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THE BATTLE OF BRITAIN AND THE BLITZ
8 Day Tour including arrival/departure
The Battle of Britain was fought in the skies of Britain
between July and October, 1940
While the German armies consolidated their hold on Western Europe, and
Britain was still recovering from the retreat of Dunkirk, thirty-three squadrons
of Hurricanes and nineteen squadrons of Spitfires took on the might of the
German Luftwaffe.
The incredible skills, daring and courage of just three thousand and eighty
Royal Airforce aircrew from throughout he British Empire who took part, ensured
that Hitler’s projected invasion on Britain did not take place.
This tour explores sites connected with this momentous time. We visit
aviation museums, seeing the aircraft of the time, find crash wrecks, drink in
the pubs used by the fighter pilots and gunners, see a range of memorials and
tour the actual airfields used.
The tour also visits other historical sights in the eastern counties of
England of Kent, Essex and Lincolnshire and takes advantage of time in both
these counties and London to look at the history of the Blitz, Hitler’s later
attempt to subdue Britain from the skies
DEPARTURE DATES & PRICES FOR YEAR 2002
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Arrive London
Sunday |
Depart London
Sunday |
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21-Jul |
28-Jul |
Price: US$1,499.00
Single Supplement US$325.00
TENTATIVE ITINERARY
Day One - Sunday
Arrival London where you’ll be met and transferred to our London
hotel situated in West London. Ironically, you’ll be staying just a few hundred
yards away from where the first of Hitler’s V2 rockets landed in 1944!
Today is a rest and recuperation day but you might like to take advantage of
the day to visit World War Two associated sites such as Churchill’s Cabinet War
Rooms and the Army Museum at Chelsea.
Day Two - Monday
Today, we first visit Westminster Abbey to view the beautiful stained glass
window, dedicated to the pilots of Fighter Command. Then to the Imperial war
Museum to see it’s excellent display on the war, and particularly it’s vivid
recreation of a blitz, bomb shelter. From here we leave London, passing the
memorial at Croydon before arriving at RAF Biggin Hill. Our final visit of the
day is at Churchill’s home of Chartwell and we stay nearby.
Day Three - Tuesday
The Hornchurch Sector is the subject of today’s explorations. We have three main
visits; to the Battle of Britain museum at Hawkinge, to the memorial at
Capel-le-Ferne and to the Spitfire and Hurricane Memorial at RAF Manston.
There’ll be guided tours at each destination and the Manston houses fine
examples of a Spitfire TB752 and Hurricane LF751.
The Hornchurch Sector covered the county of Kent, over which many dogfights
took place, and we’ll be seeing some splendid scenery as we drive through and
pinpointing some of the crash sites and the later V1 and V2 rocket targets (over
1400 of which fell on Kent). We’ll also be seeing Dover and it’s famed ‘white
cliffs’.
Day Four - Wednesday
Still in the Hornchurch Sector we visit the Purfleet Heritage Centre and
Thameside Aviation Museum. The latter, a small private museum houses a unique
collection of crash wrecks.
Our lunch-stop today will be at a pub near Epping, much frequented by Battle
of Britain pilots, though sadly, it lost much of its memorabilia in a fire.
We then head northwards into Essex, driving past what remains of the
Hornchurch airfield and the more active Stapleford Abbots airfield. Our second
main visit today will be at the North Weald Airfield and airfield museum.
There’s much to see here including the Squadron, airfield museum and the
airfield church. Later we’ll visit Blake Hall, which housed the ops room for
North Weald.
Day Five - Thursday
We spend the day in the sectors controlled by the 12 (Fighter) group, Duxford
and Debden.
Visits today will include The Imperial War Museum at Duxford, which houses
the finest collection of military aircraft and which was, of course, a US Air
Force base in WW2. We’ll also be visiting the mediaeval university city of
Cambridge.
Day Six - Friday
North of Cambridgeshire, in Digby and Wittering Sectors, we can visit RAF
Coningsby in Lincolnshire.
Lincolnshire is renowned as the ‘Home of the Royal Air Force’ and on the
North Kesteven Airfield trail there’s much to rediscover. A particular
highlight, however, will be our visit to the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight
base at RAF Coningsby. The Flight operates a Lancaster, five Spitfires, two
Hurricanes and a Dakota. It is possible to view these still-flying aircraft and
watch the technicians at work.
Day Seven - Saturday
We make our way back to London. An undoubted highlight of the day will be our
visit to Bletchley.
It was here that the Germans ‘uncrackable’ Enigma Code was broken, allowing
the allies to read Axis wireless traffic. The house holds some fantastic and
fascinating exhibits.
Later, as we near London, we’ll pass the Stanmore Fighter Command HQ and the
Uxbridge Fighter Group HQ, in addition to seeing Northolt Airfield.
Day Eight - Sunday
We transfer from our hotel base to the airport for return flights home. This has
been a memorable tour and as we board our aircraft for the flight home we'll
surely remember the courage of those who took to the skies in 1940.
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