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6-inch gun M1897

The 6-inch gun M1897 (152 mm) and its variants the M1900, M1903, M1905, M1908, and M1 (a.k.a. T2) were coastal artillery pieces installed to defend major American seaports between 1897 and 1945. For most of their history they were operated by the United States Army Coast Artillery Corps. They were installed on disappearing carriages or pedestal (a.k.a. barbette) mountings, and during World War II many were remounted on shielded barbette carriages.[4] Most of the weapons not in the Philippines were scrapped within a few years after World War II.

6-inch gun M1900
6-inch gun M1905 on disappearing carriage M1903, Battery Chamberlin, Fort Winfield Scott, Presidio of San Francisco
Type
  • coastal artillery
  • field gun
  • Place of originUnited States
    Service history
    In service1897–1945
    Used byUnited States Army
    WarsWorld War I, World War II
    Production history
    DesignerWatervliet Arsenal
    Designed1897
    ManufacturerWatervliet Arsenal, possibly others
    VariantsM1897, M1900, M1903, M1905, M1908, M1 (a.k.a. T2)
    Specifications
    Mass19,114 pounds (8,670 kg)
    Length310.4 inches (788 cm)
    Barrel length
    • 50 calibers (300 inches (760 cm))
    • M1897 & M1908: 45 calibers (270 inches (690 cm))

    Shellseparate loading,
    108 pounds (49 kg) or 105 pounds (48 kg) AP shot & shell,
    90 pounds (41 kg) HE[1][2]
    Caliber6 inch (152 mm)
    BreechInterrupted screw, De Bange type
    RecoilHydro-spring
    Carriage
    Elevation
    • disappearing: 15°
    • pedestal: 20°
    • WWII high-angle barbette: 47°
    Traverse
    • disappearing: 170° (varied with emplacement)
    • pedestal: 360° (varied with emplacement)
    • WWII high-angle barbette: 360° (varied with emplacement)
    Maximum firing range
    • disappearing: 14,600 yards (13,400 m)
    • pedestal: 17,000 yards (16,000 m)
    • WWII high-angle barbette with M1 gun: 27,500 yards (25,100 m)[1]
    Feed systemhand

    History Edit

     
    6-inch M1900 gun on M1900 pedestal mount, similar to two weapons still present at Fort Hancock, New Jersey
     
    6-inch M1900 gun on M1900 pedestal mount, annotated
     
    Two 6-inch guns on an M1917 carriage (foreground) and an M1917A carriage (background) in early 1919.[5]
     
    Annotated photograph of an M1901 Buffington–Crozier disappearing carriage for an M1900 12-inch gun, generally similar to 6-inch disappearing carriages

    In 1885, William C. Endicott, President Grover Cleveland's Secretary of War, was tasked with creating the Board of Fortifications to review seacoast defenses. The findings of the board illustrated a grim picture of existing defenses in its 1886 report and recommended a massive $127 million construction program of breech-loading cannons, mortars, floating batteries, and submarine mines for some 29 locations on the US coastline. Most of the Board's recommendations were implemented. United States Army Coast Artillery Corps fortifications built between 1885 and 1905 are often referred to as Endicott Period fortifications. The 6-inch caliber was chosen, as in many applications, for combining a relatively heavy shell with rapid hand loading. In the overall system, it was an intermediate caliber between the heavy 8-inch, 10-inch, and 12-inch weapons and the small 3-inch guns intended to defend minefields against minesweepers. The Watervliet Arsenal designed the guns and built the barrels. Initially, most of the guns were mounted on disappearing carriages; when the gun was fired, it dropped behind a concrete and/or earthen wall for protection from counter-battery fire. Within a few years, it was realized that operating the disappearing carriage negatively impacted the rate of fire, and the M1900 low-profile pedestal mount was designed.

    On the outbreak of the Spanish–American War in 1898 most of the Endicott fortifications were still under construction. To quickly arm some works a few weapons were purchased from the United Kingdom including nine 6-inch Armstrong guns, two of which survive at Fort DeSoto near St. Petersburg, Florida.[6] These appear to have been withdrawn from service by 1925.

