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Hearing about the anniversary of Loos, renewed
an old interest in artillery.
A gun of B Btry, 65th AAA Bn,1958 |
When I was young, my fathers' first command
after OCS was a battery of 120mm anti-aircraft guns. The battery was just outside a Marine base, near Naha, on Okinawa. The 120's were the
penultimate development in anti-aircraft artillery, soon to be made obsolete by
missiles. The gun tube was about 24 feet long and capable of firing a shell at 3100 ft/sec to an altitude of 60,000
feet.
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Back to the shrapnel shell - The Germans
can rightfully claim invention and first use of the shrapnel shell. In the 17th century, they developed a
projectile called the Hagelkugel, or
"hail shell". It was a lead
cylinder with a fuse and bursting charge at one end, the other end was
sealed. Behind the bursting charge was
the "hail" - metal fragments, bullets, or pebbles. When loaded into
the cannon, the fused end of the projectile faced the cannons charge. On firing, the bursting charge of the Hagelkugel released the "hail"
at about 100 yards from the gun.
The Hagelkugel
was used during the 1641 siege of Gennep, in the Netherlands. Unfortunately for German bragging rights,
artillery was an art and early artllerists were extremely secretive. This caused the Hagelkugel to sink into obscurity, allowing an Englishman to claim
invention and have his name forever linked to the Shrapnel Shell.
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While modern writers seem fond of stating
the Iron Duke thought it decisive at Waterloo, I find no credible evidence of
that and believe it apocryphal or politically
motivated since the government officially adopted the round. Accounts at the time describe it bursting
short amongst friendly troops, others described it as being indifferent or
ineffective. A Lt. Col. Frith of the
Madras Artillery wrote in 1818 that he had seen it fired into "large
bodies of horse, among whom they were seen to burst, but cannot call to mind a
single man killed by them." While there were battles, like the battle of
Vimiero where the English claimed shrapnel shells contributed to the victory,
reports from the receiving side were mixed ranging from their effect being terrible
to no worse than that of round shot.
Others said the effect varied from round to round. The truth probably lies in some middle ground.
Despite slow acceptance (according to books
of the early-mid 1800's,) Henry Shrapnel received a stipend for his invention
when it was officially adopted and the British government made Shrapnel Shell the official name of the
"spherical cased shot" projectile in 1854 after his family petitioned
for the name change to honor the inventor.
Improvements in the fuse, particularly by
Col. E.M. Boxer, and case design continued.
According to Bormann in "The Shrapnel Shell in England and in Belgium,"
1862, the most notable use of the shrapnel shell to date was during the Crimean
War on the last day of the siege of Sebastopol, 8 September 1855. Officers in a gun position manned by men of
the Royal Naval Brigade, decided to utilize shrapnel shells found in the
battery stores. Eyewitness accounts
reported these 8-inch shells "mowed down...whole lines of Russian troops
as they sprang to the breast works."
A mere 60 years passed from the siege of
Sebastopol to the start of the Loos offensive.
During this period much effort was put forth to improve the shrapnel
shell. Fuses were vastly improved. The
cases for shrapnel projectiles were designed, refined, redesigned and further
refined making the shrapnel delivery pattern increasingly effective.
Typically delivered by high velocity guns
like the British 18 pounder, the French 75mm, and the German 10cm, the shells
would give little notice of their arrival. There would be a quick "whizzzz"
followed by a sharp "bang!" The German slang for these rounds was
"Ratsch-bum," the Brits
called them "Whizz-bangs."
Unfortunately,
the Schrapnel-Aufschlag is not nearly
as good a drink as the Whizz Bang
and, like the Hagelkugel, condemned to oblivion.