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Weapons of War - The Tank
One of the more famous weapons to emerge from the war was the tank.
The tank was nothing more that a farm tractor with armor plating
surrounding it. The British Mark I tank was an American built Holt
tractor with steel plate welded to it.
The key push for the tank came from originally a navy man, Winston
Churchill (Prime Minister of England during World War Two). He proposed
that what was needed to break the deadlock of trench warfare was
a land battleship. The land battleship would be able to advance
through no man's land (through the machine gun bullets and artillery)
and take enemy trenches.
The name "tank" comes from the security urrounding the
development of the weapon. The British did not want the Germans
to know what they were developing, so they used a code word. The
British called the new vehicle a "water carrier." The
story was spread that these vehicles were being built to carry water
to the men fighting in the Sinai Desert. The name stuck with the
vehicles when they were shipped to France in crates stamped "Tank."
They thought if the German saw the crates anywhere, they would think
they were water tanks.
The first tanks were not very successful. They only moved four
to six kilometers and hour and weighed 30 tons or more. Most of
the tanks were armed with machine guns, but a few were also armed
with cannons. Yet the tank was able to drive over trenches, barbwire,
mud, trees and machine guns. To compound the limitations of the
tank was the decision to use them before they were fully tested.
British General Haig
was so desperate to find a way to break through German lines that
he forced them to be used as quickly as possible. Without understanding
tactics and the necessary support, he sent them into battle in 1916.
Of the 49 tanks he was able to scrape together, 17 broke down just
driving to the battlefield. Many of the others became stuck in the
mud due to their weight and the terrain. Haig had selected a flood
plain to launch the first tank attack.
Although
only a few tanks made it to the enemy lines during the attack, they
were effective. They had done what men had been unable to do. They
defeated barbwire, artillery and machine guns. The effect of the
tank on the Germans was significant as well. A great deal of panic
was spread in the German trenches as many just ran from the giant
monsters. It did not seem to matter what they fired at the massive
tanks they just kept on coming.
The First Tanks in Action, September 15,1916
We heard strange throbbing noises, and lumbering slowly towards
us came three huge mechanical monsters such as we had never seen
before. My first impression was that they looked ready to topple
on their noses…Instead of going on to the German lines the three
tanks assigned to us straddled our front line, stopped and then
opened up a murderous machine-gun fire, enfilading us left and right.
There they sat, squat monstrous things, noses stuck up in the air,
crushing the sides of our trench out of shape with their machine-guns
swiveling around and firing like mad.
Everyone dived for cover, except the colonel.
He jumped on top of the parapet, shouting at the top of his voice,
"Runner, runner, go tell those tanks to stop firing at once.
At once, I say." By now the enemy fire had risen t a crescendo
but, giving no thought to his own personal safety as the saw the
tanks firing on his own men, he ran forward and furiously rained
blows with his cane on the side of one of the tanks in the endeavor
to attract their attention.
Although,
what with the sounds of the engines and the firing in such an enclosed
space, no one in the tank could hear him, they finally realized
they were in the wrong trench and moved on, freighting the Jerries
(Germans) out of their wits and making them scuttle like frightened
rabbits.
Bert Chaney
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