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Coastal artillery

Coastal artillery is the branch of the armed forces concerned with operating anti-ship artillery or fixed gun batteries in coastal fortifications.[1]

The fortifications of the Castle Harbour Islands and St. George's Harbour, in Bermuda. Construction beginning in 1612, these were the first stone fortifications, with the first coastal artillery batteries, built by England in the New World.
An Ottoman redoubt of the Dardanelles Fortified Area. The weapon is possibly a German-made 28 cm SK L/40 gun on a coast defense mount.

From the Middle Ages until World War II, coastal artillery and naval artillery in the form of cannons were highly important to military affairs and generally represented the areas of highest technology and capital cost among materiel. The advent of 20th-century technologies, especially military aviation, naval aviation, jet aircraft, and guided missiles, reduced the primacy of cannons, battleships, and coastal artillery. In countries where coastal artillery has not been disbanded, these forces have acquired amphibious capabilities. In littoral warfare, mobile coastal artillery armed with surface-to-surface missiles can still be used to deny the use of sea lanes.

It was long held as a rule of thumb that one shore-based gun equaled three naval guns of the same caliber, due to the steadiness of the coastal gun which allowed for significantly higher accuracy than their sea-mounted counterparts. Land-based guns also benefited in most cases from the additional protection of walls or earth mounds. The range of gunpowder-based coastal artillery also has a derivative role in international law and diplomacy, wherein a country's three mile limit of "coastal waters" is recognized as under the nation or state's laws.[2]

History

 
50-pounder Model 1811 Columbiad (7.25 inch or 184 mm bore) and center-pivot mounting designed by George Bomford as an experimental coastal defense gun. This gun was built in 1811 as a component of the Second System of US fortifications.

One of the first recorded uses of coastal artillery was in 1381—during the war between Ferdinand I of Portugal and Henry II of Castile—when the troops of the King of Portugal used cannons to defend Lisbon against an attack from the Castilian naval fleet.

The use of coastal artillery expanded during the Age of Discoveries, in the 16th century; when a colonial power took over an overseas territory, one of their first tasks was to build a coastal fortress, both to deter rival naval powers and to subjugate the natives. The Martello tower is an excellent example of a widely used coastal fort which mounted defensive artillery, in this case muzzle-loading cannon. During the 19th century China also built hundreds of coastal fortresses in an attempt to counter Western naval threats.

Coastal artillery fortifications generally followed the development of land fortifications; sometimes separate land defence forts were built to protect coastal forts. Through the middle 19th century, coastal forts could be bastion forts, star forts, polygonal forts, or sea forts, the first three types often with detached gun batteries called "water batteries".[3] Coastal defence weapons throughout history were heavy naval guns or weapons based on them, often supplemented by lighter weapons. In the late 19th century separate batteries of coastal artillery replaced forts in some countries; in some areas these became widely separated geographically through the mid-20th century as weapon ranges increased. The amount of landward defence provided began to vary by country from the late 19th century; by 1900 new US forts almost totally neglected these defences. Booms were also usually part of a protected harbor's defences. In the middle 19th century underwater minefields and later controlled mines were often used, or stored in peacetime to be available in wartime. With the rise of the submarine threat at the beginning of the 20th century, anti-submarine nets were used extensively, usually added to boom defences, with major warships often being equipped with them (to allow rapid deployment once the ship was anchored or moored) through early World War I. In World War I railway artillery emerged and soon became part of coastal artillery in some countries; with railway artillery in coast defence some type of revolving mount had to be provided to allow tracking of fast-moving targets.[4]

Coastal artillery could be part of the Navy (as in Scandinavian countries, war-time Germany, and the Soviet Union), or part of the Army (as in English-speaking countries). In English-speaking countries, certain coastal artillery positions were sometimes referred to as 'Land Batteries',[5][6][7] distinguishing this form of artillery battery from for example floating batteries.[8][9] In the United Kingdom, in the later 19th and earlier 20th Centuries, the land batteries of the coastal artillery were the responsibility of the Royal Garrison Artillery.

In the United States, coastal artillery was established in 1794 as a branch of the Army and a series of construction programs of coastal defenses began: the "First System" in 1794, the "Second System" in 1804, and the "Third System" or "Permanent System" in 1816. Masonry forts were determined to be obsolete following the American Civil War, and a postwar program of earthwork defenses was poorly funded. In 1885 the Endicott Board recommended an extensive program of new U.S. harbor defenses, featuring new rifled artillery and minefield defenses; most of the board's recommendations were implemented. Construction on these was initially slow, as new weapons and systems were developed from scratch, but was greatly hastened following the Spanish–American War of 1898. Shortly thereafter, in 1907, Congress split the field artillery and coast artillery into separate branches, creating a separate Coast Artillery Corps (CAC) The CAC was disbanded as a separate branch in 1950.[10]

In the first decade of the 20th century, the United States Marine Corps established the Advanced Base Force. The force was used for setting up and defending advanced overseas bases, and its close ties to the Navy allowed it to man coast artillery around these bases.

