The Giant Killers: A Documentary Story of the Cam-ships.
1960 · London
by Poolman, Kenneth.
London: William Kimber, (1960). Octavo, black boards (hardcover), gilt letters, 160 pp. Former-owner bookplate; otherwise, Fine, in a Good+, mylar protected dust jacket with edgewear that includes light chipping. From dust jacket: Of all the strange, lonely and dangerous operations ever undertaken in war, those of the Merchant Service Fighter Unit of the R.A.F. were among the most unique. The Unit was a very special one, called into being to meet a desperate emergency. Early in 1941, when the Germans had captured the entire Atlantic seaboard from the North Cape of Norwat to the Bay of Biscay, there were grave fears that they would heavily increase attacks by big, long-range bombers on our merchant ships at sea in those areas beyond the range of Coastal Command, with no aircraft carriers available. Following an idea of Mr. Churchill’s, first the Navy, then the R. A. F., began operating single fighters from catapults mounted on merchant-type vessels. The Naval ships were manned and operated as bona-fide warships, but the R. A. F. fighters flew from ordinary cargo ships, called Catapult Aircraft Merchant Ships or Cam-ships, sailing in convoy and carrying out their normal business. The pilot took off on a single ticket. Once catapulted he could not return to the ship. He must make his attack, then ditch or bale out and hope that one of the ships in his convoy would pick him up -- very rarely was he in range of land... (Inventory #: 335423gl)