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kimster12271988
08-23-2012, 02:38 AM
As the Luftwaffe outnumbered the RAF by more than three to one, Adolf Hitler expected a decisive victory over the British air forces. Once air superiority had been achieved, a full-scale invasion of the British Isles was to be launched codenamed Operation Sea Lion. Thanks to the brave efforts of a small group of pilots who came to be known as "the few", this plan was postponed indefinitely.


"The Battle of Britain is about to begin...Upon this battle depends the survival of Christian civilisation. Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duty, and so bear ourselves, that if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, 'This was their finest hour."

- Wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill, summer 1940


The British were starting to get valuable intelligence from intercepting German communications, having cracked the Enigma code system, and had a new invention - radar - that would help direct the RAF fighters to intercept attacking German aircraft. But Britain was greatly outgunned; Churchill could not have known at the time that the heroic young RAF pilots would succeed in downing their enemies, by better than 2 to 1.

Nearly three thousand RAF pilots fought in the Battle of Britain. A fifth of them were not British. The top scoring pilot was, in fact, a Czech, Sgt. Josef Frantisek, who recorded 17 victories flying with the Polish 303 Squadron.


British author and amateur historian Roger Darlington:

"He wasn't just 'one of' - [Sgt Josef Frantisek] was the top-scoring pilot of the Battle of Britain... He was a very ill-disciplined pilot; he was inclined to actually endanger his colleagues if they were flying in formation. So the understanding was that he would be allowed, if you like, to 'do his own thing'. So he fought a very individual battle. He was very, very highly motivated, very courageous, and he was indeed the RAF pilot who shot down the most German aircraft in the battle."


Officially, the Battle of Britain began on July 10 and ended on October 31, 1940. Commemorations are held on the nearest Sunday to the 15th of September, the turning point of the battle.

In total, 88 Czechs defended the skies over Britain during those fateful weeks.


In "Fighter", his definitive 1977 account of the Battle of Britain, Len Deighton wrote:
"Poles and Czechs were not permitted to participate in the air fighting until they had mastered the rudiments of the English language and flying procedures. When they did start operations, these homeless men, motivated often by a hatred bordering upon despair, fought with a terrible and merciless dedication."

Two full Czech fighter squadrons, the 310th and 312th, took part. By the end of the battle, the 310th alone had claimed 39 German aircraft shot down.
"Both the Czechoslovaks and the Poles who joined the Royal Air Force in time for the Battle of Britain had a very powerful, personal reason for fighting the Germans because both Czechoslovakia and Poland had been occupied [by the Nazis]..."
Roger Darlington, is the author of "Night Hawk", a biography of the father-in-law whom he never met, Czech ace Karel Kuttelwascher, who flew with the British Squadron No.1, and is credited with 18 victories, including his first, in the Battle of Britain.

"The typical British pilot was about nineteen; Karel Kuttelwascher was twenty-four at the time of the Battle of Britain, and they called him 'Old Kut'. You wouldn't think that someone who was twenty-four would be regarded as old, but that extra four or five years meant all the difference to his colleagues."
Like top aces Kuttelwascher and Frantisek (who was killed in an accident towards the end of the battle), many experienced Czech pilots joined regular RAF squadrons, where they gained a reputation for bravery above and beyond the call of duty, and forever earned a place of honour among "The Few."



"British fighter aircraft in the Battle of Britain broke the teeth of the German air fleet of odds of seven or eight to one. Never in the field of human conflict has so much been owed by so many to so few."

- Winston Churchill

SATX
10-12-2012, 06:25 PM
Great article!

My grandfather flew with the RCAF in WWII as fighter pilot before being shipped back to Canada to teach new pilots how to fly the Avro Lancaster. Back in '89 I got to take him to the Abbotsford airshow in BC and when he watched the Hurricane's, Spitfire's, Supermarine Spitfire's and the Lancaster fly over the field, it was as if I could see the years melt away from him and suddenly I was standing next to a taller man with a far-off look in his eye of days gone by in his youth.

I will always treasure the pics I have as he touched each plane and was gretted warmly by the pilots of each, once they learned he'd flew combat missions over Britain and Europe.

shatto
12-30-2012, 03:04 PM
Nice little book about the Battle of Britain: "RAF Biggin Hill" which is about Eagle Squadron.
Coincidentally, my step-father, Chesley Hines Robertson, is worth a line of print. He was one of many Americans who joined the RCAF
and went off to fight for Britain. He was a 6'4" teenager who found himself folded into a Spitfire cockpit.
About ten years ago, as he was succumbing to Cancer, my mom took him to a reunion of Eagle Squadron.
Like many of the old men, he walked over to the Spitfire petted and caressed it, and cried.