Several friends attended the Tracks To The Trenches event at
the Apedale Light Railway, 13th to 15th July 2018. Jim
Hawkesworth took excellent photographs of the 60cm gauge gun carrier which was
on show and we’d like to celebrate this extraordinary piece of history.
100 years on, a replica eighteen pounder British gun sits on a 60cm gauge carriage at th eApedale Tracks to the Trenches Event September 2018. Photo Jim Hawkesworth |
There was a long and intimate relationship between field
railways and guns; the extensive 60cm networks of the Western Front were much
used by artillery. This link went back many years. After the Franco-Prussian
was of 1870-1, the French and German armies both devised railways to get
guns into the field. No campaign could wait until a standard gauge railway was
built; road vehicles were inadequate at the time. Everyone realised that temporary railways could provide a solution..
The Decauville Company of France had light portable track
which they thought could be used for military purposes. Though portable, it
proved to be too light. French military engineers proposed metre gauge railways. The
Germans, rather more realistically, proposed track of around 70cm gauge.
Prosper Péchot of the French Artillery realised that 60 cm
gauge was the ideal compromise between the various existing tracks. He came to
this conclusion using mathematics, physics and experiments at the factory of
Paul Decauville. Whatever their differences later, the two men united in a
profound desire to win the next war against the Germans! Péchot also designed a sleeper for portable track.
Unfortunately, no-one likes to be told that their existing
efforts have been wasted and the French military were no exception. There was
mess-room warfare between the Engineers and the advocates of the Péchot
system. In 1888, Péchot triumphed and within a year 560 kilometres of track was
being manufactured. The Germans were watching. Their flirtation with 70 and 75
gauge was rapidly ended; bogie wagons similar in length soon
appeared on 60cm track. (Noted: German bogie wagons were lighter
in designand, though fit for purpose, few survive today)
Between 1888 and 1918, there were developments. General
Peigné devised the affut-truck. This consisted of an adapted and reinforced
Péchot well-wagon, with turntable fitted in the well. A gun was mounted on
this, either 120 or 155mm, which thus had a field of fire of 360 degrees. For
operation, the train had to stop and an apron and stabilisers were swung out.
It had an obvious disadvantage. Enemy guns could soon get its range; even if
the train went off to safety, the track would suffer from hostile fire. There
is more information in Dr Christian Cénac’s excellent book ‘60 centimètres pour
ravitailler le Front’ and websites such
as:
insomniacque.e-monsite.com or forum.pages14-18.com or Passion et Compassion 1914-19
We fast-forward to 1914-18. Soon after the Western Front was
established, both sides were being supplied by 60cm systems.
The French took their guns into the field. They were very
proud of the range and accuracy of their 75mm and 155mm (Long) guns, fitted
with hydraulic recoil. These could be part-dismantled and taken on Péchot
bogies. The Péchot bogie was an engineering wonder, durable and reliable. Quite
a few survive today. By 1915, it was clear that the French could never produce
enough Péchot bogies and wagons. They went for the lighter and simpler
Plate-forme Decauville which was produced in thousands (3000 wagons, 6,500 bogies). There is more information in my book Colonel Péchot:
Tracks To The Trenches.
When the British created their War Department Light
Railways, they were clearly inspired by Péchot designs. They adopted the bogie
wagon running on 60cm gauge rail. A range of wagons were created. There is more
information in Colonel Péchot: Tracks To The Trenches, Light Railways
of the First World War by WJK Davies and in a series of articles by Peter
Foley running from issue 39 to 60 of Narrow Gauge and Industrial Railway
Modelling Review.
