• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Paris Gun attacks, the original.

Indeed. If you are talking about super heavy guns, one shouldn't really compare them to normal airpower, but the Tallboy and Grand slam raids.
That is absolutely true. But even more modest air raids were more effective than these monster guns, in proportion to the resources expended on them. The disruption of the Sevastopol communications systems, achieved by mere Ju 87s, was more damaging to the Soviet forces than the big explosions effected by Gustav and Thor.
 
The dearth of appropriate targets is the problem. The Turks used that big mother on Constantinople in 1453, and ever since some people have been certain that size matters.

Great Turkish Bombard.

I just yesterday finished a historical novel in which the Dardanelles gun plays a part. In 1807! And that's not fiction, they actually used it then. Rate of fire is, of course, abysmal. Note that it's effectively a muzzle loader -- the barrel screws onto the breach.

The Paris gun, meanwhile is quite reminiscent of the air cannons used in punkin chunkin!
 
I just yesterday finished a historical novel in which the Dardanelles gun plays a part. In 1807! And that's not fiction, they actually used it then. Rate of fire is, of course, abysmal. Note that it's effectively a muzzle loader -- the barrel screws onto the breach.

The Paris gun, meanwhile is quite reminiscent of the air cannons used in punkin chunkin!
There's another one of the same date, similar sort of weapon, in Edinburgh Castle. Mons Meg. It too was fired much later.
Mons Meg was last fired on 14th October 1681 to celebrate the birthday for the Duke of Albany and York (later King James VII of Scotland and II of England) The ancient gun's barrel burst.
It burst because even when it it was used merely to fire a salute, it was loaded with a large stone ball.
When it was fired on 3 July 1558, soldiers were paid to find and retrieve the shot from Wardie Muir, near the Firth of Forth, a distance of two miles. The salute marked the solemnization of the marriage of Mary, Queen of Scots, to the French Dauphin.
Soldiers were paid to find and retrieve the projectile. Now, can someone tell me why they would load it with ball in this role?
 
Last edited:
The RAF sank a German battleship, the Tirpitz, with Tallboy bombs?

Amongst other things, yes.

Looking at Wiki, only Thor's heaviest shell was heavier than the heaviest bomb routinely carried by Mosquito bombers

Some of the Nazi weapons were a brilliant waste of resources.

The Ratte and the Landkreuzer P. 1500 Monster would have been gifts to Allied aircraft, always assuming that they managed to move anywhere - Gawdzilla might have stats for the estimated. mechanical attrition rate per 100km for normal tanks in WWII (I seem to recall that for a normal tank battalion it was about 30%) but such large vehicles would be significantly worse, and of course a single event would immobilise the entire force rather than just one tank (because the force would *be* just one tank...
 
Before the advent of airpower big railway guns made some kind of sense. Not so much after.
 
The RAF sank a German battleship, the Tirpitz, with Tallboy bombs?

And destroyed various other high-value targets without having to get within 40km on land of them

Before the advent of airpower big railway guns made some kind of sense. Not so much after.

In a static situation, like WWI, yes. They would have been pretty poor in defence, 14-shells a day is not going to halt an attack and in a fluid situation would probably lag the advance, or the retreat.
To elaborate on your point:

It would provide a high value target for any aircraft. You probably would need air supremacy (not just superiority) to use it, when you wouldn't need to.

ETA: At least one can see the rationale behind something like the Yamato (with a 27kt speed and a lot of secondary armament which one might consider would provide some protection against aircraft. In shore bombardment under air supremacy, battleships were important for shore bombardment and probably did have something to offer that aircraft didn't.
 
Last edited:
In shore bombardment under air supremacy, battleships were important for shore bombardment and probably did have something to offer that aircraft didn't.

Battleships can 'loiter' for as long as you need them and can fire all day and night. They can put a lot of tonnage in to a very small area.With a good observer they were probably more accurate than bombers.
After D-Day RN Battleships and Cruisers gave massive fire support to the beachheads acting as heavy artillery. Look at the history of HMS Warspite for example. By D-Day she had more battle honours than any other RN ship and barely survived sinking when she was hit by a Fritz X guided missile that left a 20ft hone in her bottom and put a boiler room and X turret out of action permanently. After a repair back in the UK using Concrete to patch the holes she was the first ship to open fire on D-Day from a range of 26,000 yards and fired until her magazines were empty. Then after re-arming she continued to shoot until her guns were worn out. New barrels were fitted in Rosyth and she went back to France again. Her 15" guns fired 2000lb shells to a range of 37,870 yards.
 
Battleships can 'loiter' for as long as you need them and can fire all day and night. They can put a lot of tonnage in to a very small area.With a good observer they were probably more accurate than bombers.
After D-Day RN Battleships and Cruisers gave massive fire support to the beachheads acting as heavy artillery. Look at the history of HMS Warspite for example. By D-Day she had more battle honours than any other RN ship and barely survived sinking when she was hit by a Fritz X guided missile that left a 20ft hone in her bottom and put a boiler room and X turret out of action permanently. After a repair back in the UK using Concrete to patch the holes she was the first ship to open fire on D-Day from a range of 26,000 yards and fired until her magazines were empty. Then after re-arming she continued to shoot until her guns were worn out. New barrels were fitted in Rosyth and she went back to France again. Her 15" guns fired 2000lb shells to a range of 37,870 yards.

