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16 x 11.5 Inch Collector Size Unframed Lithograph $40.00 The Brewster Aeronautical Corp. commenced development of the F2A "Buffalo" in 1936 in response to a US Navy request for a carrier-based fighter capable of 300 MPH. Development took place at the time when Grumman was also working on its first carrier-based fighter for the Navy. Utilizing an all-metal mid-wing monoplane design the first Brewster Buffalo prototype flew in 1937. An initial order for fifty-four aircraft was placed in mid-1938. The F2A-1 utilized a 900-HP R-H20-34 radial engine and was armed with four machine guns. Eleven of the aircraft from the first production order were assigned to VF-3 which was based at that time on the USS Saratoga. The remaining forty-three aircraft were sent to Finland which was fighting off an invasion by the Soviet Union. In 1940 the F2A-2 variant entered production utilizing a more powerful 1200-HP engine. Capable of 323-MPH orders for three hundred additional aircraft were obtained including 170 from the RAF which at that time was in the midst of the Battle of Britain.. The Brits found the Buffalo very ineffective and not capable of dog fighting with the faster and highly maneuverable Bf-109s it faced. The British withdrew the Buffalo from front line service sending most of its aircraft to units in the Far East where the Buffalo would later play a role in defending Java Burma Manila and Singapore. Meanwhile the US Navy was becoming disenchanted with the aircraft due to weakness in its landing gear and its minimal armor plating. Nonetheless the Buffalo was one of the front line fighters the United States had in its arsenal when America entered WW II on December 7 1941. During the only serious combat in which the Buffalo was flown by US forces VMF-221 lost 18 of its 25 F2As during the Battle of Midway. The Buffalo proved to be no match for the faster and highly maneuverable Mitsubishi Zeroes flown by the Imperial Navy. Despite its lack luster reputation the Buffalo was utilized effectively by the Finnish Air Force in fighting the Soviets. Some of this success is no doubt due to the relative lack of combat experience by many of the Soviet pilots the fact that the Soviets had stuck with bi-plane fighter designs longer than other countries and the fact that Finland had some excellent pilots of their own. The top Finnish ace Eino Juutilainen attained thirty-three of his incredible ninety-four victories while flying the Brewster Buffalo. Several of his victories were obtained against American-built Curtis P-40s which had been sold to the Red Air Force. In his dramatic depiction entitled Buffalo Ace aviation artist Stan Stokes shows Juutilainen in action against Soviet P-40s during the defense of Finland.

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