    Between the Endicott program and the 1905–15 Taft Board fortifications, approximately 200 6-inch guns were emplaced in the United States and its possessions, around 150 of which were on disappearing carriages.

    World War I Edit

    After the American entry into World War I, the Army recognized the need for large-caliber guns for use on the Western Front. The Coast Artillery operated all US Army heavy artillery in that war, due to their experience and training with these weapons. A total of 95 6-inch coast defense guns were removed from fixed emplacements or drawn from spares and mounted on M1917 wheeled carriages as field guns; most of these (72, plus possibly a few ex-Navy weapons) equipped three Coast Artillery regiments in France, the 61st, 62nd, and 68th.[7] The guns were nicknamed "6-inch Terrors". However, due to the Armistice, none of these regiments completed training in time to see action. By 1917, pedestal mounts for 6-inch guns (all of them M1900 weapons) were known to be superior to disappearing mounts, being able to more rapidly track targets with a faster rate of fire. Thus, most disappearing guns (except the M1897, shorter than the others) were dismounted for use as field guns, while most of the few pedestal guns dismounted were returned to the forts soon after the war. The removed 6-inch disappearing guns (primarily M1903 and M1905) were stored and many were returned to service in World War II. The Army weapons removed included up to 18 M1900 guns and 74 M1903 and M1905 guns based on carriages ordered (M1917A carriages for the M1900 weapons, M1917 carriages for the M1903/M1905 weapons). One source states that four M1900 guns and 68 M1903/M1905 guns arrived in France.[5] An additional 46 6-inch guns of other types were provided by the Navy and 30 ex-Navy guns from arms dealer Francis Bannerman; a few of these were possibly delivered to France before the Armistice. These included Navy guns Marks 2 through 6, of 30, 40, 45, and 50 calibers length. All of the Bannerman guns were 30 calibers long; the number of guns of other lengths is unclear. Sources state that all Navy guns were cut down to 30 calibers barrel length in an attempt to standardize ballistics, as that was the length of the shortest Navy guns.[5][8][9][10][11] Thirty-seven M1917B carriages were ordered for the Navy guns, with a view to having a spare tube for each carriage; it is unclear how many were produced, or if any were delivered to France.[5] Some of the Army weapons (primarily the M1900 guns due to their fast-operating pedestal mounts) were returned to coast defenses after the war, but most (a count of disarmed batteries shows approximately 81)[12] were stored until World War II. One survives on a field carriage in the collection of the U.S. Army Ordnance Training and Heritage Center, Fort Lee, Virginia. In June 1919, after the Treaty of Versailles was signed, the field carriages for the 6-inch guns were declared obsolete and almost entirely scrapped.[5]

    World War II Edit

     
    6-inch gun M1905 on shielded barbette carriage at Fort Columbia State Park, Washington state
     
    Rear view of shielded barbette carriage
     
    Battery 245 at Fort Stevens, Oregon, two 6-inch guns on shielded barbette carriages, built in World War II. The battery's ammunition and fire control bunker is behind the gun.
     
    Typical entrance to 6-inch ammunition bunker at Fort Ebey, Washington state

    Along with other coast artillery weapons, some of the 6-inch guns in the Philippines saw action in the Japanese invasion in World War II. Since they were positioned against a naval attack, they were poorly sited to engage the Japanese, and the open mountings were vulnerable to air and high-angle artillery attack.