Russo-Japanese War

 
Japanese 11-inch howitzer firing; shell visible in flight

During the Siege of Port Arthur, Japanese forces had captured the vantage point on 203 Meter Hill overlooking Port Arthur harbor. After relocating heavy 11-inch (280 mm) howitzers with 500 pound (~220 kg) armor-piercing shells to the summit of the Hill, the Japanese bombarded the Russian fleet in the harbor, systematically sinking the Russian ships within range. The Japanese were attacking the city and the Russian ships were trapped in the harbor due to mines, making this one of the few cases of coastal guns being employed in an offensive action.

On December 5, 1904, the battleship Poltava was destroyed, followed by the battleship Retvizan on December 7, 1904, the battleships Pobeda and Peresvet and the cruisers Pallada and Bayan on December 9, 1904. The battleship Sevastopol, although hit 5 times by 11-inch (280 mm) shells, managed to move out of range of the guns. Stung by the fact that the Russian Pacific Fleet had been sunk by the army and not by the Imperial Japanese Navy, and with a direct order from Tokyo that the Sevastopol was not to be allowed to escape, Admiral Togo sent in wave after wave of destroyers in six separate attacks on the sole remaining Russian battleship. After 3 weeks, the Sevastopol was still afloat, having survived 124 torpedoes fired at her while sinking two Japanese destroyers and damaging six other vessels. The Japanese had meanwhile lost the cruiser Takasago to a mine outside the harbor.

World War II

Norway

 
One of the three 28 cm main battery guns at Oscarsborg

During the Battle of Drøbak Sound in April 1940, the German navy lost the new heavy cruiser Blücher, one of their most modern ships, to a combination of fire from various coastal artillery emplacements, including two obsolete German-made Krupp 280 mm (11 in) guns and equally obsolete Whitehead torpedoes. The Blücher had entered the narrow waters of the Oslofjord, carrying 1,000 soldiers and leading a German invasion fleet. The first salvo from the Norwegian defenders, fired from Oscarsborg Fortress about 1 mile (1,600 meters) distant, disabled Blücher's main battery and set her afire.

Fire from the smaller guns (57 mm to 150 mm) swept her decks and disabled her steering, and she received several torpedo hits before the fires reached her magazines and doomed her. As a result, the remainder of the invasion fleet reversed, the Norwegian royal family, parliament and cabinet escaped, and the Norwegian gold reserves were safely removed from the city before it fell.

Singapore

Singapore was defended by its famous large-caliber coastal guns, which included one battery of three 15-inch (381 mm) guns and one with two 15-inch (381 mm) guns. Prime Minister Winston Churchill nicknamed the garrison as "The Gibraltar of the East" and the "Lion of the Sea". This perhaps compelled the Japanese to launch their invasion of Singapore from the north, via Malaya, in December 1941.

It is a commonly repeated misconception that Singapore's large-calibre coastal guns were ineffective against the Japanese because they were designed to face south to defend the harbour against naval attack and could not be turned round to face north. In fact, most of the guns could be turned, and were indeed fired at the invaders. However, the guns were supplied mostly with armour-piercing (AP) shells and few high explosive (HE) shells. AP shells were designed to penetrate the hulls of heavily armoured warships and were mostly ineffective against infantry targets.[11][12] Military analysts later estimated that if the guns had been well supplied with HE shells the Japanese attackers would have suffered heavy casualties, but the invasion would not have been prevented by this means alone.[13] The guns of Singapore achieved their purpose in deterring a Japanese naval attack as the possibility of an expensive capital ship being sunk made it inadvisable for the Japanese to attack Singapore via the sea.[14] The very fact that the Japanese chose to advance down from Thailand through Malaya to take Singapore was a testament for the respect the Japanese had for the coastal artillery at Singapore.[14] However, the lack of HE shells rendered Singapore vulnerable to a land based attack from Malaya via the Johore straits.[14]

Pacific

In December 1941, during the Battle of Wake Island, US Marine defense battalions fired at the Japanese invasion fleet with six 5-inch (127 mm) guns, sinking the Japanese destroyer Hayate by scoring direct hits on her magazines, and scoring eleven hits on the light cruiser Yubari, forcing her to withdraw, and temporarily repulsing Japanese efforts to take the island.

The Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays denied Manila harbor to the invading Japanese until Corregidor fell to amphibious assault on 6 May 1942, nearly a month after the fall of Bataan. Beyond tying up besieging Japanese forces (who suffered severe supply shortages due to the inability to use Manila as a port), the forts allowed interception of radio traffic later decisive at Midway.

The Japanese defended the island of Betio in the Tarawa atoll with numerous 203 mm (8-inch) coastal guns. In 1943, these were knocked out early in the battle with a combined USN naval and aerial bombardment.

Atlantic Wall

 
A 38 cm gun of Batterie Todt

Nazi Germany fortified its conquered territories with the Atlantic Wall. Organization Todt built a string of reinforced concrete pillboxes and bunkers along the beaches, or sometimes slightly inland, to house machine guns, antitank guns, and artillery ranging in size up to the large 40.6 cm naval guns. The intent was to destroy Allied landing craft before they could unload. During the Normandy Landings in 1944, shore bombardment was given a high importance, using ships from battleships to destroyers and landing craft. For example, the Canadians at Juno beach had fire support many times greater than they had had for the Dieppe Raid in 1942.

The old battleships HMS Ramillies and Warspite with the monitor HMS Roberts were used to suppress shore batteries east of the Orne; cruisers targeted shore batteries at Ver-sur-Mer and Moulineaux; while eleven destroyers provided local fire support. The (equally old) battleship Texas was used to suppress the battery at Pointe du Hoc, but the guns there had been moved to an inland position, unbeknownst to the Allies. In addition, there were modified landing craft: eight "Landing Craft Gun", each with two 4.7-inch guns; four "Landing Craft Support" with automatic cannon; eight Landing Craft Tank (Rocket), each with a single salvo of 1,100 5-inch rockets; eight Landing Craft Assault (Hedgerow), each with twenty-four bombs intended to detonate beach mines prematurely. Twenty-four Landing Craft Tank carried Priest self-propelled 105mm howitzers which also fired while they were on the run-in to the beach. Similar arrangements existed at other beaches.

 
240 mm (9.4 in) shells from Battery Hamburg straddle USS Texas during the Bombardment of Cherbourg

On June 25, 1944 the American battleship Texas engaged German shore batteries on the Cotentin Peninsula around Cherbourg. Battery Hamburg straddled the ship with a salvo of 240mm shells, eventually hitting Texas twice; one shell damaging the conning tower and navigation bridge, with the other penetrating below decks but failing to explode. Return fire from Texas knocked out the German battery.

 
Blockhouse for 152 mm gun, near Camogli. Part of the complex called Ligurian Wall.

Allied efforts to take the port of Toulon in August 1944 ran into "Big Willie", a battery consisting of two prewar French turrets, equipped with the guns taken from the French battleship Provence, each mounting a pair of 340 mm naval guns. The range and power of these guns was such that the Allies dedicated a battleship or heavy cruiser to shelling the fort every day, with the battleship Nevada eventually silencing the guns on August 23, 1944.[15][16]

Post-World War II

After World War II the advent of jet aircraft and guided missiles reduced the role of coastal artillery in defending a country against air and sea attacks while also rendering fixed artillery emplacements vulnerable to enemy strikes.

The Scandinavian countries, with their long coastlines and relatively weak navies, continued in the development and installation of modern coastal artillery systems, usually hidden in well-camouflaged armored turrets (for example Swedish 12 cm automatic turret gun). In these countries the coastal artillery was part of the naval forces and used naval targeting systems. Both mobile and stationary (e.g. 100 56 TK) systems were used.

In countries where coastal artillery has not been disbanded, these forces have acquired amphibious or anti-ship missile capabilities. In constricted waters, mobile coastal artillery armed with surface-to-surface missiles still can be used to deny the use of sea lanes. The Type 88 Surface-to-Ship Missile is an example of modern, mobile coastal artillery. Poland also retains a Coastal Missile Division armed with the Naval Strike Missile.[17]

During the Croatian War of Independence in 1991, coastal artillery operated by Croatian forces played an important role in defending Croatian Adriatic coast from Yugoslav naval and air strikes, especially around Zadar, Šibenik and Split, defeating the Yugoslav Navy in the Battle of the Dalmatian Channels.

In practice, there is a distinction between artillery sited to bombard a coastal region and coastal artillery, which has naval-compatible targeting systems and communications that are integrated with the navy rather than the army.

Examples

Gallery

See also

Books and articles

  • Chung, Ong Chit (2011). Operation Matador: World War II—Britain's Attempt to Foil the Japanese Invasion of Malaya and Singapore. Hong Kong: Marshall Cavendish International Asia. ISBN 978-9814435444.

