Old Magazine Articles
Article Summary

The U.S. Navy Railway Guns That Served In
World War I France

• The American Legion Weekly, 1919 •

Written for The American Legion Weekly a year after the war, the attached article tells the story of the five American naval batteries that were mounted on specially made rail cars and deployed along the Western Front. The article is two pages long and is filled with interesting facts as to the whereabouts of their assorted deployments and what was expected of the naval crews who worked them.

"The Germans found the range of Battery 1 on October 5 and opened a spunky retaliatory fire. A shell burst directly over the big gun with no casualties. Shells fell on both sides of the train, but only one direct hit was scored. It sent a bucketful of wash clothes scattering over the landscape."

"The sailor is a peculiarly adaptable fellow. His life afloat embraces many phases, of life ashore. He had his land legs every minute and his shooting eye all the time he served the guns on the Western Front. Numerically he was a minor factor. In the great sea of olive drab he was only a speck of navy blue. What he lacked in numbers, however, he quite equalized in armament. His sixty-foot weapon and its 1,400-pound projectile aided him materially in becoming an important element in the fighting that finally satisfied the Hun."

This site has more articles about the rail-mounted guns of the First World War.

     




World War One Surfer
<— Prev    |    Next —>

 

 

 

 

 

 

Additional Article Summaries

African Americans | African Americans Ku Klux Klan | African Americans Lynchings | American Civil War History | American Civil War History Chronology | American Civil War History Gettysburg | American Civil War History Lincoln | Art & Architecture | Assorted Interviews and Profiles | Biplanes | Cartoons 1914-1922 | Early Aviation Zeppelins and Dirgibles | Early Cars & Automotive History | European Royalty | Golf | History of Israel and the Jews | Immigration | Literature 19th Century Writers | Literature 20th Century Writers | Living History | Men & Women | Miscellaneous | Music | Native Americans | Old Iraq | Opinions About Americans | Post World War One | Post World War One Versailles Treaty | Pre-World War One | Prohibition | Prohibition Prohibition Cartoons | Religion | Silent Movies | Silent Movies Cartoons | Silent Movies Charlie Chaplin | Tennis | The Talkies | Titanic | U.S. Army Uniforms of World War One | U.S. Army Uniforms of World War One Trench Coats | U.S. Army Uniforms of World War One U.S. Armies, Corps and Divisions | U.S. Navy Uniforms of World War One | U.S. Navy Uniforms of World War One U.S. Marine Corps Uniforms | Weird Inventions | Women’s Fashion, Society and Manners | Women’s Fashion, Society and Manners Flappers | Women’s Fashion, Society and Manners Men’s Fashion | Women’s Fashion, Society and Manners Personal Beauty | Women’s Suffrage | World War I Posters | World War One | World War One African Americans | World War One Clip Art | World War One Inventions and Weapons | World War One Letters | World War One Memoirs | World War One Writing | World War One British Uniforms | World War One Color Photographs | World War One From the Stars and Stripes | World War Two | World War Two Japanese Internment | World War Two Weapons | World War Two Yank Magazine | Yank Magazine General Marshall

© Copyright 2008 Old Magazine Articles
 
start end