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Canon de 75 modèle 1897

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Canon de 75mm Modele 1897

Canon de 75 Modèle 1897 on display in Les Invalides.
Type Regimental artillery field gun
Place of origin France
Service history
In service 1897–1945
Used by France, United States, Poland, Belgium, Romania, Germany,Finland
Wars Boxer Rebellion,World War I,
Polish-Bolshevik War,
World War II
Production history
Designed 1891–96
Produced 1897–1940?
Number built 21,000+
Specifications
Weight 1190 kg
Barrel length 2721 mm (36 calibre (2.70 m, 106 inch))
Crew 6

Shell High-explosive, shrapnel, anti-tank (5.97-7.25 kg)
7.24 kg / 15.96 lb shrapnel shell
Caliber 75 mm / 2.95 in
Carriage Horse-drawn (6 horses),
Artillery tractors
Elevation -11° to +18°
Traverse:
Rate of fire 15/min
Muzzle velocity 529 m/s / 1735 ft/s
Effective range 7000 m with normal ammunition
Maximum range 6.85 km / 7480 yd
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Riffling of a 75 modèle 1897
Enlarge
Riffling of a 75 modèle 1897

The French 75mm field gun is a quick-firing field artillery piece developed before World War I and serving into World War II. It was commonly known as the French 75, or at times simply the 75 or Soixante Quinze. It introduced, for the first time in field artillery history, a hydro-pneumatic recoil mechanism which permitted very high rates of fire while the gun's aim remained unaffected by the recoil. It was entirely manufactured at State-controlled arsenals, principally at "Atelier de Construction de Puteaux". The French 75's official designation was: Materiel de 75mm Mle 1897. It is not to be confused with the Schneider manufactured "Canon de 75mm Mle 1912" used by French cavalry, and its 1914 modification. Although they fired the original French 75's ammunition, these privately manufactured Schneider guns were lighter, smaller and mechanically different.

Contents

[edit] Development

The forerunner of the French 75 was an experimental 57mm gun which was first tested in September 1891 at Bourges arsenal. It pulled together a comprehensive package of the most advanced artillery techniques available at the time:

1) Vieille's smokeless powder invented in 1884.
2) Self-contained ammunition : the powder charge was in a brass case which held the shell.
3) An early hydro-pneumatic short-recoil mechanism designed by Lt Baquet .
4) A rotating screw breech, soon to appear on the 75mm field gun , built under licence from Thorsten Nordenfelt .

The following year, General Mathieu, the leader of French artillery, requested to upgrade this prototype to a 75mm field gun. The project was taken over by Lt-Colonel Deport at " Atelier de Construction de Puteaux." It took five more years under the leadership of Mathieu's successor, General Deloye, to perfect and finally adopt the Deport long-recoil field gun. Various deceptions, some of them linked to the Dreyfus Case, had been implemented by General Deloye and French counter-intelligence to distract German espionage.

The new 75mm field gun was functional by the summer of 1894, but difficulties persisted in keeping the recoil mechanism pressure tight. Hydraulic fluid leakage was typical of this experimental phase of artillery development. For example, Conrad Haussner's hydro-pneumatic system, patented in 1891, had been rejected by the Germans for this very reason.

In December 1894, Lt-Colonel Deport (1846-1929) was passed over for promotion and resigned to join a private armament firm. Two young engineers who had worked under him, Captains Sainte-Claire Deville and Rimailho , carried on with the project and brought it to fruition in 1896 . Their essential contribution was a leak-proof hydro-pneumatic long-recoil mechanism they called "Frein II." It kept high internal pressures almost indefinitely and under the worst field conditions. Captain Sainte-Claire Deville (1857-1944) designed additional features of importance such as an automatic device for piercing the fuses of shrapnel shells to desired bursting distances, while firing was in progress. The two independent sights had also been perfected for easy field use by the crews. A nickel-steel shield protected the gunners. The gun was adopted on March 28,1898 under the official name of " Materiel de 75mm Mle 1897. "

The French 75 fired two types of shells, in 1914, with a muzzle velocity of 500 meters/second and a maximum range of 6,900 meters a 5.3 kg slightly delayed ( 0"05) impact-fused, high-explosive (HE) thin-walled steel shell designed to explode at a man's height after having bounced forward off the ground ( the 75 had a low angle trajectory). A melted explosive called trinitrophenol, picric acid or "Melinite", was used since 1888 to fill French artillery shells and: a 7.24 kg time-fused shrapnel shell containing 290 lead balls which were shot forward , at the instant of bursting high above ground. Later during WW-1 several new shells and fuses were introduced (because trench warfare had changed the rules) including a shell that could reach up to 11,000 meters. All the shell types were fixed to brass cartridges which were automatically ejected when the breech was opened. The French 75 had introduced a new concept in artillery technology: quick firing without having to re-align the gun on its target after it had been fired. The old artillery had to be re-sighted after each shot in order to stay on target and thus fired no more that 2 aimed shots per minute . The French 75 easily delivered 15 aimed rounds per minute and could fire even faster for short periods of time. This rate of fire, the gun's accuracy and the lethality of the ammunition, made the French 75 superior to all other regimental field artillery in existence at the time. When made ready for action, the first shot buried the rear spade and the two wheel anchors into the ground, following which all other shots were fired from an entirely stable platform. The gun was unable to elevate beyond 18 degrees, unless the rear spade had been deeply buried into the ground : the 75mm field gun was not designed for plunging fire. The gun could be laid horizontally within a narrow, but sufficient 6 degrees without moving the wheels.