    In 1940–44, 16-inch gun batteries were constructed at most harbor defenses to replace the aging Endicott- and Taft-era weapons. Many 6-inch weapons (most of them stored since World War I) were remounted on M1 through M4 shielded barbette carriages at new locations in two-gun batteries to complement the 16-inch guns. These allowed higher-angle fire than previous mountings, and extended the 6-inch guns' range from 17,000 yards (16,000 m) to 27,000 yards (25,000 m). M1903 and M1905 weapons were remounted as the M1903A2 and M1905A2, and a new M1 gun (initially designated the T2) armed some batteries. A heavily concreted magazine structure with a gas-tight plotting room was constructed between each pair of guns. At one point 87 batteries were proposed, but only about 65 were built and 45 armed before construction was suspended late in World War II. Approximately 140 barbette carriages were constructed.[13] Some additional 6"/50 caliber ex-Navy guns were mounted in the year after Pearl Harbor to provide some defense while the new batteries were under construction; locations included Alaska, American Samoa, and Suriname (formerly Dutch Guiana) among others.[14] Some of the M1900 weapons on pedestal mounts were retained in service or relocated to better positions during the war, but the disappearing guns were mostly scrapped by 1944.[15] Following World War II the entire coast defense system, including almost all of the 6-inch guns, was scrapped.

    Specifications Edit

    Gun lengths are muzzle to breech face.[3][16]

    Model Length
    in calibers
    Gun Length Weight
    M1897 44.58 277.85 in (705.74 cm) 16,216 lb (7,355 kg)
    M1900 50 310.40 in (788.42 cm) 19,968 lb (9,057 kg)
    M1903 50 310.40 in (788.42 cm) 19,990 lb (9,067 kg)
    M1905 50 310.40 in (788.42 cm) 21,148 lb (9,593 kg)
    M1908 44.58 277.85 in (705.74 cm) 12,500 lb (5,670 kg)
    M1 (T2) 50 Approx. 300 in (762.00 cm) 20,550 lb (9,321 kg)

    Carriages Edit

    The carriages for Army 6-inch guns were:[3][5]

    Carriage Type Usual gun(s) Number built
    M1898 disappearing M1897 29
    M1900 pedestal M1900 45
    M1903 disappearing M1903, M1905, M1900 90
    M1905 disappearing M1905, M1908 33
    M1910 pedestal M1908M2 6
    M1917 field gun M1903, M1905 74
    M1917A field gun M1900 18
    M1, M2, M3, M4 shielded high-angle barbette M1903A2, M1905A2, M1 (T2) 143 (approx)

    Surviving examples Edit

    At least 20 Army 6-inch guns remain, mostly in the Philippines.[17]

    • One 6-inch Gun M1905 (#30 Watervliet) on Disappearing Carriage M1903 (#1 Watertown), Battery Cooper, Fort Pickens, Pensacola, Florida (weapon formerly at Battery Schofield, West Point, New York, and before that at Battery Livingston, Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, New York).
    • One 6-inch Gun M1905 (#9 Watervliet) on Disappearing Carriage M1903 (#2 Watertown), Battery Chamberlin, Fort Winfield Scott, Presidio of San Francisco, California (weapon formerly at Battery Schofield, West Point, New York, and before that at Battery Livingston, Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, New York).
    • Two 6-inch Guns M1905 (#31 & #32 Watervliet) on Disappearing Carriages M1905MI (#12 & #13 Watertown), Battery Morrison, Fort Mills, Corregidor Island, Philippines.
    • Two 6-inch Guns M1905 (#4 & #33 Watervliet) on Disappearing Carriages M1905MI (#9 & #11 Watertown), Battery Ramsay, Fort Mills, Corregidor Island, Philippines (guns severely cut up).
    • One 6-inch Gun M1905 (#27 Watervliet) (spare gun), Battery Morrison, Fort Mills, Corregidor Island, Philippines (guns severely cut up).
    • Two 6-inch Guns M1905 (#6 & #7 Watervliet) on Disappearing Carriages M1905MI (#6 & #7 Bethlehem), Battery Hall, Fort Wint, Grande Island, Subic Bay, Philippines.
    • One 6-inch Gun M1908 (#6 Watervliet), Battery Leach, Fort Hughes, Caballo Island, Philippines.
    • One 6-inch Gun M1908MII (#4 Watervliet), Battery Roberts, Fort Drum, El Fraile Island, Philippines (with shield only, no carriage).
    • Two 6-inch Guns M1900 (#22 & #23 Watervliet) on Barbette Carriages M1900 (#12 & #17 Rock Island), Battery Peck, Fort Hancock, New Jersey (located in the emplacements of Battery Gunnison).
    • Two 6-inch Guns M1905A2 (#16 & #21) on Barbette Carriages Model M1 (#58 & #59 Unk. mfr.), Battery 234, Fort Pickens, Pensacola, Florida (weapons formerly at Battery 227, Fort John Custis, Virginia).
    • Two 6-inch Guns M1905A2 (#30 & #61) on Barbette Carriages Model M1 (#9 & #10 Unk. mfr.), Battery 246, Fort Columbia State Park, Chinook Point, Washington state (weapons formerly at Battery 281, Fort McAndrew, Argentia, Newfoundland).
    • Two 6-inch Guns M1905A2 (#13 & #8) on Barbette Carriages Model M1 (#44 & #45 Unk. mfr.), Battery 282, Fort McAndrew, Argentia, Newfoundland.
    • One 6-inch Gun M1905A1 (#12 Watervliet) with Limber (#82 Morgan Eng.) on Carriage M1917 (#22 Morgan Eng.), U.S. Army Ordnance Training and Heritage Center, Fort Lee, VA.
    • Two 6-inch Rapid Fire Armstrong Guns (#12139 and #12140) on Barbette Carriages Mk 2 (#11162 and #11157) (one with partial shield), Fort DeSoto, Mullet Key, near St. Petersburg, Florida (weapons formerly at Battery Burchsted, Fort Dade, Egmont Key, Florida).
    • Several additional US Navy Mark VI and Mark VIII 6"/50 caliber guns survive in Alaska, American Samoa, and Suriname (formerly Dutch Guiana).

