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TANK 
        USAGE IN WORLD WAR 1Compiled 
        from various sources  No 
        one individual was responsible for the development of the tank.  
        Its design can be drawn back to the eighteenth century.
 A number 
        of gradual technological developments brought the development of the tank, 
        as we know it today, closer until its eventual form was unveiled out of 
        necessity by the British army, or rather, navy, since its initial deployment 
        in World War One was, perhaps surprisingly, overseen by the Royal Navy. Richard 
        Edgeworth designed the caterpillar track, upon which the tank travelled, 
        in its crudest form in 1770.  The Crimean War saw a relatively small 
        number of steam-powered tractors developed using the caterpillar track 
        to manoeuvre around the battlefield's muddy terrain.  Thus even in 
        the 1850s the development of the tank seemed tantalisingly close - except 
        that its development dimmed until the turn of the century. With 
        the 1885 development of the internal combustion engine, by Gottlieb Daimler, 
        the Holt Company constructed a tractor in the U.S. This utilised Edgeworth's 
        caterpillar tracks, again to facilitate movement over muddy terrain.  
        It was even suggested at the time that Holt's machine be adapted for military 
        purposes, but the suggestion was never acted upon. In 
        1899 Frederick Simms designed what he termed a 'motor-war car'.  
        It contained an engine by Daimler, a bulletproof casing and was armed 
        with two revolving machine guns developed by Hiram Maxim.  Whe it 
        was offered to the British army it was dismissed as of little use.  
        Lord Kitchener, later Britain's War Minister, regarded it damningly as 
        "a pretty mechanical toy". Development 
        still continued despite the British War Office's apparent lack of interest 
        in the machine's potential. A company, Hornsby & Sons, produced the 
        Killen-Strait Armoured Tractor.  The caterpillar track this time 
        was comprised exclusively of a chain of steel links meshed together with 
        steel pins. After the 
        onset of the First World War Army officers first discussed the idea of 
        an armoured tracked vehicle that would provide protection from machines 
        gunfire in 1914. Two of the officers, Colonel Ernest Swinton and Colonel 
        Maurice Hankey, both became convinced that it was possible to develop 
        a fighting vehicle that could play an important role in the war. On the outbreak 
        of the First World War, Colonel Swinton was sent to the Western Front 
        to write reports on the war. After observing early battles where machine-gunners 
        were able to kill thousands of infantryman advancing towards enemy trenches, 
        Swinton wrote that a "petrol tractors on the caterpillar principle 
        and armoured with hardened steel plates" would be able to counteract 
        the machine-gunner. 
 General Sir John French and his scientific advisers rejected Swintons 
        proposals. Unwilling to accept defeat, Colonel Ernest Swinton contacted 
        Colonel Maurice Hankey who took the idea to Winston Churchill, the navy 
        minister. Churchill was impressed by Swinton's views and in February 1915, 
        he set up a Landships Committee to look in more detail at the proposal 
        to develop a new war machine.
 
 The Landships Committee and the newly formed Inventions Committee agreed 
        with Swinton's proposal and drew up specifications for this new machine. 
        This included:
  (1)  
        a top speed of 4 mph on flat ground;   (2)  
        the capability of a sharp turn at top speed;   (3)  
        a reversing capability;   (4)  
        the ability to climb a 5-foot earth parapet;   (5)  
        the ability to cross a 8-foot gap;   (6)  
        a vehicle that could house ten crew, two machine guns and a 2-pound gun. Eventually Lieutenant W. G. Wilson of the Naval Air Service and William 
        Tritton of William Foster & Co. Ltd. of Lincoln, were given the task 
        of producing a small landship. Constructed in great secrecy, the machine 
        was given the code-name tank by Swinton. The first prototype landship 
        was demonstrated to Ernest Swinton and the Landship Committee on 11th 
        September 1915.
 This first 
        tank was given the nickname 'Little Willie' (soon followed by 'Big Willie') 
        and, as with its predecessors, possessed a Daimler engine.  Weighing 
        some 14 tons and bearing 12 feet long track frames, the tank could carry 
        three people in cramped conditions.  In the event its top speed was 
        three miles per hour on level ground, two miles per hour on rough terrain 
        (actual battlefield conditions in fact). The 
        'Little Willie' was notably restricted in that it was unable to cross 
        trenches.  Although the performance was disappointing, Ernest Swinton 
        remained convinced that when modified, the tank would enable the Allies 
        to defeat the Central Powers. This handicap was however soon remedied 
        under his energetic enthusiasm. The 
        tank was in many ways merely an extension of the principle of the armoured 
        car.  Armoured cars were popular on the Western Front at the start 
        of the war, since at that stage it was very much a war of movement.  
