and wing tanks became standard equipment as the range of this fighter was stretched for bomber escort missions in Europe. In mid- 1943 one of the biggest pilot complaints about the aircraft was remedied when a bubble top canopy and redesigned fuselage was incorporated into the D model. This dramatically improved rearward vision of the pilots. These aircraft were armed with 8 machine guns, and could carry up to 2500 pounds of additional fuel or ordinance. Herschel Herky Green was one of the top USAAF aces in Europe with a total of 18 confirmed aerial victories (3 in P-40s, 10 in P-47s, and 5 in P-5 Is.) Green was born in 1920 in Mayfield, Kentucky. While studying mechanical engineering at Vanderbilt University he learned to fly in the Civilian Pilot Training Program. He joined the Army as an aviation cadet in 1941 and earned his wings an a commission at Foster Field in 1942. One of Greens first assignments was flying P40s in North Africa. He scored a total of three victories in P-40s before his squadron transitioned to the Jug. As depicted in Stan Stokes painting, appropriately entitled Herkys Big Day, Green downed six enemy aircraft on one mission over Northern Italy on January 30, 1944. Greens flight initially encountered a group of Ju-52 transports, and Green bagged four of them. About thirty minutes later the ace encountered a lone Macchi 202. In a low level turning duel Green eventually got in position and nailed the Italian fighter. Its wing dipped, caught the ground, and sent the Macchi into a terrible cartwheel of destruction. Heading home Green encountered a Do-217, which quickly became victim number 6. Green went on to later add four more P-47 victories, and after his group changed to the P-51 he scored an additional five, making him an ace in both the Jug and the Mustang. Green remained in the Air Force following the War, serving as Deputy Commander of the 4th Fighter Group at Selfridge Field. He also held a number of important staff positions prior to his retirement in 1964. Since that time he has been a successful businessman. Greens numerous decorations include the Distinguished Service Cross, Silver Star, Distinguished Flying Cross with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Purple Heart, The Air Medal with 25 Oak Leaf Clusters, and the French Croix de Guerre with Palm. Green resides in Southern California. Signed limited edition of 500 prints. Size 22 inches x 18 inches (56cm x 446cm). Price £94.00 Signed by P-47 Ace Herky Green (deceased). Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
ITEM CODE STK0037 |
| Thunderbolt on Duty by Richard Ward
Limited edition of 300 prints, with printed signature. Image size 8 inches x 5 inches (20cm x 13cm). Price £14.00
ITEM CODE B0087 |
| First Strike on Berlin by Nicolas Trudgian. The first successful daylight raid on Berlin. Nicolas Trudgians painting relives the fearsome aerial combat on March 6, 1944, as B-17 Flying Fortresses of the 100th B.G. are attacked. Screaming in head-on, Fw190s of II./JG I charge into the bomber stream. With throttles wide open, 56th Fighter Group P-47 Thunderbolts come hurtling down to intercept. B-17 gunners are working overtime, the air is full of cordite, smoke, jagged pieces of flying metal and hot lead. We are in the midst of one of the fiercest aerial battles of the war. Signed limited edition of 600 prints. Paper size 35 inches x 24 inches (89cm x 61cm). Price £160.00 Signed by Colonel Morton Magoffin (deceased), Captain C B Red Harper and First Lieutenant Ed McKay, in addition to the artist. Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Limited edition of 60 artist proofs. Paper size 35 inches x 24 inches (89cm x 61cm). Price £200.00 Signed by Colonel Morton Magoffin (deceased), Captain C B Red Harper and First Lieutenant Ed McKay, in addition to the artist. Save £20 on selected prints - Was £220
Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Limited edition of publishers proofs. Paper size 35 inches x 24 inches (89cm x 61cm). Price £200.00 Signed by Colonel Morton Magoffin (deceased), Captain C B Red Harper and First Lieutenant Ed McKay, in addition to the artist. Save £20 on selected prints - Was £220
Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Limited edition of 60 artist special reserve prints, signed by the artist only. Paper size 35 inches x 24 inches (89cm x 61cm). Price £125.00
