Another Spitfire Ditty
		
		
				
					
					
				
				
		
			
				
					The Underbelly of History
A lot of stories like this buried with the men who fulfilled the  missions...

In the  lighter moments of WWII, the Spitfire was used 
in an unorthodox  role: 
bringing beer kegs to the men in  Normandy.
During the war, the Heneger and Constable brewery donated free beer to the troops.  
After D-Day, supplying the invasion troops in Normandy with vital supplies was already a challenge. Obviously, there was no  room in the logistics chain for such luxuries as beer or other types of  refreshments. Some men, often called 'sourcers', were able to get wine  or other niceties from the land or rather from the locals. 
RAF Spitfire  pilots came up with an even better idea.
The Spitfire Mk IX  was an evolved version of the Spitfire, with pylons under the  wings for bombs or tanks. It was discovered that the bomb pylons  could also be modified to carry beer kegs. According to pictures that  can be found, various sizes of kegs were used. 
Whether the kegs could be  jettisoned in case of emergency is unknown. If the Spitfire flew high  enough, the cold air at altitude would even refresh the beer, making it  ready for consumption upon arrival.
A variation was a  long range fuel tank modified to carry beer instead of fuel. The  modification even received the official designation Mod. XXX.
Propaganda services were quick to pick up on this, which  probably explains the official designation.

A  staged shot of the Mod. XXX tank being filled.
As a result,  Spitfires equipped with Mod XXX or keg-carrying pylons were often sent back to Great Britain for maintenance or liaison duties.. They would then return to Normandy with full beer kegs fitted under  the wings.

The  Spitfire had very little ground clearance with the larger beer kegs.
Typically, the  British Revenue of Ministry and Excise stepped in, notifying the  brewery that they were in violation of the law by exporting beer  without paying the relevant taxes. 
It seems that Mod. XXX was terminated  then, but various squadrons found different ways to refurbish their  stocks, most often done with the unofficial approval of higher  echelons.
In his book  Dancing in the Skies, Tony Jonsson, the only Icelancer pilot in  the RAF, recalled beer runs while he was flying with 65  Squadron. 
Every week a pilot was sent back to the UK to fill some cleaned-up drop tanks with beer and return to the squadron.  Jonsson hated the beer runs as every man on the squadron would be  watching you upon arrival. 
Anyone who made a rough landing and dropped  the tanks would be the most hated man on the squadron for an entire  week.

				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
				
			
			
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