        Their use only dwindled with the onset of static trench warfare, when 
        their utility was questionable. The 
        Royal Navy's role in tank development may seem incongruous but was in 
        fact merely an extension of the role they had played thus far in the use 
        of armoured cars.  The navy had deployed squadrons of armoured cars 
        to protect Allied airstrips in Belgium against enemy attack.  It 
        was this experience that Churchill drew upon when offering his department's 
        support for the 'landship'. The 
        first combat tank was ready by January 1916 and was demonstrated to a 
        high-powered audience.  Convinced, Lloyd George - the Minister of 
        Munitions - ordered production of the heavy Mark I model to begin (the 
        lighter renowned 'Whippets' entered service the following year). It 
        was not until 1916 that tanks were first introduced into battle, before 
        that armoured cars were being used, which had none of the off-road capabilities 
        of the tanks. Initially the Royal Navy supplied the crews for the tank. On 
        15th September 1916 the first British tanks were used in battle. History 
        was made on 15 September 1916 when Captain H. W. Mortimore guided a D1 
        tank into action at the notorious Delville Wood. The initial usage was 
        to ensure that it worked, and also to revitaise the attack at the Somme 
        atit was losing momentum. The tanks were sent out early that morning, 
        with infantry behind, to raid the German trenches. The first attack, one 
        tank was sent out, and an enemy trench gained. The tank was then hit by 
        a shell, and was disabled. Of the main offensive, three of the six tanks 
        got bogged down, one broke down, and the other two continued towards the 
        enemy line slowly, supporting the infantry, although the infantry did 
        move ahead, away from the protection of the tanks.   The 
        first tank offensive had been successful in the fact that they had scared 
        the Germans, and that they had not been disabled immediately. As a trial 
        though some were disappointed. Concerns that were raised included the 
        fact that the view slits were too thin to be able to see much while moving, 
        and they were targets for enemy gunshot; and the exhaust made too much 
        noise and the heat could have set alight the fuel tank. A further issue 
        raised was the amount of mud that found its way into the treads causing 
        them to block up.
 Shortly 
        afterwards thirty-six tanks led the way in an attack at Flers.  Although 
        the attack was itself successful, the sudden appearance of the new weapon 
        stunned their German opponents, these early tanks proved notoriously unreliable. In 
        part this was because the British, under Commander in Chief Sir Douglas 
        Haig, deployed them before they were truly battle ready in an attempt 
        to break the trench stalemate.  They often broke down and became 
        ditched - i.e. stuck in a muddy trench - more often than anticipated. Conditions 
        for the tank crews were also far from ideal.  The heat generated 
        inside the tank was tremendous and fumes often nearly choked the men inside.  
        Nevertheless the first tank operators proved their mettle by operating 
        under what amounted to appalling conditions. The 
        first battle honour awarded to a tank operator went to Private A. Smith, 
        awarded the Military Medal for his actions at Delville Wood on 15 September 
        1916. Meanwhile 
        the French, who were aware of British tank experimentation, proceeded 
        with their independent designs, although they remained somewhat sceptical 
        as to its potential; their focus at the time was firmly on the production 
        of ever more battlefield artillery. Nevertheless 
        the French had their Colonel Swinton, a man named Colonel Estienne. He 
        managed to persuade the French Commander in Chief, Joseph Joffre, of the 
        battlefield potential of the tank as an aid to the infantry. Joffre, 
        ever a champion of the 'offensive spirit', agreed with the result that 
        an initial order for 400 French Schneider (their first tank, named after 
        the factory which produced them) and 400 St. Chaumond tanks was placed. The 
        first French use of tanks was on 16 April 1917, and faired much worse 
        than the English attack. There were more tanks involved, but many of them 
        broke down, and those that did reach the enemy lines had no support resulting 
        in them having to retreat again. The main problems ensountered included 
        the temperature, far too hot for any human to operate safely, as well 
        as the vibrations, guns came out of their holdings. The French tanks did 
        not have the ability to cross trenches as had the British ones. Additionally 
        a problem was discovered in so much as an armour piercing bullet could 
        go through the walls of tanks. As a result of these problems, several 
        improvements were made to the design, modification was amde to the tracks 
        to reduce the collection of mud, and an 'unditching beam' was added, a 
        piece of wood that ran alongside the tracks when necessary to give extra 
        bit grip.  Similarly, 
        at Bullecourt in April/May 1917 the Australians pronounced great dissatisfaction 
        with the tank's performance. Tanks 
        were even deployed during the notorious, almost swampy, conditions of 
        the Third Battle of Ypres (more commonly known as 'Passchendaele').  
