D-Day Armada by Nicolas Trudgian

£150.00

Aircraft: P51 Mustangs, B-26 Marauders

Issued in 2004 to commemorate the 60th Anniversary of D-Day – 6 June 1944 perhaps the most decisive day in the Military events of World War II .

Signed by Captain CLAYTON GROSS, Colonel MAURICE LONG, Major General DONALD STRAIT

Description

There was never a greater concentration of air power deployed in an active theatre of war as over the English Channel in May and June 1944. As D-Day approached, the USAAF’s Ninth Air Force had assembled over 3500 aircraft and, dispatching up to 1000 aircraft a day, they were pounding enemy positions all the way from Pas de Calais to the coast of Normandy.

6 June 1944, arguably the most decisive single day in modern military history, saw the sky filled with waves of troop carrying aircraft towing gliders, dropping over 20,000 highly trained men in support of the massed sea-bourne landings on the beaches below. Grabbing all the airspace they could find, the combat wings of the Ninth Air Force were creating havoc among the German ground forces as they scrambled to get troops and armour to the battlefront.

Nicolas Trudgian’s new painting depicts a scene late on D-Day Plus One, as yet another aerial armada heads inland over the heavy fighting on the beaches below. Bearing their high profile invasion stripes, P51 Mustangs of the 354th Fighter Group are seen escorting B-26 Marauders of the 397th Bomb Group as they cross the battle lines, the Marauders’ mission to hit enemy targets ahead of advancing Allied ground forces. Below, endless flotillas of troop ships and landing craft are swarming onto the beaches as the second day of the invasion draws towards its close. A magnificent 60th Anniversary tribute to the men and machines of the Ninth Air Force who contributed so much to the greatest military invasion in history

Overall Print Size: 35.25” wide x 23.5” high

THE ACES EDITION

Each print in the Aces Edition has been individually signed

in pencil by THREE top P51 fighter Aces who flew combat

missions on D-Day, 6 June 1944.

Captain CLAYTON GROSS, Colonel MAURICE LONG, Major General DONALD STRAIT

350 signed and numbered with THREE signatures