ITEM CODE DHM2057 |
| Bridge Busting Jugs by Stan Stokes. Alexander Kartveli was a engineer with Seversky Aircraft who designed the P-35, which first flew in 1937. With Republic Aviation Kartveli supervised the development of the P-43 Lancer. Neither of these aircraft were produced in large numbers, and neither was quite successful. However, the Republic Aviation P-47 Thunderbolt, also nicknamed the Jug, was quite a different story. The Jug was the jewel in Kartvelis design crown, and went on to become one of the most produced fighter aircraft of all time with 15,683 being manufactured. The P-47 was the largest and heaviest single seat fighter of WW II. The P-47 immediately demonstrated its excellent combat qualities, including speed, rate of climb, maneuverability, heavy fire power, and the ability to take a lot of punishment. With a wingspan of more than 40 feet and a weight of 19,400 pounds, this large aircraft was designed around the powerful 2000 HP Pratt and Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp radial engine. The first P-47 prototype flew in May of 1941, and the primary variant the P-47D went into service in 1943 with units of the U.S. Armys Eighth Air Force. The Jug had a maximum speed in excess of 400 MPH, a service ceiling in excess of 42,000 feet, and was heavily armed with either six or eight heavy caliber machine guns. With its ability to carry up to a 2,500 pound bomb load, the Jug saw lots of use in ground attack roles. Until the introduction of the N model, the P-47 lacked the long range required for fighter escort missions which were most often relegated to P-51 Mustangs or P-38 Lightnings. In his outstanding painting entitled Bridge Busting Jugs, noted aviation artist Stan Stokes depicts Eighth Air Force Jugs in a ground attack mission in the Alps in June of 1944. The top P-47 ace was Francis Gabreski who had flown with the 56th Fighter Group, the first unit to be equipped with the P-47. In August of 1943 Gabreski attained his first aerial combat victory (over an Fw-190) and by years end he had reached ace status with 8 confirmed victories. As Commander of the 61st Squadron, Gabreski continued to chalk up victory after victory, and on seven different occasions he achieved two victories during the same mission. However, in July of 1944 Gabreski damaged the prop on his Jug during a low level attack on an airfield near Coblenz. Forced to make a crash landing, he was captured and remained a prisoner of war until Wars end in 1945. Following the War Gabreski returned to military service with the Air Forces 4th Fighter-Interceptor Wing in Korea. Flying the F-86 Sabre Jet, Gabreski attained 6.5 more aerial victories in 1951 and 1952 becoming an ace in two different wars. Signed limited edition of 4750 prints. Print size 16 inches x 11.5 inches (41cm x 30cm) Supplied with signed and numbered certificate of authenticity.. Price £40.00 Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Signed limited edition of 225 prints. Size 16 inches x 11.5 inches (41cm x 30cm). Price £154.00 Signed by Double War Ace USAF Col. Francis Gabby Gabreski (deceased). Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
ITEM CODE STK0028 |
| Days of Thunder by Richard Taylor. Duxford became home to the 78th Fighter Group when they arrived in England with their P-47B Thunderbolts in 1943. The objective of the American fighter units was to gain air superiority over the Luftwaffe in support of their daylight bombing campaign. By 1944 they achieved their objective. Richard Taylor commemorates the valiant contribution of the 78th Fighter Group with a fine new rendition showing P-47D Thunderbolts departing Duxford en route for the north coast of France, and a low-level strafing mission. It is the spring of 1944, and with the Normandy invasion just days away, the Thunderbolts are already painted with invasion markings. Signed limited edition of 250 prints, with 1 signature. Print paper size 30.5 inches x 22 inches (77cm x 56cm). Price £95.00 Signatories: Colonel Robert J Shorty Rankin.
Limited edition of 25 artist proofs, with 4 signatures. Print paper size 30.5 inches x 22 inches (77cm x 56cm). Price £150.00 Signatories: Colonel Robert J Shorty Rankin, Colonel Walker Bud Mahurin (deceased), Colonel Steve The Greek Pisanos, First Lieutenant Samuel Buzzard Lutz.
