During the war, France published a goodly number of post cards; I have a modest collection of them and thought I might share a few for conversational, if not informational purposes.
This first is a Hotchkiss in Belgian service. Note their uniforms and the receiver of the MG. Any comments please ?
-- Edited by 28juni14 on Monday 19th of July 2010 01:40:46 AM
Well, I would say that the photo is between 1911 and 1914. The men are wearing the single-breasted tunic and the corporal the earlier, double-breasted model. It was quite normal to see such a mixture. It's clearly posed, since they're not in Campaign Order and they're wearing the Undress Cap (Feltmuts) so I suspect it's pre-War.
Can't positively identify the Hotchkiss - there were Models 1897, 1900, 1908, and 1914, all virtually identical, but I think we can rule out it being the 1914.
I would have said that this was a photo of a trial (like those of the Madsen and Schwarzlose that didn't amount to anything) but this photo I've come across recently shows a Hotchkiss in battle conditions. The interesting thing is that most of the men are Line or possibly Grenadiers, but the men attending the gun are wearing Carabinier Cyclist caps. Those 4 are also wearing greatcoats, which was not regulation for the Cyclists, but there was a lot of improvisation during the chaos of the retreat and they might have scrounged them. (There was such a shortage of everything that it's hard to imagine that there were any spare greatcoats, but that's the only explanation I can come up with) Note that they are wearing the ventral ammunition pouch but no other equipment.
If anyone can throw any light, feel free.
-- Edited by James H on Monday 19th of July 2010 11:52:53 AM
"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
.. and now two more pics of the Hotchkiss in French service . The first is interesting because of the early uniforms with what I thought was late war head gear, but stand corrected; none-the-less a good detail shot of the weapon system.
Look closely at the second pic and note the MG is on a St.Etienne mount !
-- Edited by 28juni14 on Monday 19th of July 2010 06:00:23 PM
I don't think that's so unusual: Etiennes and Hotchkisses fitted on the same tripod as the lugs were the same. You can see them quite often on the same tripod.
Hi Hotchniss Mgs appear to be designed by L.V.Benet and H.A.Mercie you can find patents here...
Hi Ironsides,
Nice finding again! It is really an automised rifle with some accent on rifle, the bolt, lugs, extractor and ejector rather similar to those of the MAS 1936 or the earlier French rifle systems. Not that surprisingly as they are having the same roots I think.
It had never occurred to me to wonder why "Hotchkiss" is such an un-French name. This, from various sources, is apparently the story:
The Hotchkiss was based on a design by Captain Baron A. Odkolek von Augeza of Vienna. The patents had been purchased by the firm of Benjamin Hotchkiss, based in Saint-Denis, near Paris. Benjamin Hotchkiss was no longer alive at the time of the purchase, but the Odkolek design was developed and improved upon under the direction of American-born Lawrence V. Benét with the assistance of Henri Mercié.
Hotchkiss was born in Watertown, Connecticut, and moved to Sharon, Connecticut in childhood; his early experiments were made there in his father's hardware factory. Starting in the 1850s, he was employed as a gunmaker in Hartford, working on Colt revolvers and Winchester rifles.
After the American Civil War, the U.S. government showed little interest in funding new weapons. In 1867, Hotchkiss moved to France and set up a munitions factory in Saint-Denis, near Paris, named Hotchkiss et Cie. At about this time, he developed a revolving barrel machine gun (in French: "canon-revolver") known as the Hotchkiss gun (which would see use in the Wounded Knee Massacre in 1890); the gun was made in four sizes from 37 mm to 57 mm, the largest intended for naval use. After his death in 1885, the Hotchkiss company also developed in 1897 and later manufactured in large numbers an air cooled, gas actuated infantry machine gun which was widely used by several countries, particularly France and the United States during World War One.
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"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
Gentlemen, here's the St.Etienne. I have numerous pics, but will start with these two. I can't tell if the first photo actually depicts gun smoke from the bore and breach , or if it was added by an artist. Note the extended ammunition "stick" in the second. pic.
the St.Etienne was an interesting weapon. Its gas piston rod moved just the other way, forward instead of the backward movement of the Hotchkiss. The motion was reversed by a gear mechanism, ingenious (I think more than 60 parts) but complicated. It was based on its predecessor the Puteaux 1905, not a very effective weapon. The St.Etienne, which wasn't a bad weapon at all suffered by its complicated mechanism, prone to clogging and needing careful cleaning.
I think the first picture shows another interesting thing, the Model 1892 carbines. Exactly why they were made for, being shorter and more handy for machine gunners, mortar squads and of course cavalry where it all came from. And they were light weights too, 3kg. Also notice the pick axe, the 'pioche portative' behind the haversack of the kneeling man.
Excellent observations, Kieffer ! Before leaving the St.Etienne, here are 3 more pics of the weapon system. The first illustrates the gun's cleaning kit, which I thought was of interest. While the next two illustrate the method of catching spent casings during field exercises.
Note the rew uniforms & dress.
-- Edited by 28juni14 on Wednesday 21st of July 2010 09:31:19 PM
collecting casings (and counting them) after training is a habit in many armed forces I guess. But somehow casings, blanks or complete rounds disappear in soldiers pockets, to be taken home as souvenirs, becoming conversation pieces on many birthday parties where dad is telling the stories of his finest hours. Here the folding bucket is showing up again, the 'seau en toile' as I learned earlier on the forum. The tripod is the older type with the big hand wheel, made of brass. Brass was used extensively in the St.Etienne, with the complex mechanism it must have been a rather expensive weapon to produce. The cleaning kit: what a nice and rather moving picture. Instead of showing ammo boxes, or their carbines they proudly present the tool box. I think the T-shaped rod is the cleaning rod, probably extendible by screwing on a second rod. The man on the right seems to be the only one wearing a belt, with I think a model 1886 bayonet.
