1:24 AIRFIX SUPERMARINE SPITFIRE MK.IXC - FLYING DRAY Plastic Model Kit
1:24 AIRFIX SUPERMARINE SPITFIRE MK.IXC - FLYING DRAY Plastic Model Kit is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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Airfix 1/24 Supermarine Spitfire Mk.IXc - Flying Dray
This 1/24 scale Supermarine Spitfire Mk.IXc kit includes all the parts you need to replicate the beer-carrying Spitfires, the Flying Drays. Build your own morale-boosting Second World War aircraft and create a lasting tribute to the heroes of war.
Also included are some additional resin parts, essential for enhancing the story of your model. These include two beer barrels with lids, two nose cones, two bomb racks and a slipper tank.
This kit comes with an Airfix pint glass, so you can raise your own morale while building your model.
History
Over the years, various photographs and stories from pilots memoirs have emerged about Spitfires that carried beer barrels. Publications mention a special Depth Charge Modification XXX. After the D-Day landings, squadrons based at the forward airfields in northern France would send a pilot back across the Channel in a Spitfire to collect some beer or ale in barrels strapped under the wings on modified bomb racks.
Obviously, such sorties would have been deemed highly irregular by the RAFs higher command, so the flights would not have been recorded as such in the pilots logbooks. Which leaves little official proof as to the exact details of these ad hoc deliveries.
Recurring details relating to these escapades frequently turn up in various secondary sources. One example is the involvement of The Henty and Constable Brewery in Chichester and the nearby RAF Ford. To raise spirits, the story was also propagandised by the newspapers of the time, accompanied by some clearly staged photographs.
So, its difficult to determine the full and accurate story or whether the pilots claiming involvement in such missions were instead guilty of not letting the truth get in the way of a good story.
In the summer of 1944, after the D-Day landings, British troops pressing into Normandy faced fierce resistanceand a dry pint glass. Supplies were tight, and morale was vital. So, in one of the wars most unexpected missions, Spitfire pilots took to the skies, not just with ammunition, but with beer.
Ingenious airmen modified drop tanks and strapped barrels beneath their wings, delivering much-needed refreshments to parched troops across the Channel. Some called it Operation Cheers. These werent official missions. They were flights of morale. Spitfires, symbols of British grit, became airborne drays for a brief, glorious period.
It wasnt about luxury. It was about home. A cold beer in a hot war zone was more than a drinkit was a reminder of what they were fighting for.
So, raise a glass to the RAF pilots who delivered courage, camaraderie, and casks, one flight at a time. Because even heroes need a pint!
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