Heavy Artillery of WWI

By MSW Add a Comment 13 Min Read
Heavy Artillery of WWI

To the sentry standing his pre-dawn duty in the trenches of
the Western Front, the sight of a jagged line of light on the opposite horizon
cannot have been comforting, for behind such a line lay the fire of the largest
concentration of artillery pieces in history. World War I was an artillery war
and, while large numbers of field guns were involved in. all the major battles
of that conflict. It was the heavy artillery that ultimately won or lost
battles. It was only the heavy artillery that had the shell power to destroy the
earth or concrete protection upon which each side. came to rely for survival in
the front line, and it was only the heavy artillery that could smash a way
through the lines of defences behind which each side sheltered. By 1914 most
European powers had built up large gun parks that contained artillery of
increasingly heavy calibres and power. These were necessary to demolish the
rings of fortifications that all the major powers used to protect their
territories against the intrusions of others, but once those fortresses had
been bypassed by the events of the first year of the war the same heavy
artillery was equally useful in the strange conditions of the Western Front,
where trench lines imposed their own peculiar method of warfare.

The Great War was the heyday of heavy artillery. in the
purely static conditions that existed along the Western Front the heavy guns
and howitzers could be carefully emplaced with few thoughts of dramatic or
rapid moves, and they could be fed with their heavy projectiles for as long as
the required logistic machinery remained in being. They had plenty of targets
as each side burrowed deep into the earth to survive the storm that daily flew
over their heads. The only way to harm such burrows was by the use of heavy
projectiles that could smash their way through such protection as there was,
and these heavy projectiles could only be delivered by the heavy artillery.

ln an age in which mass-produced mechanical transport
devices are common-place, it comes as something of a surprise to realize how
scarce such devices were during the early days of this century. Before World
War I a great deal of power was generated by the simple application of manual labour
assisted at times by the power of the horse, and this has to be remembered in
the context of heavy artillery. At that time mechanical traction and powered
lifting devices were unusual. So when it came to moving and handling heavy artillery
there was often little more than brute force available.

Throughout the centuries gunners have learned to handle even
the heaviest of their charges using only what is to hand. This has always
involved a complicated system of timbers, joists, pulleys, levers and hard
work, and while this can on its own move even the heaviest field gun and its carriage,
such methods can have only a limited utility in the movement of large-calibre
weapons. Fortunately the monsters in service during World War I had generally
been designed at a time when metallurgy and mechanics were beginning to reach
an advanced state, so designers were often able to build into these weapons
some form of handling system that required only a minimum of physical effort
and also offered a greater degree of safety to all concerned. The various
systems usually involved built-in rails and ln; inches that enabled a howitzer
or gun barrel to be removed or withdrawn on to its transport carriage without
the need for special jigs and overhead structures. Some heavy artillery had
inbuilt cranes for the same purpose, while some designers simply decided that
the best way to assemble and disassemble guns was by suppling a mobile crane that
was issued as part of the weapon’s standard equipment.

So by the time of World War I the emplacement of a heavy artillery
piece was often not quite the problem it might have been, but usually there was
still a great deal of work to be done. Pits had to be dug to accommodate the
heavy firing platform needed by most weapons of the period, and in some cases
earthboxes had to be filled to counteract the forces produced on firing. Heavy
sub-assemblies still had to be manhandled on occasion, and this necessity often
led to the allocation of only the largest men to heavy artillery units.

Putting the weapons [together or taking them apart was only
one aspect of the labour involved in moving heavy artillery. Once the weapon
had been broken down into a number of loads, each load had somehow to be pulled
to where it was required. Before World War I this usually involved the horse or
other draught animal, but the largest weapons required so many teams of horses
that any real efficiency was impossible. Some of the less advanced nations had
to rely on the horse, but the more advanced nations came to rely upon powered traction
in the form of the internal combustion-engined tractor, the steam traction
engine and even railways.

Traction engines were very often normal commercial models
impressed into military service, and they rarely required any modifications for
their new role. With the motor tractors things were different, however. The motor
vehicle was still a relatively simple vehicle, and very often the power
generated by the engines was relatively low. The only way to gain the power required
tow heavy artillery was by the enlargement of engines to massive proportions.  This in turn led to large and heavy wheels to
carry the engines and transmit power, with the result that the specialist artillery
tractors of World War I resembled nothing more than huge bonnets carried on
large wheels. ln such examples the drive appeared to be a mere appendage to the
vehicle. Typical these monsters were the many designs produced in Austria and
Germany, such as the Austro-Daimlers and their ilk.  