Both von Rundstedt and Rommel noted the power of naval gunfire, especially the heavies, when discussing their lack of mobility. (Rommel said nothing about this after the war, however. :D )

The ground troops on Okinawa credited the OBBs' fire for helping to break the Shuri Line.
 
Battleships can 'loiter' for as long as you need them and can fire all day and night. They can put a lot of tonnage in to a very small area.With a good observer they were probably more accurate than bombers.
After D-Day RN Battleships and Cruisers gave massive fire support to the beachheads acting as heavy artillery. Look at the history of HMS Warspite for example. By D-Day she had more battle honours than any other RN ship and barely survived sinking when she was hit by a Fritz X guided missile that left a 20ft hone in her bottom and put a boiler room and X turret out of action permanently. After a repair back in the UK using Concrete to patch the holes she was the first ship to open fire on D-Day from a range of 26,000 yards and fired until her magazines were empty. Then after re-arming she continued to shoot until her guns were worn out. New barrels were fitted in Rosyth and she went back to France again. Her 15" guns fired 2000lb shells to a range of 37,870 yards.

Indeed, the loitering was part of what I was thinking. And with, say eight guns firing these shells at 2-rounds a minute, plus the six-inch guns as well, that is a different matter to firing once every 45 minutes.
 
Great stuff!

Did Paris not come under fire from German guns in 1871?

ETA Prussian guns.
Yes they did. Late in the siege.
In January, on Bismarck's advice, the Germans fired some 12,000 shells into the city over 23 nights in an attempt to break Parisian morale. About 400 perished or were wounded by the bombardment, which "had little effect on the spirit of resistance in Paris."
This optimistic view is contradicted later in the same article.
On 25 January 1871, Wilhelm I overruled Moltke and ordered the field-marshal to consult with Bismarck for all future operations. Bismarck immediately ordered the city to be bombarded with large-caliber Krupp siege guns. This prompted the city's surrender on 28 January 1871. Paris sustained more damage in the 1870–1871 siege than in any other conflict.

It was pure terror bombing worthy of Churchill and Harris, or Hitler in Warsaw or Belgrade. To Bismarck falls the honour of inaugurating such methods of warfare in modern times.

Up to now we've been discussing the effect of super heavy artillery in siege warfare as such. This was the use of heavy weapons to slaughter unprotected civilians indiscriminately. That heavy guns can do that is not in doubt. Does that win wars? Not easy to determine. By the time the bombardment started the Parisians were already very short of food, and were eating dogs and rats. The bombardment may have been the last straw, because attempts to break the German lines and relieve the city had already definitively failed.

A more conventional use of very heavy siege guns was the German deployment of such weapons to reduce the fortresses round Liège in 1914.
In 1914 the forts were completely outclassed by the much more powerful German artillery, which included the enormous Big Bertha 42 cm howitzer. It was therefore a surprise that the forts resisted as long and as successfully as they did. However, the forts' poor ability to deal with powder gases, pulverized dust and the stench from inadequate sanitary facilities became a determining factor in the endurance of the forts' garrisons.
The design of the forts, as regards facilities such as ventilation, food provision and waste disposal, was quite unbelievably poor. Nonetheless, that they held out as long as they did disrupted the German advance timetable long enough to have been a major factor in ensuring the failure of the Schlieffen Plan, and the survival of France.

So was this a victory for Big Bertha and her ugly sisters? Hard to say.

ETA Note also that even in the effective absence of aerial attack, these guns were very vulnerable to long range conventional calibre enemy artillery fire. Here's Big Bertha and her sisters later in their career.
With a range of 15km their 420mm shells proved devastating and all four were used during the German assault upon Verdun from February 1916.

Once the Verdun offensive was called off in failure (leading to the replacement of German Chief of Staff Erich von Falkenhayn who had initiated the battle) the Big Bertha guns were decommissioned, since Allied artillery developments had resulted in guns with a longer range.
 
Last edited:
Both von Rundstedt and Rommel noted the power of naval gunfire, especially the heavies, when discussing their lack of mobility. (Rommel said nothing about this after the war, however. :D )

The ground troops on Okinawa credited the OBBs' fire for helping to break the Shuri Line.

The US Marine Corps fought against the retirement of the Iowa Class Battleships in the 1990's.
I understand,though they are now Museums,that they are actually maintained in such a way that they could be brought back into service....
 
Both von Rundstedt and Rommel noted the power of naval gunfire, especially the heavies, when discussing their lack of mobility. (Rommel said nothing about this after the war, however. :D )

The ground troops on Okinawa credited the OBBs' fire for helping to break the Shuri Line.

Naval Fire played a major role in Normandy in breaking the Fortresses protecting Cherbourg.

They also.in Patton's opinion saved the day at Sicily when is looked as though the German Panzers would be able to throw the American Gela Beachead into the sea.
 
The US Marine Corps fought against the retirement of the Iowa Class Battleships in the 1990's.
I understand,though they are now Museums,that they are actually maintained in such a way that they could be brought back into service....

That's my understanding, that the same maintenance they had post-WWII would continue.
 
</Churchill>
[url="http://www.theguardian.com/notesandqueries/query/0,,-1433,00.html]Over-rumming[/url] as well as over-ramming too, if Winston is to be believed. (Leaving aside over-lashing.)
 

Back
Top Bottom