
Pubs, Pilots, and the Battle of Britain : Churchill’s ‘Few’ Living Life to the Full in Britain’s Darkest Hour
by Pen & Sword Books Ltd
£25.00
MPN9781036193041
Prices updated 21 May 2026
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Product Description
In August 1940, Spitfire pilot Tim Vigors was shot down by a Messerschmitt Bf 109 over Kent.After crash-landing in a field, he realized he would have to pass through London to get back to his squadron’s airfield.He decided there was no rush, called his girlfriend Jill, and hours after nearly dying, he was dancing the night away at London’s fashionable 400 Club. This juxtaposition of mortal combat and carefree revelry was not unusual – it was daily life for the young men of Fighter Command.Pubs, Pilots, and The Battle of Britain reveals how Britain's pubs and clubs became crucial lifelines during the Battle of Britain.These weren’t just places to drink – they were unofficial messes, refuges where fear and grief could be drowned in camaraderie, becoming even the centres of squadron identity.At the White Hart in Brasted, Biggin Hill, pilots signed the now-famous blackout board that became a roll call of Britain’s aerial defenders.At the Cat & Custard Pot near RAF Hawkinge, pilots who flew cover during the Dunkirk evacuation found momentary peace in its ancient rooms. From Kent’s country inns to London’s glittering nightclubs, this book maps the social geography of Fighter Command, documenting over 100 historic pubs and their connections to the RAF stations and squadrons made famous during the deadly summer of 1940.Readers will discover the ‘Twitch Inn’ at RAF West Malling, where pilots left their marks on the makeshift pub’s ceilings; the King’s Arms in Leaves Green, where a German tail gunner's strafing attack brought the war directly to the pub's doorstep; and London establishments where Polish, Czech, and British pilots forged the international bonds that helped win the war. Drawing on pilots’ diaries, squadron records, and previously unpublished accounts, this book provides the first comprehensive study of how pub culture sustained Fighter Command through Britain’s darkest hour.Within these pages, rare photographs capture aviators in their off-duty moments – drinking, laughing, and living with desperate intensity – revealing the human faces behind the legendary ‘Few’.
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