    See also Edit

    Weapons of comparable role, performance and era Edit

    • 6"/50 caliber gun - contemporary US Navy weapon, used on ships circa 1900 and as coast defense in World War II
    • BL 6-inch Mk VII naval gun - contemporary British weapon, used on ships, as coast defense, and as field artillery
    • 6-inch gun M1917 - British 6-inch gun Mark XIX, acquired as field artillery by the US in the World War I era; all US weapons transferred to Brazil as coast artillery 1940–41

    References Edit

    1. ^ a b Berhow, p. 61
    2. ^ TM 9-424, pp. 3-4
    3. ^ a b c Berhow, pp. 94-105
    4. ^ Coast Defense Study Group fort and battery list
    5. ^ a b c d e f Williford, pp. 92–99
    6. ^ Congressional serial set, 1900, Report of the Commission on the Conduct of the War with Spain, Vol. 7, pp. 3778–3780, Washington: Government Printing Office
    7. ^ 61st Coast Artillery in WWI
    8. ^ US Army Coast Artillery Corps in World War I
    9. ^ 69th Coast Artillery in WWI
    10. ^ Handbook of Ordnance Data, November 15, 1918, pp. 86-88
    11. ^ Crowell, Benedict (1919). America's Munitions 1917-1918. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. pp. 73–75.
    12. ^ Berhow, pp. 202-225
    13. ^ Berhow, pp. 226–227
    14. ^ Berhow, pp. 236-237
    15. ^ Berhow, pp. 202–225
    16. ^ Coastal Battery Gun List at FortWiki.com
    17. ^ Berhow, pp. 235-236
    • Berhow, Mark A., ed. (2015). American Seacoast Defenses, A Reference Guide, Third Edition. McLean, Virginia: CDSG Press. ISBN 978-0-9748167-3-9.
    • Lewis, Emanuel Raymond (1979). Seacoast Fortifications of the United States. Annapolis: Leeward Publications. ISBN 978-0-929521-11-4.
    • Williford, Glen (2016). American Breechloading Mobile Artillery, 1875-1953. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7643-5049-8.