References

  1. ^ Peter Doyle; Matthew R. Bennett (2002). Fields of Battle: Terrain in Military History. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic. ISBN 1-4020-0433-8.
  2. ^ The three mile limit is often circumvented by boats offering Gambling Cruises or Party Cruises. Past the three mile limit, a States restrictive laws are relaxed, so gambling or teenage drinking in the United States become unenforceable in courts.
  3. ^ Weaver II, John R. (2018). A Legacy in Brick and Stone: American Coastal Defense Forts of the Third System, 1816-1867, 2nd Ed. McLean, VA: Redoubt Press. pp. 16–17, 24–34. ISBN 978-1-7323916-1-1.
  4. ^ Hogg, Ian V. (2002). British & American Artillery of World War II. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. pp. 180–181. ISBN 1-85367-478-8.
  5. ^ George Floyd Duckett (1848). Technological military dictionary, German-English-French. p. 201.
  6. ^ John Gross Barnard (1861). Notes on Sea-Coast Defence. D. Van Nostrand. p. 48. land battery.
  7. ^ Civil War Forificiations Digital Research Library (2004). "Batteries, River and Coast Defense". Dictionary of Fortification. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
  8. ^ Glenn Tucker (2015). Chickamauga: Bloody Battle In The West. Pickle Partners Publishing. ISBN 9781786251152. Hamilton had experimented with an ironclad floating battery, and Stevens had set up an ironclad land battery
  9. ^ Rutter (1867). "The Great Ironclad Floating Gun Battery For Bay and Harbour Defences". Illustrated Sydney News – via Trove - National Library of Australia. [the floating battery] will have all the advantages of a land battery, combined with, the capability of motion
  10. ^ See "Coast Artillery Organization: A Brief Overview, Bolling W. Smith and William C. Gaines, in a 2008 update to "American Seacoast Defenses," Mark Berhow, Ed., CDSG Press, McLean, VA, 2004. An online version of this article can be found here.
  11. ^ Smith 2006, pp. 442–443 & 527.
  12. ^ Kirby 1954, p. 361.
  13. ^ Chung 2011, pp. 24–26.
  14. ^ a b c Chung 2011, pp. 26.
  15. ^ Karig, Commander Walter; Burton, Lieutenant Earl; Freeland, Lieutenant Stephen L. (1946). Battle Report (Volume 2); The Atlantic War. New York/Toronto: Farrar and Rinehart, Inc. pp. 386–387.
  16. ^ Burton, Earl (September 2004). "The Other D-Day: The Invasion Of Southern France". Sea Classics. 37 (9): 60–70. Retrieved 2009-06-23.
  17. ^ "Altair Agencja Lotnicza". www.altair.com.pl. Retrieved 29 March 2018.

External links

  • Coast Defense Study Group homepage and list of US forts and batteries
  • Defenses along the Pacific Coast of the United States
  • Coastal Artillery of Finland and Russia at Northern Fortress
  • John T. Duchesneau: The Artillery of Fort Adams
  • Gander, Terry. (PDF). Fortress Study Group. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 April 2014. Retrieved 5 March 2012.
  • Smith, Colin (2006). Singapore Burning: Heroism and Surrender in World War II. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-101036-6.
  • Kirby, Stanley Woodburn (1954). War Against Japan: The Loss of Singapore. History of the Second World War. Vol. I. HMSO. OCLC 58958687.