Indistinguishable from the real thing! Apart from a few early examples most WD wagons, including the gun wagon, ran on these standardised bogies. These 16mm scale models are produced by Wrightscale |
War Department Light Railways were used to carry guns. Photos such as CO 3807 survive in the Imperial War Museum Collection to prove the point. There are other photographs in the NGIRM Review collection, as seen in Issue 71, page 292, and 79,
page 286. Enthusiasts will also like Appendix 1 of Narrow Gauge at
War (2) by Keith Taylorson. He makes an important point. Once WDLR railways
were up and running, ie from late 1916 onwards, there were field experiments on
various ways to carry guns. The photographs in the Appendix show an adaptation of the WDLR
F-class wagon being used to transport an Eighteen Pounder and a 6” 26-cwt
howitzer. (An 18 pound shell is roughly 8kg. A 6” shell is roughly 150mm in
diameter – 26 cwt is very roughly 1.2 tonnes.)
Replica gun wagon seen at Tracks To The Trenches. It is not an adaptation of a standard WD wagon. Photograph courtesy Jim Hawkesworth |
A group decided to
celebrate these gun wagons by building a replica, designed to take an Eighteen Pounder. This appeared at the Apedale Centenary Event 13-15 July 2018.
The Imperial War
Museum photographs show a
complete F-class wagon with stanchions removed and steel troughs slung either
side, supported by girders across the body. The Apedale replica consists of two
WD bogies supporting channel steel troughs bolted to a custom framework.
End view of replica gun wagon. Photo Jim Hawkesworth |
WOT! No authentic wagon butchered for their experiment! To
this, there are two answers. Firstly, in 1917-18, as in 2017-18, various
experimental gun carriages were built. The ingenious workshop staff used
anything to hand. To my mind the gun carriage is very much in the spirit of 100
years ago. Secondly, Tom Porteous, in his article in Review 71, remarks ‘what
appears to be shown (in a contemporary photo) is a wagon .. consisting of a
purpose-built frame straddling WD bogies.
End detail of replica gun wagon. Photo Jim Hawkesworth |
The Apedale wagon design echoes the Porteous research. Cross
members in steel channel are supported by the bogie pivots. They are fitted at
their ends with hangers which support the gun-wheel troughs. This gives a low
centre of gravity, a great advantage. In addition, the wheel channels are the
right spacing for the gun. If they had been fitted to the side of an F-class,
gun wheel spacing and the wheel-troughs would have been incompatible.
Detail, replica gun wagon. Photo Jim Hawkeswoth |
The motive power for the wagon (and water tank) in the
picture is a restored ‘Joffre’ 0-6-0 built by Kerr Stuart for the French Army.
There was a rush to provide enough motive power for the vast new trench
railways. A similar 0-6-0 tank locomotive was built by Decauville in the
period. Unfortunately, though similar in design, there were too many
differences to ensure that parts were interchangeable. If you haven’t got your
metric/Imperial callipers, a quick way to spot the KS Joffre is the
‘American-style’ spark arresting chimney. In addition, unlike the Decauville,
the platework of the cab side is level with the driver’s step.
The Germans did not have much use for these gun carriages. They
did, however develop almost legendary ‘big guns’
The small but deadly Minenwerfer
(trench mortars) could be moved by horse or human power; the field railway was
invaluable for keeping them supplied. I say ‘small’ but these trench mortars,
at 170mm, were of greater calibre than the French 150mm Long or the British 6”
howitzer. These German guns were not as accurate at long range but they were
very suitable for lobbing shrapnel and high explosive over no-man’s-land and
down into enemy trenches. They had successfully traded volume for accuracy
The Germans tended to keep large guns back from the Front. The
greatest were of such a range that they could be parked somewhere convenient,
supplied by standard gauge railway. They could then bombard French cities such
as Meaux from a safe distance of 50 kilometres or more. The fear was that they might get in
range of Paris.
In late July 1918, US troops recaptured la Fère en Tardenois,
Aisne, dangerously close to Meaux. Hidden in a
nearby wood, they found the mountings of one such giant gun. As the AEF
advanced, the gun itself had been removed by rail; it could have been a long
range 240mm design or 380mm. The 380mm gun had a shorter range than the 240mm
but even so this was 50 km.
In the photograph, French and US troops admire the ruins of
the huge emplacement. The gun had been mounted on a huge turntable supplied by
standard gauge rail. This has been partially destroyed by retreating Germans.
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