Thursday, July 16, 2020 - 08:19 AM UTC
De Havilland and Hatfield 1936-1993 by Philip Birtles is a new book from Fonthill Media provides a comprehensive and illustrated history of de Havilland and Hatfield Aerodrome from 1936 until closure in 1993
With the approach of the Second World War, the de Havilland Aerodrome at Hatfield went through a major expansion, concentrating on Mosquito production as well as pioneering the development of jet engines that led to the Vampire jet fighter. Early commercial aircraft were the Dove and Heron, but the major pioneering programme was the Comet, the world’s first commercial jet airliner. The DH.108 tailless research aircraft based on the Vampire fuselage was used to investigate the effects of the speed of sound, exceeding Mach 1 on 9 September 1948. The de Havilland jet airliner developed through the Trident, which was the first aircraft capable of automatic landing with passengers in all weathers, leading to the BAe 146 Whisper Jet, Britain’s most successful jet airliner. In addition to developing turbojet engines, the Engine Company also developed rocket engines. The Propeller Company developed air-to-air guided missiles and the Blue Streak stage 1 booster space rocket. Other types developed were the Sea Vixen naval strike fighter and the DH 125 business jet.

The book encompasses:
• Much of the history are first-hand experiences or from long-term employee interviews
• Many of the photographs were taken by the author and have not been previously published
• The wartime development of the Mosquito is covered as well as jet engine pioneering development
• Three generations of jet airliners were produced at Hatfield – Comet, Trident and BAe146 – plus the development of advanced Airbus wings

Publication: 30 August 2020
Price: £18.00/$28.00
ISBN: 978-1-78155-763-1
Size: 234 x 156 mm
Binding: Paperback
Extent: 224 pages
Illustrations: 215 mono
Rights: World, all languages

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Comments

Thanks Tim, I’ll keep my eye out for this book as I don’t live that far from the former airfield, although I wasn’t near when it was still in operation.
JUL 16, 2020 - 07:57 PM
THIS STORY HAS BEEN READ 674 TIMES.
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