Looking forward to more on your Bader/ Hurricane tribute Alan good look with the decals lots of info submitted on Bader in this thread seems that although he was a very brave skilful pilot he was a terrible leader and team player not the all round hero I previously thought he was a maverick perhaps from what I have read here .But for me regardless of his ego a man with no legs who climbs back into a plane when pilots were very limited in numbers in the country's hour of need then he should be respected faults warts and all along with all the other unsung men and women who served the Royal Airforce
Badder's hurricane ?
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Originally posted by \Interestingly Bader in later years mentioned “The awesome responsibility for this country’s survival rested squarely on Keith Park’s shoulders. British military history of this century has been enriched with the names of great fighting men from New Zealand, of all ranks and in every one of our services. Keith Park's name is carved into history alongside those of his peers"
The Battle of Britain, said Bader,
....was controlled, directed and brought to a successful conclusion by the man whose memory we honour today. The awesome responsibility of this country's survival rested squarely on Keith Park's shoulders. Had he failed, Stuffy Dowding's foresight, determination and achievement would have counted for nought...... This is no sad occasion. Rather it is a time during which we can let our memories drift back to those halcyon days of 1940 when we fought together in English skies under the determined of that great New Zealander we are remembering now....... Keith Park was one of us. We all shared the great experience. That is what we remember today. British military history of this century has been enriched with the names of great fighting men from New Zealand, of all ranks and in every one of our fighting services. Keith Park's name is carved into that history alongside those of his peers.
It is a noble tribute to Park and speaks volumes also for Bader. The axe had been buried. Whatever we may now think about his behaviour in 1940, he did the right thing in 1975.
Bader was not really a bad guy, more a fall guy. He had outdated ideas about fighter tactics and did not understand how the modern system designed by Park, Dowding and others worked. He should have been and could have been, brought into line by his commanding officers. He was only a Squadron Leader. Unfortunately he had the ear of Leigh-Mallory and he, along with other far more senior officers, used Bader for their own ends. In some ways Bader was as much a victim of the intrigue as he was a conspirator.
Cheers
SteveComment
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Well my hurry came this morning and YES ! Panick over all decals for Bader's aircraft are in the kit and I have a little pilot with similar hair style that I can pass off as Bader so happy times
This won't be a day job though there are to many parts and I shall get another one of these due to it having the engin showing this one will be just the aircraft with Bader to go with Gallands messy
So Montrose in on hold now as I don't want to ruin that build by rushing it to get it finished
Just one question chaps the ventral colour was it the pail green or the sky grey I have both but just kneed to know as the colour is named different for different kit makers
Thanks for all the info chaps it's been very enlighteningComment
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Alan, I'm not sure what you mean by 'ventral colour'. If you mean the underside then the colour would be 'Sky' which is the pale green colour.
It was a new colour in June 1940 and there was much confusion about what units were supposed to apply. The following signal was supposed to clarify.
The 'Type S' simply refers to the smooth finish and has nothing to do with the colour (Sky).
Cheers
SteveComment
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