[edit] World War I Service

French artillery entered the war in August 1914 with more than 4000 Mle 1897 75mm field guns ( 1000 batteries of 4 guns each ). It is credited for having played a major role in stopping and reversing the German invasion during the first Battle of the Marne ( September 1914 ) and later at Verdun (1916). The Mle 1897 75mm field gun was manned by highly trained crews led by officers recruited among graduates of engineering schools. Men recruited from the countryside took care of the 6 horses that pulled each gun and its first caisson. Another 6 horses pulled the 2 additional caissons which were assigned to each gun. Over 17,500 Mle 1897 75mm field guns were produced during WWI. All the essential parts, including the gun's barrel and the hydro-pneumatic recoil mechanisms were manufactured by French State arsenals : Puteaux, Bourges, Chatellerault and St Etienne. A truck-mounted anti-aircraft version of the French 75 was assembled by the automobile firm of De Dion-Bouton and adopted in 1913. The total production of 75mm shells during WWI exceeded 200 million rounds, mostly by private industry. In order to ramp-up shell production from 20,000 rounds per day to 100,000 in 1915, the government turned to civilian contractors and, as a result, shell quality deteriorated. This led to an epidemic of burst barrels which afflicted 75mm artillery during 1915. At the worst time in March 1915, statistics showed 1 burst barrel for each 3,000 rounds fired, whereas in 1914 it was 1 burst barrel for 500,000 rounds fired. Colonel Sainte-Claire Deville confronted the crisis (defects in the base of the shells, due to shortcuts in manufacturing) and the problems were corrected. Shell quality came back by September 1915, but never to the full exacting standards of pre-war manufacture. The French Army also used, for its cavalry, a 75mm field gun made by the firm of Schneider: the "Canon de 75mm Mle 1912." The gun was smaller and lighter and it featured a swivel breech plus a Schneider-designed hydro-pneumatic recoil system. The 75mm Mle 1912 Schneider was also sold to other countries, including Serbia, Poland and Italy. The Mle 1912 Schneider fired the same ammunition as the older Mle 1897 French 75 and, although its barrel was shorter, it could reach at a maximum distance of about 7 kilometers. The American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) in France used the Mle 1897 French 75 in large numbers; 480 American 75mm batteries of 4 guns each were in the field, by November 1918. As an aside, Captain Harry S Truman was a 75mm battery commander during Meuse-Argonne in September-October 1918 (Battery "D",129th Field Artillery). The favorable experience with this weapon had led to its adoption by the U.S. Army in May 1918. Manufacturing of the French 75 by U.S. industry begun in the spring of 1918. Carriages were manufactured by Willys-Overland, the hydro-pneumatic recuperators by the Singer Manufacturing Co and Rock Island Arsenal, the barrels by Symington-Anderson and Wisconsin Gun Company. Of the 1050 French 75s built in the U.S.A. by April 1919, 143 were shipped to France before the Armistice of November 11,1918.

"75mm PAK 97/38"
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"75mm PAK 97/38"
"75mm PAK 97/38"
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"75mm PAK 97/38"

[edit] World War II Service

Despite obsolescence brought on by new developments in artillery design by World War II, large numbers of 75s were still in existence in 1939 ( 4,500 in the French army alone) and they eventually found their way into a number of unlikely places . Some had been delivered to Poland in the 1920's, together with infantry ordnance, in order to fight the Bolsheviks. They were known as : 75mm Armata Polowa wz.1897/17 . In 1939 the Polish army had 1374 of these guns, making it by far the most numerous artillery piece in Polish service.

Some French guns were modernised between the wars, in part to adapt it for anti-tank fire, resulting in the Canon de 75 Mle 1897/33. Many were captured by Germany during the Fall of France in 1940, in addition to many Polish guns captured in 1939. Over 600, renamed 7.5 cm PaK 97/38, were mounted on a 5 cm PaK 38 carriage and put to use by the Wehrmacht in 1942 as an emergency weapon against the Soviet Union's T-34 and KV tanks.

The US Army having adopted the French 75 during WWI kept a large inventory of the gun and used it for training purposes. During the 1930's many of those were equipped with rubber tires. Others were mounted on a split trail permitting plunging fire: the French 75 M2A1,A2 and A3. Furthermore, M3 Half-Track mounted French 75's were used in the Pacific theater for quite a while, following Pearl Harbor, and later during the landing operations in North Africa and Italy. One of the more ingenious uses for the old gun was its mounting in B-25 Mitchell bombers for attacking Japanese shipping. Otherwise the French 75 was replaced by the U.S. 105mm M101 split-trail Howitzer by 1941.

[edit] References

  • Alvin, Colonel, Andre, Commandant (1923). Les Canons de la Victoire ( Manuel d'Artillerie). Paris: Charles Lavauzelle & Cie.
  • Benoit, Lt-Col. Christian (1996). Le Canon de 75: Une gloire centenaire. Vincennes, France: S.H.A.T.. ISBN 2-86323-102-2.
  • Challeat, J. (1935). Histoire technique de l'artillerie en France pendant un siecle (1816-1919). Paris: Imprimerie Nationale.
  • Crowell, Benedict (1919). America's Munitions, 1917-1918. Washington, D.C.: U.S.Government Printing Office.
  • Demaison, Gerard (1997). Le centenaire d'une arme legendaire: Le canon de 75 Mle 1897, Cahiers № 24, A.N.S.B.V.. Verdun: Musee Memorial de Verdun.
  • Doise, Jean (1994). Un secret bien garde: Histoire militaire de l'Affaire Dreyfus. Editions du Seuil. ISBN 2-02-021100-9.
  • Touzin, Pierre, Vauvillier, Francois (2006). Les Materiels de l'Armee Francaise: Les canons de la victoire, 1914-1918. Tome 1: L'Artillerie de Campagne. Paris: Histoire et Collections. ISBN 2-35250-022-2.
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