This highly illustrated survey gives a fascinating insight into the recent evolution of the British tank and its role in the postwar world. The engineers’ tanks – the flails, recovery vehicles, bridge-layers – are featured, as are the less-well-known British tanks made for export. All the British tanks that have seen service since the war are depicted,Īmong them the Conqueror, Chieftain, Centurion and Challenger. He describes its origins in Britain and its development and deployment in the Second World War and in the post-war period. Using a selection of contemporary photographs – supported by some modern photographs of preserved vehicles – Pat Ware sets the modern tank in a historical context. Fewer types of tank were built than during the wartime period, but the complexity of design and manufacture increased, and a level of technical sophistication in the key areas of armor, firepower and mobility was beyond the imaginings of the tank pioneers of the First World War. In this companion volume to British Tanks: The Second World War, Pat Ware provides an expert introduction to the design, production and operation of British tanks since 1945. New England Historic Genealogical Society.
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