But it should not be forgotten that all too often the motor
tractor and traction engine could not be used for the simple reason that even
under war production conditions there were rarely enough to meet all the
demands made upon the numbers available. All too often the gunners had to rely
on the horse for their traction purposes, and if horses were not available they
had to call upon such beasts as draught oxen or even camels. The difficulties
involved in using  huge teams of such animals
to tow heavy and awkward artillery loads across the shattered terrain of World
War I battlefields can barely be imagined, but for the gunners who had to carry
out such tasks we can now only offer our admiration.

French self-propelled heavy guns

Based on a large chassis developed by Schneider, the M
280 sur chenilles carried a derivative of the mle I 4/I6 Schneider howitzer.
Few of these 280-mm models were produced.

The Canon de 194 mle GPF used the same chassis as the
280-mm model. While elevation was limited, the vastly increased mobility was
more than adequate compensation. The driver of the carriage sat at the front of
the equipment, with the working area and rearward-facing ordnance behind him.
The petrol engine was at the rear of the carriage, below the elevating gear.

The Canon de 194 mle GPF (Grand Puissance Filloux –
High-Power Filloux) – was the first French tracked self-propelled gun (SPG).
Designed at the end of World War I, it was a pioneering weapon with many modern
features.

The vehicle was designed in Schneider’s Le Creusot works. It
was originally planned to arm it with a 155 mm gun but a weapon of 194 mm was
eventually chosen. A few examples of this SPG were armed with a modified 280 mm
siege mortar, this version was known as the M 280 sur chenilles (literally –
“tracked M 280”). Both weapons used the same chassis and were powered
by a 120 horsepower (89 kW) Panhard SUK4 M2 engine. Compared to its
contemporary British SPG, the Gun Carrier Mark I, the Canon de 194 was much
more advanced; it was driven by only one person, had hydraulic brakes and the
gun had automatically adjusting recoil mechanisms and pneumatic recuperators.

These two weapons shared a common carriage driven by a
petrol engine installed at the rear of the chassis. The driver sat at the
extreme front with the barrel cradle almost immediately behind him. A small
crane was provided to raise ammunition to the level of the crew platform behind
the breech. The design had one drawback, the installation so arranged that
ordnance elevation was somewhat limited (preventing the full range of the piece
from being reached), but the mobility that the carriage provided more than made
up for this. Later models were redesigmed to achieve increased elevations.

Not many of the 280-mm (11.02-in) models appear to have been
made, Production was apparently concentrated on the 194-mm (7.64-in) model, but
even so the main problem during the latter part of World War I was that there
were never enough of them, Despite their bulk and weight they were able to
cross terrain that no equivalent towed weapon could negotiate without
difficulty, and the gun itself had a good range and a useful projectile weight.

After the Great War all M 280 models were converted to take
the 194 mm gun. Around 50 were still in use at the outbreak of World War II,
some were used against the invading German forces. Surviving vehicles were
pressed into Wehrmacht service as the 19.4cm Kanone 485 (f) auf
Selbstfahrlafette. At least 3 of them were used by the Germans in Russia in
about 1942, serving in the 84th Regiment of Heer Artillery.

For its day the French self-propelled carriage was a remarkable
achievement. It now seems safe to say that it was the first true self-propelled
artillery platform to be used operationally in any numbers, and it certainly
had many features that were carried over to later designs. Apart from the
caterpillar tracks these carriages had automatically-adjusting recoil
mechanisms to suit all angles of elevation, hydraulic brakes and pneumatic
recuperators.

Specification Canonde 194mleGPF

Calibre: 194 mm(7.64 in)

Lengrth of barrel 6,50 m (2i ft 3,9 in)

Weight: in action 29600 kq (65,257 lb)

Elevation: 0* to 37* Traverse: 55*

Muzzle velocity: 725 m (2,379 ft) per second

Maximum range: 20900 m (22,855 yards)

Shell weight: 78.83 kg (173.8 Ib)

LINK [Russian]

By MSW
Forschungsmitarbeiter Mitch Williamson is a technical writer with an interest in military and naval affairs. He has published articles in Cross & Cockade International and Wartime magazines. He was research associate for the Bio-history Cross in the Sky, a book about Charles ‘Moth’ Eaton’s career, in collaboration with the flier’s son, Dr Charles S. Eaton. He also assisted in picture research for John Burton’s Fortnight of Infamy. Mitch is now publishing on the WWW various specialist websites combined with custom website design work. He enjoys working and supporting his local C3 Church. “Curate and Compile“
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