coastal, artillery, branch, armed, forces, concerned, with, operating, anti, ship, artillery, fixed, batteries, coastal, fortifications, fortifications, castle, harbour, islands, george, harbour, bermuda, construction, beginning, 1612, these, were, first, ston. Coastal artillery is the branch of the armed forces concerned with operating anti ship artillery or fixed gun batteries in coastal fortifications 1 The fortifications of the Castle Harbour Islands and St George s Harbour in Bermuda Construction beginning in 1612 these were the first stone fortifications with the first coastal artillery batteries built by England in the New World An Ottoman redoubt of the Dardanelles Fortified Area The weapon is possibly a German made 28 cm SK L 40 gun on a coast defense mount From the Middle Ages until World War II coastal artillery and naval artillery in the form of cannons were highly important to military affairs and generally represented the areas of highest technology and capital cost among materiel The advent of 20th century technologies especially military aviation naval aviation jet aircraft and guided missiles reduced the primacy of cannons battleships and coastal artillery In countries where coastal artillery has not been disbanded these forces have acquired amphibious capabilities In littoral warfare mobile coastal artillery armed with surface to surface missiles can still be used to deny the use of sea lanes It was long held as a rule of thumb that one shore based gun equaled three naval guns of the same caliber due to the steadiness of the coastal gun which allowed for significantly higher accuracy than their sea mounted counterparts Land based guns also benefited in most cases from the additional protection of walls or earth mounds The range of gunpowder based coastal artillery also has a derivative role in international law and diplomacy wherein a country s three mile limit of coastal waters is recognized as under the nation or state s laws 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Russo Japanese War 1 2 World War II 1 2 1 Norway 1 2 2 Singapore 1 2 3 Pacific 1 2 4 Atlantic Wall 1 3 Post World War II 2 Examples 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 Books and articles 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit 50 pounder Model 1811 Columbiad 7 25 inch or 184 mm bore and center pivot mounting designed by George Bomford as an experimental coastal defense gun This gun was built in 1811 as a component of the Second System of US fortifications One of the first recorded uses of coastal artillery was in 1381 during the war between Ferdinand I of Portugal and Henry II of Castile when the troops of the King of Portugal used cannons to defend Lisbon against an attack from the Castilian naval fleet The use of coastal artillery expanded during the Age of Discoveries in the 16th century when a colonial power took over an overseas territory one of their first tasks was to build a coastal fortress both to deter rival naval powers and to subjugate the natives The Martello tower is an excellent example of a widely used coastal fort which mounted defensive artillery in this case muzzle loading cannon During the 19th century China also built hundreds of coastal fortresses in an attempt to counter Western naval threats Coastal artillery fortifications generally followed the development of land fortifications sometimes separate land defence forts were built to protect coastal forts Through the middle 19th century coastal forts could be bastion forts star forts polygonal forts or sea forts the first three types often with detached gun batteries called water batteries 3 Coastal defence weapons throughout history were heavy naval guns or weapons based on them often supplemented by lighter weapons In the late 19th century separate batteries of coastal artillery replaced forts in some countries in some areas these became widely separated geographically through the mid 20th century as weapon ranges increased The amount of landward defence provided began to vary by country from the late 19th century by 1900 new US forts almost totally neglected these defences Booms were also usually part of a protected harbor s defences In the middle 19th century underwater minefields and later controlled mines were often used or stored in peacetime to be available in wartime With the rise of the submarine threat at the beginning of the 20th century anti submarine nets were used extensively usually added to boom defences with major warships often being equipped with them to allow rapid deployment once the ship was anchored or moored through early World War I In World War I railway artillery emerged and soon became part of coastal artillery in some countries with railway artillery in coast defence some type of revolving mount had to be provided to allow tracking of fast moving targets 4 Coastal artillery could be part of the Navy as in Scandinavian countries war time Germany and the Soviet Union or part of the Army as in English speaking countries In English speaking countries certain coastal artillery positions were sometimes referred to as Land Batteries 5 6 7 distinguishing this form of artillery battery from for example floating batteries 8 9 In the United Kingdom in the later 19th and earlier 20th Centuries the land batteries of the coastal artillery were the responsibility of the Royal Garrison Artillery In the United States coastal artillery was established in 1794 as a branch of the Army and a series of construction programs of coastal defenses began the First System in 1794 the Second System in 1804 and the Third System or Permanent System