Fighter Aces limited edition of 150 prints, with 4 signatures. Print paper size 30.5 inches x 22 inches (77cm x 56cm). Price £120.00 Signatories: Colonel Robert J Shorty Rankin, Colonel Walker Bud Mahurin (deceased), Colonel Steve The Greek Pisanos, First Lieutenant Samuel Buzzard Lutz.
Limited edition of 25 remarques, with 4 signatures. Print paper size 30.5 inches x 22 inches (77cm x 56cm). Price £265.00 Signatories: Colonel Robert J Shorty Rankin, Colonel Walker Bud Mahurin (deceased), Colonel Steve The Greek Pisanos, First Lieutenant Samuel Buzzard Lutz.
ITEM CODE DHM2613 |
| Feeding the Wolves Bite by Brian Bateman. The twelfth of May, 1944. The German countryside is blooming with the coming of spring. Germanys struggle is coming to a crescendo as the Allies continue their assault on the Third Reich. Just above the deceptive peace of the countryside, Gruppenkommandeur Gunther Rall, assigned to JG/11 on the Western Front, is bounced by P-47s of the 56th Fighter Group. Better known as Zemkes Wolf pack, the 56th is the highest scoring USAAF fighter unit of the ETO, accounting for some 665-1/2 aircraft in the air. Rall is outnumbered four to one. Taking evasive action, Rall descends from the clouds toward the treetops, trying everything he knows to pull out and away from the much-too-powerful P-47s. Weaving, twisting and at full throttle, even Rall is no match for the numbers against him. Finally, Ralls 109 is within range and the P-47s eight 50-caliber guns are making deadly strikes--igniting Ralls aircraft and shooting his thumb off at the throttle. Rall has no choice but to pull into a half loop and bail out. To make matters worse, as Rall reaches the ground he is approached by a German farmer with a pitchfork who tries to impale him! After convincing the farmer hes German, Rall stomps off to a local phone and is subsequently taken to a hospital where he would remain until 1944. Feeling the Wolves Bite depicts Gunther Ralls 109G during this encounter. Rall, on fire and wounded, begins to pull into a half loop as he prepares to bail out of his Messerschmitt for the first and only time in his career. Signed limited edition of 250 prints. Image size 26 inches x 21 inches (66cm x 53cm). Price £125.00 Signed by : General Gunther Rall (deceased) and Oberleutnant Walter Schuck. Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
ITEM CODE DHM1876 |
| The Wolfpack by Robert Taylor. The 56th Fighter Group was led by some of Americas greatest fighter leaders of World War II and was home to many of its leading fighter Aces. Under successive commanders Hub Zemke, Robert Landry and David Schilling, the 56th destroyed more enemy aircraft in combat than any other fighter group in the Eighth Air Force. Arriving in England in January 1943 under the command of Colonel Hub Zemke, a master tactician and fearless leader, the 56th quickly emerged as an outstanding fighting unit. The only Eighth Air Force Group to fly P-47 Thunderbolts throughout the war, the 56th spawned more fighter Aces than any other USAAF group - legends such as Gabby Gabreski, Robert Johnson and the colourful Ace Walker Bud Mahurin. Under Hub Zemkes mercurial leadership they became known and feared as Zemkes Wolfpack. On 26 November, 1943, the P-47s of the 56th Fighter Group were tasked to escort B-24 Liberators of the 392nd Bomb Group on a dangerous mission to attack the heavily defended industrial and dockyard facilities in the German port of Bremen. Zemke knew the Luftwaffe would be waiting for them as they approached the target, and they were – in force! It was to become a day of high drama. With the Luftwaffe throwing all the fighters they could muster at the American heavy bombers, a massive aerial battle ensued. In the running dogfights high over Bremen, the Wolfpack claimed their most successful action of the war with 23 confirmed kills, 3 probables, and 9 damaged, creating an all-time record in the European Theatre. The 392nds B-24 Liberators could not have been in safer hands on that eventful day. Signed limited edition of 400 prints. Paper size 35 inches x 26.5 inches (88cm x 66cm) - Image size 24.5 inches x 22 inches (62cm x 56cm). Price £200.00 Signed by Colonel Walker Bud Mahurin (deceased), Brigadier General Leslie C Smith and Brigadier General Lyle Adrianse.
