GDG- Arty Anti-personnel Effectiveness

Norman Levitt njlevitt at hotmail.com
Thu Nov 30 08:43:02 CST 2006



>From: Batrinque at aol.com
>Reply-To: GDG <gettysburg at arthes.com>
>To: gettysburg at arthes.com
>Subject: Re: GDG- Arty Anti-personnel  Effectiveness
>Date: Wed, 29 Nov 2006 21:46:30 EST
>
>Esteemed GDG Member Contributes:
>
>
>In a message dated 11/29/06 1:09:20 PM Pacific Standard Time,
>ccj at infionline.net writes:
>
> > Please note: There was little real difference between the
> > artillery materiel of the Franco-Prussian War and that of the Civil War.
> > The famous French "75" to which you refer was introduced for service in
> > 1898.  It had the long-recoil cylinder that made it the first modern
> > quick-firing field gun.  The German 77mm C 96 n/A followed soon after 
>and
> > was in service in World War I.
> >
>
>I think that we must keep in mind that due to the nature of the munitions,
>the lethality of CW artillery was much different at close (canister) range 
>than
>at long (exploding shell and exploding case) range.  I suspect we are
>unconsciously influenced by 20th Century experience where artillery rounds 
>filled with
>high explosives were far, far more lethal at long range than their
>counterparts of the century before.  CW explosive shells were thick-walled 
>and contained
>a rather small powder charge sufficient to burst the casing and not much
>more.  Doctrine called for employing canister at ranges up to 200 or 300 
>yards,
>then solid shot for the next few hundred yards (yes, a solid 12-pound ball 
>or
>10-pound bolt could do nasty things to the human body, but their overall
>lethality was dwarfed by the spray of shot from canister at shorter 
>ranges).  And
>beyond that, exploding shells/case were called for, ideally exploding over 
>the
>heads of enemy troops, showering them with shell fragments (and balls from
>exploding case).  But to do this took considerable skill (and some luck) 
>with the
>types of fuses in use.  Certainly, sometimes an individual exploding shell
>might inflict a number of casualties, but can we realistically compare  it 
>with
>what canister did at much shorter ranges?
>
>Once again, I point to the low power of explosives used in shells.  Early
>high explosives -- including dynamite -- were too unstable to be fired from
>cannons by conventional means -- the shell would detonate while being 
>fired.  This
>led to a curious development late in the 19th century: the "dynamite gun",
>"dynamite referring to the projectile, not the projecting charge.  Such
>"dynamite" projectiles were propelled by compressed air to avoid too great 
>a shock
>during discharge.  Both US Army and Navy versions were employed to a 
>limited
>extent during the Spanish-American War.  But these low-velocity, 
>short-range
>weapons proved a technological dead end when more stable high explosives, 
>capable of
>withstanding the shock of firing from a gun, were developed, leading to the
>truly lethal artillery of WW1 and after.  (And, of course, the employment 
>of
>rapid-firing breech-loading cannon added to that lethality.)
>
>If data exists that distinguishes between casualties inflicted by canister
>versus those from other artillery rounds, a comparison would be very
>interesting.  From everything I have seen, the number of such casualties 
>drastically drop
>after a few hundred yards.
>]
>
>Bruce Trinque
>Amston, CT
>                    
>----------------------------------------------------------------


This very useful summary brings up a question that has always intrigued me, 
but for which I have never found a satisfactory answer:  Why did Lee expect 
so much of the famous artillery barrage of July 3, in view of the 
unreliability of case shot (very unreliable, so far as Confederate munitions 
went), and the extreme range of most of his gun-line?  Relatively small-bore 
field pieces simply didn't have much killing power with those munitions at 
that distance, and could not have been expected to do much to scatter a line 
of seasoned veterans.  Moreover, the barrage pretty well exhausted Lee's 
batteries and kept them from moving up with the PPT advance to support those 
troops at close range (presumably with cannister or grape).

Why were these weaknesses not obvious to a commander of Lee's experience and 
sagacity?  Are there any useful sources?

NL

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