in 1816 Masonry forts were determined to be obsolete following the American Civil War and a postwar program of earthwork defenses was poorly funded In 1885 the Endicott Board recommended an extensive program of new U S harbor defenses featuring new rifled artillery and minefield defenses most of the board s recommendations were implemented Construction on these was initially slow as new weapons and systems were developed from scratch but was greatly hastened following the Spanish American War of 1898 Shortly thereafter in 1907 Congress split the field artillery and coast artillery into separate branches creating a separate Coast Artillery Corps CAC The CAC was disbanded as a separate branch in 1950 10 In the first decade of the 20th century the United States Marine Corps established the Advanced Base Force The force was used for setting up and defending advanced overseas bases and its close ties to the Navy allowed it to man coast artillery around these bases Russo Japanese War Edit Japanese 11 inch howitzer firing shell visible in flight During the Siege of Port Arthur Japanese forces had captured the vantage point on 203 Meter Hill overlooking Port Arthur harbor After relocating heavy 11 inch 280 mm howitzers with 500 pound 220 kg armor piercing shells to the summit of the Hill the Japanese bombarded the Russian fleet in the harbor systematically sinking the Russian ships within range The Japanese were attacking the city and the Russian ships were trapped in the harbor due to mines making this one of the few cases of coastal guns being employed in an offensive action On December 5 1904 the battleship Poltava was destroyed followed by the battleship Retvizan on December 7 1904 the battleships Pobeda and Peresvet and the cruisers Pallada and Bayan on December 9 1904 The battleship Sevastopol although hit 5 times by 11 inch 280 mm shells managed to move out of range of the guns Stung by the fact that the Russian Pacific Fleet had been sunk by the army and not by the Imperial Japanese Navy and with a direct order from Tokyo that the Sevastopol was not to be allowed to escape Admiral Togo sent in wave after wave of destroyers in six separate attacks on the sole remaining Russian battleship After 3 weeks the Sevastopol was still afloat having survived 124 torpedoes fired at her while sinking two Japanese destroyers and damaging six other vessels The Japanese had meanwhile lost the cruiser Takasago to a mine outside the harbor World War II Edit Norway Edit One of the three 28 cm main battery guns at Oscarsborg During the Battle of Drobak Sound in April 1940 the German navy lost the new heavy cruiser Blucher one of their most modern ships to a combination of fire from various coastal artillery emplacements including two obsolete German made Krupp 280 mm 11 in guns and equally obsolete Whitehead torpedoes The Blucher had entered the narrow waters of the Oslofjord carrying 1 000 soldiers and leading a German invasion fleet The first salvo from the Norwegian defenders fired from Oscarsborg Fortress about 1 mile 1 600 meters distant disabled Blucher s main battery and set her afire Fire from the smaller guns 57 mm to 150 mm swept her decks and disabled her steering and she received several torpedo hits before the fires reached her magazines and doomed her As a result the remainder of the invasion fleet reversed the Norwegian royal family parliament and cabinet escaped and the Norwegian gold reserves were safely removed from the city before it fell Singapore Edit Singapore was defended by its famous large caliber coastal guns which included one battery of three 15 inch 381 mm guns and one with two 15 inch 381 mm guns Prime Minister Winston Churchill nicknamed the garrison as The Gibraltar of the East and the Lion of the Sea This perhaps compelled the Japanese to launch their invasion of Singapore from the north via Malaya in December 1941 It is a commonly repeated misconception that Singapore s large calibre coastal guns were ineffective against the Japanese because they were designed to face south to defend the harbour against naval attack and could not be turned round to face north In fact most of the guns could be turned and were indeed fired at the invaders However the guns were supplied mostly with armour piercing AP shells and few high explosive HE shells AP shells were designed to penetrate the hulls of heavily armoured warships and were mostly ineffective against infantry targets 11 12 Military analysts later estimated that if the guns had been well supplied with HE shells the Japanese attackers would have suffered heavy casualties but the invasion would not have been prevented by this means alone 13 The guns of Singapore achieved their purpose in deterring a Japanese naval attack as the possibility of an expensive capital ship being sunk made it inadvisable for the Japanese to attack Singapore via the sea 14 The very fact that the Japanese chose to advance down from Thailand through Malaya to take Singapore was a testament for the respect the Japanese had for the coastal artillery at Singapore 14 However the lack of HE shells rendered Singapore vulnerable to a land based attack from Malaya via the Johore straits 14 Pacific Edit In December 1941 during the Battle of Wake Island US Marine defense battalions fired at the Japanese invasion fleet with six 5 inch 127 mm guns sinking the Japanese destroyer Hayate by scoring direct hits on her magazines and scoring eleven hits on the light cruiser Yubari forcing her to withdraw and temporarily repulsing Japanese efforts to take the island The Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays denied Manila