• By the war's end, the late model Churchill Mk VII had exceptional amounts of armour – considerably more than the German Tiger tank.
  • The Churchill was the last infantry tank design of WW2. It started badly at Dieppe, but later proved one of the most dependable British tanks of the war.
  • ] Churchill Oke (3) A Churchill II or III with a flamethrower . The Oke flamethrowing tank was named after its designer, Major J.M. Oke.
  • Churchill Infantry Tank Mk 1, 12th Canadian Army Tank Regiment (Three Rivers) taking part in Exercise Spartan in the UK, 8-10 March 1943.
  • The Tank, Infantry, Mk IV, Churchill I (A22) (or just Churchill I) was introduced to British service in 1941 as an infantry tank to assist ground forces in World War II.
  • On one occasion, a Churchill scored a lucky hit in the turret ring of a Tiger tank, jamming the turret. The crew hastily deserted it, leaving the Tiger as a prize.
  • The tank that had the honor of bearing the name of Winston Churchill easily falls into the category of one of the most iconic British armored vehicles of.
  • "Undoubtedly, the Churchill Infantry Tank proved to be the most important British tank of World War 2 and was produced in the thousands."
  • In fact it was the Churchill's performance in Tunisia that kept the tanks in production as the project had been scheduled to end in 1943.
  • Despite a troubled development, the Churchill tank went on to become one of the most numerous and versatile British tanks. This article appears in: March 2007.