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Carriers in Combat The Air War at Sea
Chester G. Hearn
ISBN: 0-275-98557-1
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98557-8
336 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 9/30/2005
List Price: $51.95 (UK Sterling Price: £35.95)
Discount Price: $25.98 Sale Price for U.S. Customers Only. Save 50%. Ends 12/31/2009.
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • This is a critical and instructive analysis of US carrier battles...
    —The Naval Review
    August 2006
  • [A] useful introduction to the subject, beginning with Eugene Ely's historic shipboard flights of 1910-1911, up through U.S. carrier operations in Operation Iraqi Freedom of March 2003. The writing style is good and photographs and maps are suitable.
    —Proceedings
    February 2006
Description: Since World War II, there have been no engagements between carrier air groups, but flattops have been prominent and essential in every war, skirmish, or terrorist act that could be struck from planes at sea. Carriers have political boundaries. They range at will with planes that can be refueled in the air to strike targets thousands of miles inland. From the improvised wooden platforms of the early 20th century to today's nuclear-powered supercarriers, Hearn explores how combat experience of key individuals drove the development, technology, and tactics of carriers in the world's navies.

In the early 20th century, during the days of the dreadnaughts, innovators in Europe and North America began to fly contraptions made from wood, canvas, wire, and a small combustion engine. Naval officers soon wondered whether these rickety bi-planes could be launched from the deck of a surface vessel. Trials began from jury-rigged wooden platforms built upon the decks of colliers. The experiments stimulated enough interest for the navies of the world to begin building better aircraft and better aircraft carriers. The novelty of a ship that could carry its own airstrip anywhere on the world's oceans caught fire in the 1920s and helped induce a new arms race. While the rest of the world viewed carriers as defensive weapons, Japan focused on offensive capabilities and produced the finest carrier in the world by 1940. World War II would see the carrier emerge as the greatest surface ship afloat. Since then, no war has been fought without them.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface and Acknowledgements
    Abbreviations
    Illustrations and Maps
    The Dawn of Naval Air Power
    From Dreadnoughts to Flattops
    Mobilizing for War
    Flattops in the Atlantic
    The Rising Sun
    Carriers at War
    Fighting for Time
    Coral Sea
    Midway--The Turning Point
    Evolution of Combat Tactics
    The Eastern Solomons
    The Battle for Guadalcanal
    Refining Career Tactics
    Island-Hopping in the Pacific
    The Marianas Turkey Shoot
    Ascent of the Air Admirals
    The New Air Navy
    Prelude to the Philippines
    Leyte Gulf
    The Setting Sun
    Command of the Seas
    Korea--Carriers and Politics
    Vietnam--President Johnson's War
    Cold Wars and Brush Fires
    The Desert Wars
    Afterword
    Notes
    Bibliography
About the Author: CHESTER G. HEARN is the author of eighteen books, including Sorties into Hell: The Hidden War on Chichi Jima (Praeger, 2003) and Circuits in the Sea: The Men, the Ships, and the Atlantic Cable (Praeger, 2004). He has studied naval and maritime history for much of his life, and his works include histories and biographies stretching from the Revolution to Desert Storm.
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