BRITAIN
AT WAR 155 HP VICTOR DIVE BLACKOUT RIPPER CHALLENGER I MBT SHOLTO DOUGLAS WW2
THE DARK SIDE OF THE HOME FRONT
HUNTING THE BLACKOUT RIPPER GORDON CUMMINS - Gordon Frederick Cummins (18
February 1914 25 June 1942) was a British serial killer known as the Blackout
Killer, the Blackout Ripper and the Wartime Ripper, who murdered four women and
attempted to murder two others over a six-day period in London in February
1942. He is also suspected of committing two earlier murders in October 1941. Convicted
of the murder of 34-year-old Evelyn Oatley, Cummins was sentenced to death for
her murder and was hanged at HMP Wandsworth on 25 June 1942. Cummins became known as the "Blackout
Killer" and the "Blackout Ripper" due to the fact he committed
his murders during the imposed wartime blackout and because of the extensive
mutilations inflicted upon three of his victims' bodies. He is also known as
the "Wartime Ripper" as his murders were committed at the height of
World War II. The murders committed by
Gordon Cummins have been described by one Detective Superintendent within the
Metropolitan Police as "by far the most vicious" he ever investigated
during his entire career
POST WAR RAF V-FORCE HP VICTOR
DEATH-DEFYING SUPERSONIC POWER DIVE
SINGAPORE SACRIFICE FROM SHIP
TO SURRENDER IN WW2
RAF AIR MARSHALL WILLIAM SHOLTO
DOUGLAS CONTROVERSIAL RAF COMMANDER
ILL-FATED BRITISH 18TH
DIVISION
BATTLE OF THE BOGSIDE
LONDONDERRY, NORTHERN IRELAND, AUGUST 15, 1969
WEAPONS OF WAR BRITISH FV4030/4
CHALLENGER I MAIN BATTLE TANK
REGGIE POHLMANN - WW1 RFC
YORKSHIRE WARRIOR
RAF VICKERS VARSITY TRAINER
STOLEN DURING THE COLD WAR
WW2 BRITISH ROYAL ENGINEERS
ADVANCE INTO THE NETHERLANDS
RAMSAY MUSEUM
EDEN CAMP COLLECTIONS
WAR DAMAGE TO BIG BEN
ROYAL NAVY SUBMARINE CAPTAIN
REAR-ADMIRAL SIR ANTHONY CECIL MIERS - Rear Admiral Sir Anthony Cecil Capel Miers,
VC, KBE, CB, DSO & Bar (11 November 1906 30 June 1985), known as
"Crap Miers" and "Gamp", was a Royal Navy officer who
served in the submarine service during the Second World War. Miers was a recipient of the Victoria Cross,
the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy
that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. He was allegedly
responsible for two war crime incidents, while commanding HMS Torbay, including
the shooting of seven Germans in a life raft.
WORLD
WAR TWO CONVOYS HELL ON THE HIGH SEAS