Limited edition of 25 artist proofs. Paper size 35 inches x 26.5 inches (88cm x 66cm) - Image size 24.5 inches x 22 inches (62cm x 56cm). Price £415.00 Signed by Colonel Walker Bud Mahurin (deceased), Brigadier General Leslie C Smith, Brigadier General Lyle Adrianse, Captain Walter Groce, Lieutenant Colonel Edgar Whitley, Colonel Harold Bunny Comstock, Major Michael B Gladych, Captain Shirley Ulch, Lieutenant John Bradshaw - Companion Print, Colonel Billy Gene Edens - Companion Print, Chief Warrant Officer Russell Kyler - Companion Print and Colonel Robert J Shorty Rankin - Companion Print.
Collectors edition of 350 prints. Paper size 35 inches x 26.5 inches (88cm x 66cm) - Image size 24.5 inches x 22 inches (62cm x 56cm). Price £275.00 Signed by Colonel Walker Bud Mahurin (deceased), Brigadier General Leslie C Smith, Brigadier General Lyle Adrianse, Captain Walter Groce, Lieutenant Colonel Edgar Whitley, Lieutenant John Bradshaw - Companion Print, Colonel Billy Gene Edens - Companion Print, Chief Warrant Officer Russell Kyler - Companion Print and Colonel Robert J Shorty Rankin - Companion Print.
Wolfpack Tribute Proof edition of 50 prints. Paper size 35 inches x 26.5 inches (88cm x 66cm) - Image size 24.5 inches x 22 inches (62cm x 56cm). Price £ Signed by Colonel Walker Bud Mahurin (deceased), Brigadier General Leslie C Smith, Brigadier General Lyle Adrianse, Captain Walter Groce, Lieutenant Colonel Edgar Whitley, Colonel Harold Bunny Comstock, Major Michael B Gladych, Captain Shirley Ulch, Lieutenant John Bradshaw - Companion Print, Colonel Billy Gene Edens - Companion Print, Chief Warrant Officer Russell Kyler - Companion Print, Colonel Robert J Shorty Rankin - Companion Print, Colonel Gordon Batdorf - Companion Print, Colonel Robert Winters - Companion Print, Colonel Gabby Gabreski (deceased) - (matted) Companion Print, Lt Col Robert S Johnson (deceased) - (matted) Companion Print and Colonel Hub Zemke (deceased) - (matted) Companion Print.
