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Hawker Collection (page 29)

Background imageHawker Collection: Hawker Typhoon

Hawker Typhoon

Background imageHawker Collection: Hawker Tornado HG641

Hawker Tornado HG641
Hawker Tornado, HG641, powered by a Bristol Centaurus radial

Background imageHawker Collection: Aeschna pilosa, dragonfiles

Aeschna pilosa, dragonfiles
Plate 21, an illustration of two dragonflies from Libellulinae Europaeae 1840 by Toussaint de Charpentier

Background imageHawker Collection: Aeshna sp. dragonflies

Aeshna sp. dragonflies
Dragonflies illustrated and described by Toussaint de Charpentier in Libellulinae europaeae descriptae e depictae (1840)

Background imageHawker Collection: Hawker dragonfly

Hawker dragonfly
A hawker dragonfly at rest, photographed in the Wildlife Garden at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageHawker Collection: Street Hawker

Street Hawker
People You See. From Teddy Bear (20 December 1969)

Background imageHawker Collection: Russian Falconer

Russian Falconer Date: circa 1910s

Background imageHawker Collection: Remains of Hawker and Grieves Sopwith

Remains of Hawker and Grieves Sopwith
The remains of the Sopwith aeroplane Atlantic (picked up in the Mid Atlantic) from the ill-fated attempt to cross the Atlantic Ocean by Harry George Hawker and Kenneth Mackenzie Grieve

Background imageHawker Collection: Belgian Air Force 6

Belgian Air Force 6
Remy van Lierde escapes to England May 1940, joins RAF and has many successes, notably shooting down V1 rockets, of which he destroys 38 flying a Hawker Tempest. Date: 1916+

Background imageHawker Collection: Hawker Hunter

Hawker Hunter
Hawker P-1067 British jet fighter Date: circa 1950

Background imageHawker Collection: Hawker Sea Hawk

Hawker Sea Hawk
British jet fighter Date: circa 1950

Background imageHawker Collection: Page from Aircraft of the Royal Air Force card album

Page from Aircraft of the Royal Air Force card album
Page from Aircraft of the Royal Air Force cigarette card album issued by John Player & Sons, featuring the Hawker Demon I (Turret) Fighter; the Hawker Fury Fighter; and the Hawker Hurricane Fighter

Background imageHawker Collection: Dragonfly (Aeshna Cyanea) emerged from exuvia

Dragonfly (Aeshna Cyanea) emerged from exuvia
A close-up view of a Dragonfly (Aeshna Cyanea, Southern Hawker) which has just emerged from its exoskeleton or exuvia

Background imageHawker Collection: RAF camp with Hurricanes

RAF camp with Hurricanes
Royal Air Force Camp, Medmenham, Buckinghamshire with parked Hawker Hurricane fighter aircraft. Pastel sketch by Raymond Sheppard

Background imageHawker Collection: Hawker Hurricanes in formation; Second World War, 1940

Hawker Hurricanes in formation; Second World War, 1940
Photograph showing a squadron of British Hawker Hurricane fighter airplanes flying in a tight formation, somewhere over Britain in 1940

Background imageHawker Collection: Hawker Hind

Hawker Hind
Essentially an updated Hart, this two-seat light bomber will be in service with the Royal Air Force till 1939, and a few will be flying in Afghanistan in the 1950s !

Background imageHawker Collection: HURRICANE PROTOTYPE

HURRICANE PROTOTYPE
Sidney Camms F36/34 monoplane will develop into the Hurricane, the most efficient if not the most glamorous of the Royal Air Forces fighters

Background imageHawker Collection: Hawker Super Fury

Hawker Super Fury
The single-seat Fury fighter goes into service in 1931, and soon improved or modified models make their appearance, such as this Super Fury offering enhanced performance. Date: 1933

Background imageHawker Collection: Rev Robert Hawker / Robert

Rev Robert Hawker / Robert
REV ROBERT HAWKER Clergyman and writer, Vicar of Charles, Plymouth



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