5 March 1936: As soon as he was in the air test pilot Joseph ‘Mutt’ Summers knew that the sleek prototype fighter in his hands was a winner. It was a called a ‘Spitfire’ and not only had it been beautiful to look at but on this, its maiden flight, the nimble little machine was proving to be fast, powerful and incredibly responsive, everything that its designer R.J. Mitchell had hoped for. As he put the Spitfire through its initial paces high over the Solent, Summers began to acknowledge the distinctive throaty roar coming from the new Rolls Royce Merlin 12-cylinder liquid-cooled piston engine bolted into the fuselage ahead of him. It was a sound that friendly pilots would soon come to love and the enemy would fear.
Vickers’ chief test pilot wasn’t the only one impressed with Mitchell’s Spitfire; within three months of that brief maiden flight the Air Ministry was placing its first order. They were just in time because in mainland Europe thoughts were turning to the prospect of another awful war as Germany’s aggressive new dictator Adolf Hitler, began laying out his visions for a new world order – The Third Reich.
Hitler’s new Reich would be backed by the most powerful military machine of its day and already, the previous year, Willy Messerschmitt had unveiled his radically new Bf109 – a cutting-edge, all-metal monoplane fighter that already threatened to put Germany’s resurgent Luftwaffe into an unassailable position. Soon to be tried, tested and honed into battle- readiness during the Spanish Civil War, the Luftwaffe reckoned their Bf109 was superior to anything in the RAF’s arsenal. But, with the Spitfire, the RAF now had an answer.
When war eventually broke out in September 1939, nine squadrons in Fighter Command were already equipped with Spitfires, and more would follow. Soon Spitfires and Bf109s would be dueling on equal terms over France, and in the Battle of Britain the Spitfire would become a legend.
This previously never-released masterwork has been selected from the publisher's archives to serve as a lasting tribute to this iconic aircraft and all who flew her. With Merlin engines purring in perfect harmony and the warm glow of the morning sun behind them, a pair of Mk.V Spitfires race home as storm clouds gather below. Completed in 1986, this was a period of Robert’s career that included some of his most famous pieces featuring the supreme Spitfire – long sold out masterpieces such as
Coming Home Together (1985),
Return of the Few (1986) and
Bader’s Bus Company (1989).
Signatures:Limited Edition & Artist's Proof:
Adding great provenance to this historic and atmospheric release, the edition has been personally signed by a WWII Spitfire pilot who finished the war an Ace having scored 6 victories over enemy aircraft in this mighty machine.:
Squadron Leader ALLAN SCOTT DFMMatted Collectors Editions:
Every print in this four signature edition has been conservation mounted to include the original autographs of three famous WWII Spitfire pilots:
Air Vice-Marshal J.E. ‘JOHNNIE’ JOHNSON CB CBE DSO** DFC* DL
Colonel JAMES GOODSON DFC
Chief Test Pilot Sir ALEX HENSHAW MBEMatted Publisher’s Proof:
With all autographs of the Matted Collector’s Edition, each print in this ELEVEN signature edition is conservation mounted to include the original autographs of a further seven highly-regarded Spitfire pilots:
Squadron Leader F.A.O. ‘TONY’ GAZE DFC**
Squadron Leader CYRIL ‘BAM’ BAMBERGER DFC*
Flight Lieutenant PETER GRAHAM
Squadron Leader NIGEL ROSE
Flight Lieutenant HUGH PARRY
Wing Commander GEORGE SWANWICK
Squadron Leader TONY IVESON DFC AE