By the time the Battle of Britain broke out, the aircraft had evolved into the Bristol Blenheim, a nearly obsolete twin-engine aircraft that nonetheless played an important role in the fight.
the world's only air-worthy Bristol Blenheim, the B-17 flying fortress Sally B, American P-51 Mustangs and other Second World War aircraft.
Laura Stopforth, from Tilehurst in Berkshire, owned the Bristol Blenheim seat which was was recovered by a farmhand in northern France in May 1940. Her father Jack Bartley, the aircraft's gunner ...
Flt Lt Robert George Coventry was killed when his Bristol Blenheim bomber crashed in 1940 in Quedgeley in Gloucestershire. He is believed to have taken evasive action to avoid hitting Quedgeley ...
The exhibition features seven aircraft that represent those flown during the summer of 1940 in Great Britain and France, along with memorabilia and guided tours.