Arthur Harris (1)
Author of Bomber Offensive
For other authors named Arthur Harris, see the disambiguation page.
Arthur Harris (1) has been aliased into Sir Arthur Travers Harris.
About the Author
Image credit: Stannus, RAF (1944)
Works by Arthur Harris
Works have been aliased into Sir Arthur Travers Harris.
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Allhallows School,Devon
- Occupations
- Manager of the South African Marine Corporation
- Awards and honors
- Order of the Bath (Knight Grand Cross)
Order of the British Empire (Officer)
Air Force Cross
Mentioned in Despatches (2)
Order of Suvorov (USSR|1st Class)
Distinguished Service Medal (United States) (show all 11)
Legion of Merit (United States|Chief Commander)
Order of Polonia Restituta (Poland|Grand Cross)
Order of the Southern Cross (Brazil|Grand Cross)
Légion d'Honneur (France|Grand Officer)
Croix de guerre (France) - Relationships
- Barbara Money(spouse)
Therese ('Jillie') Hearne(spouse) - Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, UK
- Place of death
- Goring, Oxfordshire
- Associated Place (for map)
- UK
Members
Reviews
Harris turns out to be a good writer and this treads just the right line between personal biography and historical record.
As a history of Bomber Command, from the high-level decision making, and also for Harris' justifications for most of the choices made, this is essential reading for anyone interested in WWII. It will never quieten the questions about whether Harris was right (on either aspect, the moral justification or the cost in crew lives) but it does largely show why Harris made the show more choices he did and how narrow his options had been.
This shouldn't be read in isolation from broader campaign histories or some technical history of the aircraft, avionics and weapons, but it's a very good book and fills a space that nothing else can. show less
As a history of Bomber Command, from the high-level decision making, and also for Harris' justifications for most of the choices made, this is essential reading for anyone interested in WWII. It will never quieten the questions about whether Harris was right (on either aspect, the moral justification or the cost in crew lives) but it does largely show why Harris made the show more choices he did and how narrow his options had been.
This shouldn't be read in isolation from broader campaign histories or some technical history of the aircraft, avionics and weapons, but it's a very good book and fills a space that nothing else can. show less
Obviously this is Harris' view, but that makes it essential reading - you cannot reasonably critique Harris or Bomber Command without reading this first and thinking quite deeply about what he says.
And it's well written with lots of interesting detail and perspectives to boot.
And it's well written with lots of interesting detail and perspectives to boot.
Statistics
- Works
- 1
- Members
- 90
- Popularity
- #205,794
- Rating
- 4.4
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 15
- Languages
- 1


