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Overall print size
37" x 23 "
Base to the
legendary Douglas Bader Fighter Wing during the Battle of Britain,
Duxford became home to the 78th Fighter Group in April 1943. Today
it appropriately houses the American Air Museum, and hosts the
many summer air-shows where crowds thrill to the sight and sound
of the glorious WWII warbirds. First equipped with P-47
Thunderbolts then P-51Ds, the 78th Fighter Group was credited with
688 enemy aircraft destroyed, 474 in the air, and another 406
destroyed on the ground during low-level strafing missions.
Charles London of the 78th became the 8th Air Force’s first
fighter ace of the war and a 78th pilot, Quince Brown, was the
first to down a Me262 jet in August 1944. Nick Trudgian’s dramatic
painting vividly captures the heady atmosphere of a take-off
sequence from a busy wartime Duxford. It is March 1945. Led by
Colonel John Landers flying “Big Beautiful Doll”, one of the 8th
Air Force’s most flamboyant fighters, the 78th P-51D Mustangs roar
off the field to begin an escort mission taking B-17 Fortresses –
already airborne in the background – all the way to Hamburg. Most
of the hangars seen in Nick’s painting are still there today,
beautifully maintained, housing flying examples of the legendary
aircraft that won the Second World War.
Each print is signed by two highly
distinguished fighter pilots who flew P-51s with the 78th Fighter
Group.
Lt Colonel CLARK W CLEMONS
Captain WAYNE L COLEMAN
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