World War II

SCIENCE!

Arthur C. Clarke demonstrated an interest in science from an early age. Born in 1917 in Minehead ona book he wrote in conjunction with his work on the landmark 1968 film with director Stanley Kubrick. (Cla rke is pictured on one of the f ilm’s sets in the image below.) Sir Arthur died in 2008 at the age of 90.

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More from World War II

World War II3 min read
Lightning Strikes
IF YOU ASK ME, World War II’s coolest airplane is the Lockheed P-38 Lightning. It looks like something a kid might have doodled in a notebook while daydreaming in class. I became enthralled with the airplane in junior high when I read a book by Marti
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Friend Or Foe?
As some of you correctly guessed, we removed the landing gear from the Grumman F6F Hellcat aboard HMS Indomitable. Please email your answers to this issue’s challenge to challenge@historynet.com. SEE OUR SUMMER ISSUE FOR THE ANSWER TO THIS ISSUE’S C
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The Worst Journey
ON JULY 4, 1942, at a crisis moment for PQ 17, an Arctic merchant convoyen route to resupply the Soviet Union, John Broome received a fateful order direct from British First Sea Lord Dudley Pound: “Most Immediate… Convoy is to scatter.” Broome, PQ 17

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