    Bibliography Edit

    • Instructions for Mounting, Using, and Caring For Disappearing Carriage L. F., Model of 1905MII, and 6-inch Guns Models of 1905 and 1908, January 14, 1914. Washington: Government Printing Office
    • Lohrer, George L. (1904). Ordnance Supply Manual, United States Army Ordnance Dept. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. pp. 235–258.
    • TM 9-424, 6-inch Seacoast Materiel: Gun M1900 mounted on Barbette Carriage M1900
    • TM 9-428, 6-inch Seacoast Materiel: Guns M1903A2 and M1905A2; Barbette Carriage M1

    External links Edit

    • FortWiki gun type list
    • 6-inch M1900 and M1 (T2) gun and battery description at CoastDefense.com

    inch, m1897, variants, m1900, m1903, m1905, m1908, were, coastal, artillery, pieces, installed, defend, major, american, seaports, between, 1897, 1945, most, their, history, they, were, operated, united, states, army, coast, artillery, corps, they, were, insta. The 6 inch gun M1897 152 mm and its variants the M1900 M1903 M1905 M1908 and M1 a k a T2 were coastal artillery pieces installed to defend major American seaports between 1897 and 1945 For most of their history they were operated by the United States Army Coast Artillery Corps They were installed on disappearing carriages or pedestal a k a barbette mountings and during World War II many were remounted on shielded barbette carriages 4 Most of the weapons not in the Philippines were scrapped within a few years after World War II 6 inch gun M19006 inch gun M1905 on disappearing carriage M1903 Battery Chamberlin Fort Winfield Scott Presidio of San FranciscoTypecoastal artillery field gunPlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1897 1945Used byUnited States ArmyWarsWorld War I World War IIProduction historyDesignerWatervliet ArsenalDesigned1897ManufacturerWatervliet Arsenal possibly othersVariantsM1897 M1900 M1903 M1905 M1908 M1 a k a T2 SpecificationsMass19 114 pounds 8 670 kg Length310 4 inches 788 cm Barrel length50 calibers 300 inches 760 cm M1897 amp M1908 45 calibers 270 inches 690 cm Shellseparate loading 108 pounds 49 kg or 105 pounds 48 kg AP shot amp shell 90 pounds 41 kg HE 1 2 Caliber6 inch 152 mm BreechInterrupted screw De Bange typeRecoilHydro springCarriageM1898 M1903 or M1905 disappearing M1900 or M1910 pedestal M1 M2 M3 M4 shielded barbette most carriages manufactured by Watertown Arsenal 3 Elevationdisappearing 15 pedestal 20 WWII high angle barbette 47 Traversedisappearing 170 varied with emplacement pedestal 360 varied with emplacement WWII high angle barbette 360 varied with emplacement Maximum firing rangedisappearing 14 600 yards 13 400 m pedestal 17 000 yards 16 000 m WWII high angle barbette with M1 gun 27 500 yards 25 100 m 1 Feed systemhand Contents 1 History 1 1 World War I 1 2 World War II 2 Specifications 3 Carriages 4 Surviving examples 5 See also 5 1 Weapons of comparable role performance and era 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory Edit nbsp 6 inch M1900 gun on M1900 pedestal mount similar to two weapons still present at Fort Hancock New Jersey nbsp 6 inch M1900 gun on M1900 pedestal mount annotated nbsp Two 6 inch guns on an M1917 carriage foreground and an M1917A carriage background in early 1919 5 nbsp Annotated photograph of an M1901 Buffington Crozier disappearing carriage for an M1900 12 inch gun generally similar to 6 inch disappearing carriagesIn 1885 William C Endicott President Grover Cleveland s Secretary of War was tasked with creating the Board of Fortifications to review seacoast defenses The findings of the board illustrated a grim picture of existing defenses in its 1886 report and recommended a massive 127 million construction program of breech loading cannons mortars floating batteries and submarine mines for some 29 locations on the US coastline Most of the Board s recommendations were implemented United States Army Coast Artillery Corps fortifications built between 1885 and 1905 are often referred to as Endicott Period fortifications The 6 inch caliber was chosen as in many applications for