Special Sale Pack of 5 Prints - 4 FREE!
DPK0810. Special Sale Pack of 5 Prints - 4 FREE! Aviation Print Pack.
Items in this pack : Item #1 - Click to view individual item DHM2466. Ardennes Offensive by Nicolas Trudgian. As 1944 drew to a close, Hitler made his final gamble of the war, mounting a massive strike force aimed at splitting the Allies forces advancing upon Germany. His armour, supported from the air, would rip through the Ardennes to Antwerp, capture the Allied fuel supplies, and cut off all the opposing forces to the north. Hitlers commanders were dubious of the outcome but nevertheless obeyed orders, and the operation was launched on 16th December. Allied intelligence had discounted any German counter-offensive and the initial wave, comprising 8 Panzer divisions, took the Allied forces completely by surprise. A parachute drop of English-speaking German soldiers in American uniforms behind the assault zone added to the confusion. Advancing some 30 miles, and almost in sight of the River Meuse, by 26th December the SS Panzers had ground to a halt with empty fuel tanks, and were at the mercy of Allied counter-attacks. By 16th January the German penetration was repulsed and Hitlers beloved Panzer units retreated in tatters. The Fuhrers last gamble had failed. Fw190s of JG1 provide close support to the 9th SS Panzer Division, as they spearhead Germanys final major offensive of World War II. Seen advancing on the 82nd Airborne Division, the King Tiger tanks, with the aid of Luftwaffe ground-attack fighters, drive the Americans back through the snowy fields of the Ardennes on Christmas Day, 1944. It was the last, short-lived and ultimately unsuccessful advance made by the German forces during World War II.
Published 2001. Less than 20 copies available of this sold out edition. Signed by Oberstleutnant Helmut Bennemann (deceased), Oberstleutnant Hans Lutz (deceased), Leutnant Siegfried Muller (deceased) and Oberst Eberhard Stephan (deceased). Signed limited edition of 500 prints. Paper size 36 inches x 25 inches (91cm x 64cm)
Item #2 - Click to view individual item DHM6183F. The Struggle for Malta by Ivan Berryman. Having been initially intercepted by just three ageing Gloster Gladiators, who gallantly gave both the Germans and Italians the impression of a much bigger resistance in the skies above Malta, the Italian Air Force was suddenly confronted by the more capable Hawker Hurricanes of 261 (F) Sqn, commanded by Sqn Ldr D W Balden. The previously unescorted bombers of the Regia Aeronautica suddenly required the presence of fighters to protect the marauding bombers, as depicted here, where Macchi 200s of 6° Gruppo 1° Stormo, reel around the sky to chase off the Hurricanes from the attacking Savoia Marchetti SM.79s above Grand Harbour in the summer of 1940. Artists Special Reserve of 50 prints. Image size 12.5 inches x 8 inches (32cm x 20cm)
Item #3 - Click to view individual item B0494D. LCT 312 by Ivan Berryman. LCT (Landing Craft Tank) 312 is shown unloading a Sherman tank directly onto the beach during the Normandy landings of June 1944. Over 1,000 of these versatile craft were built in the United States, with a small number being constructed in the UK and Canada. Artists Special Reserve of 50 prints. Image size 12.5 inches x 8 inches (32cm x 20cm)
Item #4 - Click to view individual item B0522D. Typhoons Over Normandy by Ivan Berryman. Wing Commander J R Baldwin is depicted flying Typhoon MN934 whilst commanding 146 Wing, 84 Group operating from Needs Oar Point in 1944, en route to a bombing raid on 20th June with other Typhoons of 257 Sqn in which both ends of a railway tunnel full of German supplies were successfully sealed. Artists Special Reserve of 50 prints. Image size 12.5 inches x 8 inches (32cm x 20cm)
Item #5 - Click to view individual item DHM6202. Dinah Might by Ivan Berryman. 6th June, 1944 - D-Day - and Martin B.26 Marauders of the 386th Bomb Group, 553rd Bomb Squadron are among the first aircraft to bomb the beaches in readiness for the Normandy landings on that momentous day. Shown softening up the enemy gun emplacements on a low level run over Utah Beach is 131576 AN-Z, now on display at the Utah Beach Museum. Artists Special Reserve of 50 prints. Image size 12.5 inches x 8 inches (32cm x 20cm)
Website Price: £ 210.00
To purchase these prints individually at their normal retail price would cost £370.00 . By buying them together in this special pack, you save £160
All prices are displayed in British Pounds Sterling
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