Author name: Brett Holman

Brett Holman is a historian who lives in Armidale, Australia.

1930s, Air control, Interviews, Television, Videos

Wings over Waziristan

This is a BBC interview with Group Captain Robert Lister, recorded in 1980, about his experiences as a junior officer in 20 Squadron on the North-West Frontier. He transferred there in 1935, and flew Audaxes in air control operations against Waziri tribespeople, sometimes in support of the Army, sometimes independently. He candidly notes that the […]

1900s, After 1950, Aircraft, Before 1900, Books, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures

The Boer War in airpower history

The Boer War of 1899-1902 doesn’t often appear in airpower history. This may have something to do with the fact that it took place before the invention of the aeroplane, which I suppose is reasonable. But there are still interesting and even important connections and influences to be traced. Here are a baker’s half-dozen.

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Garry Campion. The Good Fight: Battle of Britain Propaganda and the Few. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. Looking forward to reading this book, which looks at looks at how the Battle of Britain and The Few were portrayed in the press, in official propaganda, plays, film, overseas, from the ground, etc. It even

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Juliet Gardiner. The Thirties: An Intimate History. London: Harper Press, 2010. In similar vein to her Wartime, portrays British society from a wide variety of angles using a wide variety of sources. But are the 1930s really ‘Britain’s forgotten decade’, as the front cover has it?

1940s, Art, Periodicals, Pictures

Visible vortices

In the summer of 1940, strange patterns like these began to appear in the sky over southern England. Today they wouldn’t be thought so unusual (except that they are on the twisty side), for contrails are a common sight now, especially over London. Seventy years ago, however, they were a little mysterious, even to those

Aircraft, Australia, Pictures

RAAF Museum 1

A few weeks ago I went along to the biennial RAAF Museum Pageant. The RAAF is, of course, the Royal Australian Air Force, and the RAAF Museum is at Point Cook, on the outskirts of Melbourne. Despite being relatively nearby I’ve never been, so when fellow aviation blogger JDK (who volunteers at the Museum) suggested

1910s, Disarmament, Periodicals

Ban the airship!

In February 1912, the International Arbitration League issued ‘A Memorial Against the Use of Armed Airships‘, an early proposal for arms control. The memorial claimed that ‘For the first time, in the face of a new development of the arts of fighting, nations possess both the conscience and the machinery necessary to check that development

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