combining a relatively heavy shell with rapid hand loading In the overall system it was an intermediate caliber between the heavy 8 inch 10 inch and 12 inch weapons and the small 3 inch guns intended to defend minefields against minesweepers The Watervliet Arsenal designed the guns and built the barrels Initially most of the guns were mounted on disappearing carriages when the gun was fired it dropped behind a concrete and or earthen wall for protection from counter battery fire Within a few years it was realized that operating the disappearing carriage negatively impacted the rate of fire and the M1900 low profile pedestal mount was designed On the outbreak of the Spanish American War in 1898 most of the Endicott fortifications were still under construction To quickly arm some works a few weapons were purchased from the United Kingdom including nine 6 inch Armstrong guns two of which survive at Fort DeSoto near St Petersburg Florida 6 These appear to have been withdrawn from service by 1925 Between the Endicott program and the 1905 15 Taft Board fortifications approximately 200 6 inch guns were emplaced in the United States and its possessions around 150 of which were on disappearing carriages World War I Edit After the American entry into World War I the Army recognized the need for large caliber guns for use on the Western Front The Coast Artillery operated all US Army heavy artillery in that war due to their experience and training with these weapons A total of 95 6 inch coast defense guns were removed from fixed emplacements or drawn from spares and mounted on M1917 wheeled carriages as field guns most of these 72 plus possibly a few ex Navy weapons equipped three Coast Artillery regiments in France the 61st 62nd and 68th 7 The guns were nicknamed 6 inch Terrors However due to the Armistice none of these regiments completed training in time to see action By 1917 pedestal mounts for 6 inch guns all of them M1900 weapons were known to be superior to disappearing mounts being able to more rapidly track targets with a faster rate of fire Thus most disappearing guns except the M1897 shorter than the others were dismounted for use as field guns while most of the few pedestal guns dismounted were returned to the forts soon after the war The removed 6 inch disappearing guns primarily M1903 and M1905 were stored and many were returned to service in World War II The Army weapons removed included up to 18 M1900 guns and 74 M1903 and M1905 guns based on carriages ordered M1917A carriages for the M1900 weapons M1917 carriages for the M1903 M1905 weapons One source states that four M1900 guns and 68 M1903 M1905 guns arrived in France 5 An additional 46 6 inch guns of other types were provided by the Navy and 30 ex Navy guns from arms dealer Francis Bannerman a few of these were possibly delivered to France before the Armistice These included Navy guns Marks 2 through 6 of 30 40 45 and 50 calibers length All of the Bannerman guns were 30 calibers long the number of guns of other lengths is unclear Sources state that all Navy guns were cut down to 30 calibers barrel length in an attempt to standardize ballistics as that was the length of the shortest Navy guns 5 8 9 10 11 Thirty seven M1917B carriages were ordered for the Navy guns with a view to having a spare tube for each carriage it is unclear how many were produced or if any were delivered to France 5 Some of the Army weapons primarily the M1900 guns due to their fast operating pedestal mounts were returned to coast defenses after the war but most a count of disarmed batteries shows approximately 81 12 were stored until World War II One survives on a field carriage in the collection of the U S Army Ordnance Training and Heritage Center Fort Lee Virginia In June 1919 after the Treaty of Versailles was signed the field carriages for the 6 inch guns were declared obsolete and almost entirely scrapped 5 World War II Edit nbsp 6 inch gun M1905 on shielded barbette carriage at Fort Columbia State Park Washington state nbsp Rear view of shielded barbette carriage nbsp