Showing 1 to 5 of 5 search results
Fordson Sussex fitted with a Wild Balloon Winch
Aircraft & Exhibits, 1938-1945, London, Hangar Five, 1995/0886/V
Balloons were an important deterrent to low-level attack, usually sited on the approach to important targets. If an aircraft hit the balloon's cable, it would then be cut by explosive links, which in turn activated two parachutes. These would rapidly slow the aircraft, forcing it to stall and crash.
Royal Air Force Balloon Command, November 1938-June 1945
Archives, In Storage, B3054
Ring binder of typescript sheets, photographs and memoirs regarding the history and operations of Balloon Command during the Second World War complied by Flight Lieutenant William Forks.
Study: A Balloon Site, Coventry (VIII) by Dame Laura Knight, graphite and watercolour on paper
Fine Art, In Storage, FA01169
This compositional study is one of several preparatory drawings by Dame Laura Knight for a painting commissioned by the War Office to encourage recruitment of women to RAF Balloon Command - 'A Balloon Site: Coventry' (1942, Imperial War Museums).
Filter results by: Hide filters
Department hide filter
Type show filter
Associated with hide filter
- Balloon Command (RAF)
- Royal Air Force [3]
- Women's Auxiliary Air Force [2]
- 11 Group (RAF) [1]
- 2 Squadron (RAF) [1]
- 5 Balloon Centre (RAF) [1]
- 6 Balloon Centre (RAF) [1]
- 906 Squadron (RAF) [1]
- 911/23 Squadron (RAF) [1]
- 912 Squadron (RAF) [1]