Andrew Roberts, Tinkerers Triumphant; Grunts and generals get the glory, but it was middle-ranking 'problem solvers' who developed the tools to win World War II. Wall Street Journal, Jan 27, 2013
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB ... 44540714187334.html
("By 1943, only the British and American navies were launching heavy warships, and by August of that year the battle of the Atlantic was won")
Note:
(a) The review opened, "Other historians might narrow it down further—perhaps to the five months between the surrender of Stalingrad in February 1943 and the Germans' defeat at Kursk that July, a period that would also include the surrender of a quarter of a million Axis troops in North Africa in May. But none will disagree that by the time of the Red Army's destruction of German Army Group Center in July 1944, the writing was finally on the wall of the Reich Chancellery."
(i) Battle of Kursk
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kursk
(near city of Kursk, Soviet Union [now in Russia]; July and August 1943)
(ii) Army Group Center
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Army_Group_Center
(section 2.6 Destruction of Army Group Centre)
(b) The review continued, "Placing the Rolls-Royce Merlin 61 engine into the P-51 Mustang allowed it to fly at 432 miles per hour, enabling it to destroy Germany's Focke-Wulf 190 fighters then dominating the skies of occupied Europe."
(i) Rolls-Royce Merlin
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolls-Royce_Merlin
(the PV-12 became known as the Merlin following the company convention of naming its piston aero engines after birds of prey; production 1936-1950)
(ii) Focke-Wulf Fw 190
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focke-Wulf_Fw_190
(1941-1945 (Luftwaffe); Manufacturer Primarily Focke-Wulf Flugzeugbau AG [Where Focke and Wulf were surnames of two founders])
(c) The review indicated, "Similarly, the idiosyncratic Great War pilot Humphrey de Verd Leigh invented the Leigh plane-carried searchlights, which in Mr Kennedy's characteristically vivid language 'would catch in their stunning glare and paralyze U-boats recharging their batteries at night.'"
(i) Humphrey de Verd Leigh
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humphrey_de_Verd_Leigh
(1897–1980; a Royal Air Force officer; During the Second World War his idea for an anti-submarine spotlight for Coastal Command [of UK Royal Air Force] was developed and named the Leigh Light after him)
(d) The review followed, "The inventors of the cavity magnetron, a miniaturized radar device that could be placed in aircraft like the Vickers Wellington, as well as in smaller ships, are also given their due."
(i) cavity magnetron
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavity_magnetron
(a high-powered vacuum tube that generates microwaves; The compact cavity magnetron tube drastically reduced the size of radar sets so that they could be installed in anti-submarine aircraft and escort ships)
(ii) Vickers Wellington
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vickers_Wellington
(Manufacturer Vickers-Armstrongs (Aircraft) Ltd [surnames of two founders]; a British twin-engine, long range medium bomber; Produced 1936–1945)
(e) The review averred, "Mr Kennedy reminds us that the massive four-engine Lancaster bomber—like the B-17, B-24 and B-29—was capable of carrying the same bomb load as nine Axis medium bombers. The German two-engined Heinkel 111 bombers that had terrorized London earlier in the war simply couldn't cause the necessary damage, which is why nine times more German civilians died from aerial bombing than Britons."
(i) For Lancaster bomber, see Avro Lancaster
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avro_Lancaster
(a British four-engined Second World War heavy bomber designed and built by Avro (cofounded in 1910 at Manchester, UK by Alliott Verdon Roe; thus AVRO] for the Royal Air Force; The "Lanc", as it was affectionately known, thus became the most famous and most successful of the Second World War night bombers, "delivering 608,612 long tons of bombs in 156,000 sorties")
(ii) oeing B-17 Flying Fortress
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_B-17_Flying_Fortress
(During World War II, the B-17 equipped 32 overseas combat groups, inventory peaking in August 1944 at 4,574 USAAF aircraft worldwide. B-17s dropped 640,036 short tons (580,631 metric tons) of bombs on European targets (compared to 452,508 short tons (410,508 metric tons) dropped by the Liberator and 463,544 short tons (420,520 metric tons) dropped by all other U.S. aircraft). The British heavy bombers, the Avro Lancaster and Handley Page Halifax, dropped 608,612 and 224,207 long tons respectively)
(iii) Boeing B-29 Superfortress
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_B-29_Superfortress
(Produced 1943–1946; Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
Avro Lancaster)
(iv) Heinkel He 111
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinkel_He_111
(Produced 1935–1944)
* "Heinkel Flugzeugwerke [1922-1965] was a German aircraft manufacturing company founded by and named after Ernst Heinkel." Wiki
(f) Mulberry Harbor
(i) Mulberry. Encyclopaedia Britannica, undated.
http://www.britannica.com/dday/article-9344572
(ii) Nick Enoch, 'An idea of simple genius': Original 1942 blueprints of Mulberry harbour that made D-Day possible and Hitler's architect envious are expected to fetch £60,000
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ ... d-fetch-60-000.html
(A Mulberry harbour "enabled the Allies to land troops, vehicles and equipment on French soil without having to capture a port first" but Allied still had to capture a beach)
(g) For Cherbourg, see Cherbourg-Octeville
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherbourg-Octeville
(officially formed when the commune of Cherbourg absorbed Octeville in 2000)
(h) Tarawa
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarawa
is an atoll which includes South Tarawa, capital of Republic of Kiribati.
* South Tarawa
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Tarawa
(The meaning of Teinainano is "down of the mast", alluding to the sail-shape of the atoll [when viewed from the sky]) |