Battery 245 at Fort Stevens Oregon two 6 inch guns on shielded barbette carriages built in World War II The battery s ammunition and fire control bunker is behind the gun nbsp Typical entrance to 6 inch ammunition bunker at Fort Ebey Washington stateAlong with other coast artillery weapons some of the 6 inch guns in the Philippines saw action in the Japanese invasion in World War II Since they were positioned against a naval attack they were poorly sited to engage the Japanese and the open mountings were vulnerable to air and high angle artillery attack In 1940 44 16 inch gun batteries were constructed at most harbor defenses to replace the aging Endicott and Taft era weapons Many 6 inch weapons most of them stored since World War I were remounted on M1 through M4 shielded barbette carriages at new locations in two gun batteries to complement the 16 inch guns These allowed higher angle fire than previous mountings and extended the 6 inch guns range from 17 000 yards 16 000 m to 27 000 yards 25 000 m M1903 and M1905 weapons were remounted as the M1903A2 and M1905A2 and a new M1 gun initially designated the T2 armed some batteries A heavily concreted magazine structure with a gas tight plotting room was constructed between each pair of guns At one point 87 batteries were proposed but only about 65 were built and 45 armed before construction was suspended late in World War II Approximately 140 barbette carriages were constructed 13 Some additional 6 50 caliber ex Navy guns were mounted in the year after Pearl Harbor to provide some defense while the new batteries were under construction locations included Alaska American Samoa and Suriname formerly Dutch Guiana among others 14 Some of the M1900 weapons on pedestal mounts were retained in service or relocated to better positions during the war but the disappearing guns were mostly scrapped by 1944 15 Following World War II the entire coast defense system including almost all of the 6 inch guns was scrapped Specifications EditGun lengths are muzzle to breech face 3 16 Model Lengthin calibers Gun Length WeightM1897 44 58 277 85 in 705 74 cm 16 216 lb 7 355 kg M1900 50 310 40 in 788 42 cm 19 968 lb 9 057 kg M1903 50 310 40 in 788 42 cm 19 990 lb 9 067 kg M1905 50 310 40 in 788 42 cm 21 148 lb 9 593 kg M1908 44 58 277 85 in 705 74 cm 12 500 lb 5 670 kg M1 T2 50 Approx 300 in 762 00 cm 20 550 lb 9 321 kg Carriages EditThe carriages for Army 6 inch guns were 3 5 Carriage Type Usual gun s Number builtM1898 disappearing M1897 29M1900 pedestal M1900 45M1903 disappearing M1903 M1905 M1900 90M1905 disappearing M1905 M1908 33M1910 pedestal M1908M2 6M1917 field gun M1903 M1905 74M1917A field gun M1900 18M1 M2 M3 M4 shielded high angle barbette M1903A2 M1905A2 M1 T2 143 approx Surviving examples EditAt least 20 Army 6 inch guns remain mostly in the Philippines 17 One 6 inch Gun M1905 30 Watervliet on Disappearing Carriage M1903 1 Watertown Battery Cooper Fort Pickens Pensacola Florida weapon formerly at Battery Schofield West Point New York and before that at Battery Livingston Fort Hamilton Brooklyn New York One 6 inch Gun M1905 9 Watervliet on Disappearing Carriage M1903 2 Watertown Battery Chamberlin Fort Winfield Scott Presidio of San Francisco California weapon formerly at Battery Schofield West Point New York and before that at Battery Livingston Fort Hamilton Brooklyn New York Two 6 inch Guns M1905 31 amp 32 Watervliet on Disappearing Carriages M1905MI 12 amp 13 Watertown Battery Morrison Fort Mills Corregidor Island Philippines Two 6 inch Guns M1905 4 amp 33 Watervliet on Disappearing Carriages M1905MI 9 amp 11 Watertown Battery Ramsay Fort Mills Corregidor Island Philippines guns severely cut up One 6 inch Gun M1905 27 Watervliet spare gun Battery Morrison Fort Mills Corregidor Island Philippines guns severely cut up Two 6 inch Guns M1905 6 amp 7 Watervliet on Disappearing Carriages M1905MI 6 amp 7 Bethlehem Battery Hall Fort Wint Grande Island Subic Bay Philippines One 6 inch Gun M1908 6 Watervliet Battery Leach Fort Hughes Caballo Island Philippines One 6 inch Gun