harbor to the invading Japanese until Corregidor fell to amphibious assault on 6 May 1942 nearly a month after the fall of Bataan Beyond tying up besieging Japanese forces who suffered severe supply shortages due to the inability to use Manila as a port the forts allowed interception of radio traffic later decisive at Midway The Japanese defended the island of Betio in the Tarawa atoll with numerous 203 mm 8 inch coastal guns In 1943 these were knocked out early in the battle with a combined USN naval and aerial bombardment Atlantic Wall Edit A 38 cm gun of Batterie Todt Nazi Germany fortified its conquered territories with the Atlantic Wall Organization Todt built a string of reinforced concrete pillboxes and bunkers along the beaches or sometimes slightly inland to house machine guns antitank guns and artillery ranging in size up to the large 40 6 cm naval guns The intent was to destroy Allied landing craft before they could unload During the Normandy Landings in 1944 shore bombardment was given a high importance using ships from battleships to destroyers and landing craft For example the Canadians at Juno beach had fire support many times greater than they had had for the Dieppe Raid in 1942 The old battleships HMS Ramillies and Warspite with the monitor HMS Roberts were used to suppress shore batteries east of the Orne cruisers targeted shore batteries at Ver sur Mer and Moulineaux while eleven destroyers provided local fire support The equally old battleship Texas was used to suppress the battery at Pointe du Hoc but the guns there had been moved to an inland position unbeknownst to the Allies In addition there were modified landing craft eight Landing Craft Gun each with two 4 7 inch guns four Landing Craft Support with automatic cannon eight Landing Craft Tank Rocket each with a single salvo of 1 100 5 inch rockets eight Landing Craft Assault Hedgerow each with twenty four bombs intended to detonate beach mines prematurely Twenty four Landing Craft Tank carried Priest self propelled 105mm howitzers which also fired while they were on the run in to the beach Similar arrangements existed at other beaches 240 mm 9 4 in shells from Battery Hamburg straddle USS Texas during the Bombardment of Cherbourg On June 25 1944 the American battleship Texas engaged German shore batteries on the Cotentin Peninsula around Cherbourg Battery Hamburg straddled the ship with a salvo of 240mm shells eventually hitting Texas twice one shell damaging the conning tower and navigation bridge with the other penetrating below decks but failing to explode Return fire from Texas knocked out the German battery Blockhouse for 152 mm gun near Camogli Part of the complex called Ligurian Wall Allied efforts to take the port of Toulon in August 1944 ran into Big Willie a battery consisting of two prewar French turrets equipped with the guns taken from the French battleship Provence each mounting a pair of 340 mm naval guns The range and power of these guns was such that the Allies dedicated a battleship or heavy cruiser to shelling the fort every day with the battleship Nevada eventually silencing the guns on August 23 1944 15 16 Post World War II Edit After World War II the advent of jet aircraft and guided missiles reduced the role of coastal artillery in defending a country against air and sea attacks while also rendering fixed artillery emplacements vulnerable to enemy strikes The Scandinavian countries with their long coastlines and relatively weak navies continued in the development and installation of modern coastal artillery systems usually hidden in well camouflaged armored turrets for example Swedish 12 cm automatic turret gun In these countries the coastal artillery was part of the naval forces and used naval targeting systems Both mobile and stationary e g 100 56 TK systems were used In countries where coastal artillery has not been disbanded these forces have acquired amphibious or anti ship missile capabilities In constricted waters mobile coastal artillery armed with surface to surface missiles still can be used to deny the use of sea lanes The Type 88 Surface to Ship Missile is an example of modern mobile coastal artillery Poland also retains a Coastal Missile Division armed with the Naval Strike Missile 17 During the Croatian War of Independence in 1991 coastal artillery operated by Croatian forces played an important role in defending Croatian Adriatic coast from Yugoslav naval and air strikes especially around Zadar Sibenik and Split defeating the Yugoslav Navy in the Battle of the Dalmatian Channels In practice there is a distinction between artillery sited to bombard a coastal region and coastal artillery which has naval compatible targeting systems and communications that are integrated with the navy rather than the army Examples EditIn the UKAdmiralty Pier Turret Tyne Turrets Cross Channel guns Palmerston Forts Needles Battery Ness BatteryBritish coastal guns outside the UKCastle Islands Fortifications Fort St Catherine s St David s Battery Royal Naval Dockyard Bermuda and nearly a hundred other forts and batteries built in Bermuda between 1612 and 1939 Fort Siloso Fort Ostenburg Fort Queenscliff Hobart coastal defences Coastal fortifications of New ZealandUnited States of AmericaBoard of Fortifications U S Army Coast Artillery Corps Seacoast defense in the United States List of coastal fortifications of the United States Battery ChamberlinCanadaYork Redoubt Connaught Battery Cape Spear Fort AmherstAsiaManila and Subic Bays Fort Drum El Fraile Island Fort Mills Singapore consisted of five 15 inch 381 mm guns Nazi GermanyAtlantic Wall Hanstholm fortress