        They promptly sank in the mire and were entirely without benefit. In 
        what many regard as the first truly successful demonstration of the potential 
        of the tank, the entire British Tank Corps (consisting of 474 tanks) saw 
        action at the Battle of Cambrai on 20 November 1917 (although the French 
        can lay claim to its earlier successful use at Malmaison). In 
        a sweepingly successful start to the battle twelve miles of the German 
        front was breached, with the capture of 10,000 German prisoners, 123 guns 
        and 281 machine guns. This early morning attack caught the Germans by 
        surprise, initially the offensive had started out with what was then standard 
        tactics by first bombardimg the line with shrapnel, gas, etc. Then the 
        tanks began to move forward, crashing through the wire leading the infantry 
        and cavalry through. The tanks used fascines to fill the trenches, and 
        the men behind used these to cross. The attack was succesful until the 
        German Fortified position of Flesquieres was encountered, the tanks could 
        not continue, many ran out of fuel. Unfortunately 
        for the British this enormous initial success was effectively cancelled 
        out in German counter-attacks because the British did not possess sufficient 
        infantry troops to exploit the breach they had created. Nevertheless 
        the successful use of tanks at Cambrai restored dwindling faith in tank 
        development.  The U.S. army took note and undertook development of 
        its own tank series. It 
        also acted as a stimulus to the curiously hesitant German army, who had 
        expressed continuing doubts as to the battlefield value of the tank. They 
        too began to hasten production of their own models, although they never 
        pretended enthusiasm for their cause. The 
        U.S. Tank Corps adopted the use of French Renault tanks, light six-ton 
        vehicles designed for close infantry support.  Around 200 of these 
        were used in action at St. Mihiel and again at the Battle of Meuse-Argonne 
        during late September/early October (although losses were high in the 
        latter action). The 
        first successful display of German tanks came on 24 April 1918, when thirteen 
        German models, chiefly A7V's, engaged British and Australian infantry 
        at Villers Bretonneux. Successful 
        in driving back the British and Australians this encounter was to become 
        famous as the site of the first tank versus tank engagement.  Three 
        British Mark IVs fought three German A7Vs south of Villers Bretonneux, 
        the British succeeding in driving off the German tanks.   On 
        4 July 1918 the tank was used in a manner that helped to fashion the method 
        in which it was deployed in future battles.  General John Monash, 
        commander of the Australian Corps, launched an attack at Le Hamel by unleashing 
        a co-ordinated barrage of tanks, artillery and warplanes, all designed 
        to clear a path for advancing infantry.
 Monash 
        saw no point in attempting to gain ground by using infantry to storm enemy 
        machine gun positions.  Rather he believed in using technology to 
        facilitate a relatively uneventful infantry advance, with tanks at their 
        head. His 
        view vindicated, Monash achieved victory at Le Hamel in just 93 minutes.  
        Other commanders took note. Tanks 
        were increasingly used during the Allied advance of summer 1918. During 
        the French attack at Soissons from 18-26 July no fewer than 336 Schneiders, 
        St Chamonds and Renaults were deployed to support combined French and 
        American infantry. However 
        tank deployment on the grand scale was reached on 8 August 1918, when 
        604 Allied tanks assisted an Allied 20 mile advance on the Western Front. By 
        the time the war drew to a close the British, the first to use them, had 
        produced some 2,636 tanks.  The French produced rather more, 3,870.  
        The Germans, never convinced of its merits, and despite their record for 
        technological innovation, produced just 20. With 
        the French tanks proving more serviceable than their British equivalents 
        they continued to be used beyond wartime. The 
        French Renault F.T. tank continued to grow in popularity as the concept 
        of the tank as a close aid to advancing infantry prospered. Both 
        the U.S. and Italy produced their own tank designs which were based on 
        the French Renault model, a testament to its design strengths.  The 
        Italians produced the Fiat 3000 and the U.S. the M1917. Tank 
        design continued to improve beyond the war and the tank, which helped 
        to make trench warfare redundant, restored movement to the battlefield.  
        Its widespread use continues to the present day. Tank 
        Production 1916-18 
         
          | Year | UK | France | Germany | Italy | USA |   
          | 1916 | 150 | - | - | - | - |   
          | 1917 | 1,277 | 800 | - | - | - |   
          | 1918 | 1,391 | 4,000 | 20 | 6 | 84 |  Tank Terms 
         
          | Bellied | A term 
            used when a tank's underside was caught upon an obstacle so high that 
            its tracks could not grip the earth. |   
          | Ditched | A tank 
            became ditched when the ground beneath became so soft or waterlogged 
            as to prevent the tracks from gripping. |   
          | Gearsman | Tank 
            crew member responsible for managing the gears. |   
          | Panzer | A term 
            used to describe a German tank. |   
          | Whippet | Term 
            used to describe any light tank. |  
 
 Last 
        updated 
        28 October, 2022
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