M1908MII 4 Watervliet Battery Roberts Fort Drum El Fraile Island Philippines with shield only no carriage Two 6 inch Guns M1900 22 amp 23 Watervliet on Barbette Carriages M1900 12 amp 17 Rock Island Battery Peck Fort Hancock New Jersey located in the emplacements of Battery Gunnison Two 6 inch Guns M1905A2 16 amp 21 on Barbette Carriages Model M1 58 amp 59 Unk mfr Battery 234 Fort Pickens Pensacola Florida weapons formerly at Battery 227 Fort John Custis Virginia Two 6 inch Guns M1905A2 30 amp 61 on Barbette Carriages Model M1 9 amp 10 Unk mfr Battery 246 Fort Columbia State Park Chinook Point Washington state weapons formerly at Battery 281 Fort McAndrew Argentia Newfoundland Two 6 inch Guns M1905A2 13 amp 8 on Barbette Carriages Model M1 44 amp 45 Unk mfr Battery 282 Fort McAndrew Argentia Newfoundland One 6 inch Gun M1905A1 12 Watervliet with Limber 82 Morgan Eng on Carriage M1917 22 Morgan Eng U S Army Ordnance Training and Heritage Center Fort Lee VA Two 6 inch Rapid Fire Armstrong Guns 12139 and 12140 on Barbette Carriages Mk 2 11162 and 11157 one with partial shield Fort DeSoto Mullet Key near St Petersburg Florida weapons formerly at Battery Burchsted Fort Dade Egmont Key Florida Several additional US Navy Mark VI and Mark VIII 6 50 caliber guns survive in Alaska American Samoa and Suriname formerly Dutch Guiana See also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 6 inch gun M1897 Coastal artillery Seacoast defense in the United States Coast Artillery fire control system List of field guns List of U S Army weapons by supply catalog designation United States War Department Forms index of US Army ordnance manuals circa 1900 1920Weapons of comparable role performance and era Edit 6 50 caliber gun contemporary US Navy weapon used on ships circa 1900 and as coast defense in World War II BL 6 inch Mk VII naval gun contemporary British weapon used on ships as coast defense and as field artillery 6 inch gun M1917 British 6 inch gun Mark XIX acquired as field artillery by the US in the World War I era all US weapons transferred to Brazil as coast artillery 1940 41References Edit a b Berhow p 61 TM 9 424 pp 3 4 a b c Berhow pp 94 105 Coast Defense Study Group fort and battery list a b c d e f Williford pp 92 99 Congressional serial set 1900 Report of the Commission on the Conduct of the War with Spain Vol 7 pp 3778 3780 Washington Government Printing Office 61st Coast Artillery in WWI US Army Coast Artillery Corps in World War I 69th Coast Artillery in WWI Handbook of Ordnance Data November 15 1918 pp 86 88 Crowell Benedict 1919 America s Munitions 1917 1918 Washington DC Government Printing Office pp 73 75 Berhow pp 202 225 Berhow pp 226 227 Berhow pp 236 237 Berhow pp 202 225 Coastal Battery Gun List at FortWiki com Berhow pp 235 236 Berhow Mark A ed 2015 American Seacoast Defenses A Reference Guide Third Edition McLean Virginia CDSG Press ISBN 978 0 9748167 3 9 Lewis Emanuel Raymond 1979 Seacoast Fortifications of the United States Annapolis Leeward Publications ISBN 978 0 929521 11 4 Williford Glen 2016 American Breechloading Mobile Artillery 1875 1953 Atglen PA Schiffer Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 7643 5049 8 Bibliography EditInstructions for Mounting Using and Caring For Disappearing Carriage L F Model of 1905MII and 6 inch Guns Models of 1905 and 1908 January 14 1914 Washington Government Printing Office Lohrer George L 1904 Ordnance Supply Manual United States Army Ordnance Dept Washington DC Government Printing Office pp 235 258 TM 9 424 6 inch Seacoast Materiel Gun M1900 mounted on Barbette Carriage M1900 TM 9 428 6 inch Seacoast Materiel Guns M1903A2 and M1905A2 Barbette Carriage M1External links EditFortWiki gun type list Photos of existing 6 inch coast defense guns in the US WW2 6 inch battery description 6 inch M1900 and M1 T2 gun and battery description at CoastDefense com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 6 inch gun M1897 amp oldid 1144594733, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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