Batterie Vara Cross Channel guns Battery LothringenSouth amp Central AmericaCallao Fort Copacabana Santa Clara Battery Valdivian fort systemAustraliaFort Denison Fort Glanville Fort PearceOtherCoastal artillery of the Dardanelles Strait Ottoman Empire German coastal battery Tirpitz near Constanța Romania Swedish Coastal Artillery Russian Empire Peter the Great s Naval Fortress part of the fortification line protecting Saint Petersburg Spanish Army Coastal Artillery including eighteen 38 1 cm 45 Model 1926 naval gunGallery Edit RML 11 inch 25 ton gun at Fort George Bermuda 16 inch howitzer M1920 Fort Story Virginia USA 1942 Pallada under fire as the Oil Depot burns Pallada and Pobeda The effect of thirty years evolution in the design of coastal fortifications between the 1790s and 1822 can be discerned between Ferry Island Fort in the foreground with multiple guns arrayed to cover the water westward and the Martello tower in the background which used a single gun with 360 traverse to cover all of the surrounding area Ferry Reach Bermuda 2011 19th century coastal artillery guns preserved in Suomenlinna fortress in Helsinki British 64 Pounder RML Gun on a Moncrieff disappearing mount at Scaur Hill Fort Bermuda The fort housed a fixed battery meant to serve as coastal artillery as well as guarding against an overland attack Schematic of a coastal fortification with a rotating gun turret Coastal fortification with fixed guns 16 inch Navy MkIIMI gun possibly MkIIIMI firing on a US Army coast defense mount 1931 The weapon behind it is on a disappearing carriage Typical US Army World War II installation of a 16 inch casemated gun A 9 2 RBL two 6 RBLs are in background of the St David s Battery or the Examination Battery St David s Island Bermuda in 2011 9 2 RBL at Fort Victoria on St George s Island in Bermuda St David s Battery Bermuda in 1942 with two 9 2 left and two 6 guns A 6 RBL and two 9 2 RBLs at St David s Battery in Bermuda in 2011 75 mm turret gun model 1957 at Femore battery Sweden 3 abandoned BL 6 inch Mk VII naval gun at 7th coastal artillery battery at Outao PortugalSee also EditArtillery List of coastal artillery Coastal defence and fortification Seacoast defense in the United States Gun laying Disappearing gun Anti ship ballistic missileBooks and articles EditChung Ong Chit 2011 Operation Matador World War II Britain s Attempt to Foil the Japanese Invasion of Malaya and Singapore Hong Kong Marshall Cavendish International Asia ISBN 978 9814435444 References Edit Peter Doyle Matthew R Bennett 2002 Fields of Battle Terrain in Military History Dordrecht Kluwer Academic ISBN 1 4020 0433 8 The three mile limit is often circumvented by boats offering Gambling Cruises or Party Cruises Past the three mile limit a States restrictive laws are relaxed so gambling or teenage drinking in the United States become unenforceable in courts Weaver II John R 2018 A Legacy in Brick and Stone American Coastal Defense Forts of the Third System 1816 1867 2nd Ed McLean VA Redoubt Press pp 16 17 24 34 ISBN 978 1 7323916 1 1 Hogg Ian V 2002 British amp American Artillery of World War II Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole Books pp 180 181 ISBN 1 85367 478 8 George Floyd Duckett 1848 Technological military dictionary German English French p 201 John Gross Barnard 1861 Notes on Sea Coast Defence D Van Nostrand p 48 land battery Civil War Forificiations Digital Research Library 2004 Batteries River and Coast Defense Dictionary of Fortification Retrieved 14 December 2016 Glenn Tucker 2015 Chickamauga Bloody Battle In The West Pickle Partners Publishing ISBN 9781786251152 Hamilton had experimented with an ironclad floating battery and Stevens had set up an ironclad land battery Rutter 1867 The Great Ironclad Floating Gun Battery For Bay and Harbour Defences Illustrated Sydney News via Trove National Library of Australia the floating battery will have all the advantages of a land battery combined with the capability of motion See Coast Artillery Organization A Brief Overview Bolling W Smith and William C Gaines in a 2008 update to American Seacoast Defenses Mark Berhow Ed CDSG Press McLean VA 2004 An online version of this article can be found here Smith 2006 pp 442 443 amp 527 Kirby 1954 p 361 Chung 2011 pp 24 26 a b c Chung 2011 pp 26 Karig Commander Walter Burton Lieutenant Earl Freeland Lieutenant Stephen L 1946 Battle Report Volume 2 The Atlantic War New York Toronto Farrar and Rinehart Inc pp 386 387 Burton Earl September 2004 The Other D Day The Invasion Of Southern France Sea Classics 37 9 60 70 Retrieved 2009 06 23 Altair Agencja Lotnicza www altair com pl Retrieved 29 March 2018 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coastal artillery Coast Defense Study Group homepage and list of US forts and batteries A brief history of the coast artillery corps Defenses along the Pacific Coast of the United States Fort Carroll Coastal Artillery of Finland and Russia at Northern Fortress John T Duchesneau The Artillery of Fort Adams Gander Terry TWENTIETH CENTURY BRITISH COAST DEFENCE GUNS PDF Fortress Study Group Archived from the original PDF on 14 April 2014 Retrieved 5 March 2012 Smith Colin 2006 Singapore Burning Heroism and Surrender in World War II London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 101036 6 Kirby Stanley Woodburn 1954 War Against Japan The Loss of Singapore History of the Second World War Vol I HMSO OCLC 58958687 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coastal artillery amp oldid 1101509638, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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