ITEM CODE DHM1726 |
| Schweinfurt Thunderbolts by Jason Askew. (P) Thunderbolts of the 78th Fighter Group based at Duxford (station 357) engage Me109s during the August 17th raid on Schweinfurt. The 78th Fighter Group were assigned the duty of escorting the B-17s from Antwerp to Eupen between the hours of 1353-1410, and the group claimed two confirmed kills and no losses during their engagement. Original pencil drawing by Jason Askew, with original signatures. Pencil drawing image area size 25.5 inches x 17 inches (65cm x 43cm) Surrounded by coloured border, making the total paper size 35 inches x 23.5 inches (89cm x 63cm). Price £620.00 Signed by General Gunther Rall (deceased) and Walter Wolfrum. Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
ITEM CODE B0400 |
| Thunderbolts and Lightnings by Nicolas Trudgian. The relief of Bastogne turned the tide in the Battle of the Bulge and Hitlers final great offensive of World War II lay in ruins. P47 Thunderbolts of the 406th Fighter Group, in company with P38 Lightnings, support the advancing armor of General George Pattons US Third Army as they prepare to relieve the battered 101st Airborne Division from their heroic defence of Bastogne during the final climax to the Battle of the Bulge, 24 December 1944. The Battle of the Bulge was one of the largest land battles of WWII with more than a million American, British and German troops involved, incurring huge casualties on all sides and this release pays tribute to the sacrifice of Allied Forces, during this important milestone in World War II. Limited Edition : Signed limited edition of 350 prints. Print paper size 30.5 inches x 23.5 inches (77cm x 59cm). Price £160.00 Signatories: Ft Lt Howard M Park; Sgt William True. Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Limited edition of 25 artist proofs. Print paper size 30.5 inches x 23.5 inches (77cm x 59cm). Price £255.00 Signatories: Ft Lt Howard M Park; Sgt William True; Pvt Frank Denison; Cpl Gordon Hearne; Cpl Peter Howenstein; Sgt John Mosley; Stf Sgt Murray Shapiro; Sgt Egbert Duke Buniff. Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Limited edition of artist proofs with two signatures. Print paper size 30.5 inches x 23.5 inches (77cm x 59cm). Price £200.00 Signatories: Ft Lt Howard M Park and Sgt William True. Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Veterans Edition : Signed limited edition of 250 prints. Print paper size 30.5 inches x 23.5 inches (77cm x 59cm). Price £210.00 Signatories: Ft Lt Howard M Park; Sgt William True; Pvt Frank Denison; Cpl Gordon Hearne; Cpl Peter Howenstein; Sgt John Mosley; Stf Sgt Murray Shapiro; Sgt Egbert Duke Buniff. Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
ITEM CODE DHM2595 |
| Duxford Pair by Ivan Berryman. These Republic P-47D Thunderbolts were operational with the 82nd FS, 78th FG based at Duxford during the final months of the war in Europe. Signed limited edition of 1150 prints. Image size 25 inches x 15 inches (64cm x 38cm). Price £95.00 Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Limietd edition of 50 artist proofs. Image size 25 inches x 15 inches (64cm x 38cm). Price £130.00 Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Save £5 on selected prints - Was £135
Johnson Presentation edition of 5 prints from the signed limited edition of 1150 prints. Image size 25 inches x 15 inches (64cm x 38cm). Price £250.00 Features the matted original signature of Lt Col Robert S Johnson (deceased).
Limited edition of 50 giclee canvas prints. Image size 30 inches x 20 inches (76cm x 51cm). Price £370.00 £90 Off Selected Giclee Canvas Prints - Was £460
ITEM CODE B0093 |
| Eagle Strike by Simon Atack. Flying his Messerschmitt Me109G6, Major Günther Rall, Group Commander of II./JG11 with over 200 air victories already to his credit, clashes with a P-47 Thunderbolt of the 63rd Sqn, 56th Fighter Group high over the Rhine south of Koblenz, May 12, 1944. Led by Colonel Hub Zemke, the 56th Fighter Group played advance guard to a deep penetration bomber raid to central Germany. As his forty eight P-47 Thunderbolts arrived to sweep the sky around the Koblenz –Frankfurt area, the Me109s of II./JG11 pounced from a 5000 feet height advantage. Simon Atacks high-impact painting shows Major Günther Rall bringing down Hub Zemkes wingman, the first of two victories he claimed before himself being brought down by 56th Fighter Group P-47s later in the combat. Günther Rall returned to combat flying, commanding JG300 until the end of hostilities by which time, with 275 air victories, he became the third highest scoring Ace in history. Signed limited edition of 500 prints. . Price £115.00 Signed by Generalleutnant Gunther Rall (deceased) Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
Limited edition of 25 artist proofs. . Price £145.00 Signed by Generalleutnant Gunther Rall (deceased) Part of our Buy One, Get One Half Price Offer
ITEM CODE SA0001 |
| Looking for Trouble by Keith Woodcock.
Open edition print. Image size 14.5 inches x 9.5 inches (37cm x 24cm). Price £18.00
ITEM CODE KW0003 |
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Herkys Big Day by Stan Stokes. Herschel
Herky Green downed 6 Axis aircraft on one mission over N. Italy on
January 30, 1944. Greens flight initially encountered a group of Ju-52s.
Green would bad 4. Minutes later he wasted a Macchi 202 in a low level
turning duel. Heading for home he ran into a Do-217 which became victory
number six.
Bridge Busting Jugs by Stan Stokes. Alexander
Kartveli was a engineer with Seversky Aircraft who designed the P-35,
which first flew in 1937. With Republic Aviation Kartveli supervised the
development of the P-43 Lancer. Neither of these aircraft were produced
in large numbers, and neither was quite successful. However, the
Republic Aviation P-47 Thunderbolt, also nicknamed the Jug, was quite a
different story. The Jug was the jewel in Kartvelis design crown, and
went on to become one of the most produced fighter aircraft of all time
with 15,683 being manufactured. The P-47 was the largest and heaviest
single seat fighter of WW II. The P-47 immediately demonstrated its
excellent combat qualities, including speed, rate of climb,
maneuverability, heavy fire power, and the ability to take a lot of
punishment. With a wingspan of more than 40 feet and a weight of 19,400
pounds, this large aircraft was designed around the powerful 2000 HP
Pratt and Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp radial engine. The first P-47
prototype flew in May of 1941, and the primary variant the P-47D went
into service in 1943 with units of the U.S. Armys Eighth Air Force. The
Jug had a maximum speed in excess of 400 MPH, a service ceiling in
excess of 42,000 feet, and was heavily armed with either six or eight
heavy caliber machine guns. With its ability to carry up to a 2,500
pound bomb load, the Jug saw lots of use in ground attack roles. Until
the introduction of the N model, the P-47 lacked the long range required
for fighter escort missions which were most often relegated to P-51
Mustangs or P-38 Lightnings. In his outstanding painting entitled Bridge
Busting Jugs, noted aviation artist Stan Stokes depicts Eighth Air
Force Jugs in a ground attack mission in the Alps in June of 1944. The
top P-47 ace was Francis Gabreski who had flown with the 56th Fighter
Group, the first unit to be equipped with the P-47. In August of 1943
Gabreski attained his first aerial combat victory (over an Fw-190) and
by years end he had reached ace status with 8 confirmed victories. As
Commander of the 61st Squadron, Gabreski continued to chalk up victory
after victory, and on seven different occasions he achieved two
victories during the same mission. However, in July of 1944 Gabreski
damaged the prop on his Jug during a low level attack on an airfield
near Coblenz. Forced to make a crash landing, he was captured and
remained a prisoner of war until Wars end in 1945. Following the War
Gabreski returned to military service with the Air Forces 4th
Fighter-Interceptor Wing in Korea. Flying the F-86 Sabre Jet, Gabreski
attained 6.5 more aerial victories in 1951 and 1952 becoming an ace in
two different wars.
Jenkins Jerry Junkers by Stan Stokes.
This tribute to the 510th Fighter Squardron shows four
P-47s; The Bug, Squirt, Raid Hot Moma and The Touch of Texas.
Thunderbolts and Lightnings by Nicolas Trudgian.
The relief of
Bastogne turned the tide in the Battle of the Bulge and Hitlers final
great offensive of World War II lay in ruins. P47 Thunderbolts of the
406th Fighter Group, in company with P38 Lightnings, support the
advancing armor of General George Pattons US Third Army as they prepare
to relieve the battered 101st Airborne Division from their heroic
defence of Bastogne during the final climax to the Battle of the Bulge,
24 December 1944. The Battle of the Bulge was one of the largest land
battles of WWII with more than a million American, British and German
troops involved, incurring huge casualties on all sides and this release
pays tribute to the sacrifice of Allied Forces, during this important
milestone in World War II.
Thunderbolt Strike by Robert Taylorn P-47 Razorback Thunderbolt's of the US Ninth Air Force make their
escape following an attack on installations near the port of Le Havre,
Northern France 1944.
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