...collecting casings (and counting them) after training is a habit in many armed forces I guess. ...
Taken to its ultimate expression in the Italian 8mm (8x59) Breda model 37 HMG which neatly re-inserted the fired cartridge casings back into the feed-tray. Nobody seems to know why but it was supposedly a superb MG. Oh well, a WW2 weapon so we needn't concern ourselves with it too much but it is a footnote about the quest of the military to secure and account for all ammunition (and auditing fired rounds is part of the process).
Considering the less-than-loveable natures of some senior NCOs, Warrant Officers and junior Officers I'm sure many of us have known I can only suppose this was some form of self-preservation, rather than of frugality
I'm sure the casings were saved for reloading. It's a relatively simple means to economize ammunition expenditures.
.. in the USA the exercise is called "policing brass". The practice was discontinued some years ago in favor of a civilian contractor who visited firing ranges for the recovery effort. The contractor then paid X dollars to the Army per pound, and was then free to resell the brass to the civilian market.
Rectalgia wrote: Taken to its ultimate expression in the Italian 8mm (8x59) Breda model 37 HMG which neatly re-inserted the fired cartridge casings back into the feed-tray. Nobody seems to know why but it was supposedly a superb MG.
Hi Steve, that was remarkable indeed. One could assume catching cases is a handy practise in closed rooms like tanks but for that reason the 37 was modified, the feed-tray replaced by a box magazine system. The tray had to be emptied when reloading this weapon, I guess in combat situations the cases were thrown hastily all over the place anyhow... But as you stated already it's a ww2 thing, though I must say that this is just a little off-topic, it's not about elephants trumpeting in the coal mine so there is hope! regards, Kieffer
I'm sure the casings were saved for reloading. It's a relatively simple means to economize ammunition expenditures. ...
Well, I'm sort of guessing but I think while that would be true in many places now, in 'those days' the US-invented Berdan primers were mostly used in military small arms cartridges (except, perhaps, in the USA which was apparently an 'early adopter' of the British-invented Boxer primers in military service) and those then more common (Berdan primers) are not so easily reloaded. The commercial processes used pneumatic pressure to decap/deprime but even then some/a lot of the ammo had the primer crimped and "shellacked" which conspires to make it difficult or impossible.
There was also the matter of cheaper, corrosive (mercuric) priming compounds widely used in military primers which tended to "poison" the brass casings. Of course when it comes to MG ammunition you want maximum reliability of function and reloaded ammunition has drawbacks in that regard - the cartridge case expands and lengthens, requiring re-sizing and (perhaps) trimming leading to thinner walls and maybe re-annealing/differential heat treatment is needed (which mercury poisoning compromises), comparatively the base needs to be hard, the neck soft - and it still ends up weaker (more prone to head separation, primer pocket enlargement and neck splitting). The answer is to re-issue as rifle ammunition but MG ammo may have distinctive head stamps so that form of recycling could compromise/complicate the purpose of such marking.
I really think there was a security aspect involved in the military thinking (otherwise they would have used Boxer priming) but certainly also the supply (and value) of metal - brass in particular - was a critical operational (and economic) factor in wartime which would be an anticipated exigency. I'm supposing that in the WW1 era, and for a considerable period after, most of that brass was re-smelted. Except maybe in the US. All armies strictly control their materiels of course. But if you've read HH Kirst's Gunner Asch Goes to War you may recall a passage where a conscript fires a hoarded round through a building (lavatory maybe) containing an instructor. Find me a conscript who has not felt like doing just the same! Well, maybe without the building in the way.
Going against that argument somewhat, there was a time when even civilian reloaders, individual citizens, routinely reloaded Berdan-primed cases and some reckoned they could de-cap it as quickly as others did Boxer-primed cases but volumes were low, it was a far more skilled and 'fiddly' operation, there was an appreciable wastage rate and case life was not great (maybe the mercury thing). And at the end of the day, Berdans were only reloaded by such people because Boxers weren't available 'there and then'.
I'm not sure what most armies (apart from the USA) use now. In my day (mid 1960s) only the 7.62mm NATO blank was Boxer-primed (the 'case' was plastic and the base was aluminium which doesn't suit Berdan design). I have a vague notion the (earlier) .303 'ballistite' cartridge for use with the rifle grenade projector cup might have been Boxer-primed (but crimped) also but I'm unsure why - well the crimping would be to handle over-pressure, those things had a huge kick and deafening report and presumably developed very high - but fractionally delayed - chamber pressures.
It is a complex field, surprisingly so unless you consider the criticality of it and perhaps overlook the thousands upon thousands of 'man-years' of development effort within the shifting mosaic of 'compromise and practicality'. Even so, logic sometimes seems to have taken a holiday.
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Friday 23rd of July 2010 07:10:38 AM
...But as you stated already it's a ww2 thing, though I must say that this is just a little off-topic, it's not about elephants trumpeting in the coal mine so there is hope!
Well, I wonder if an elephant could be modified into the dreaded 'flame trumpet'. Maybe both ends. Was it the Cheshires in Egypt (Napoleonic wars) who were attacked from the front and the rear at the same time? They might have found a use for such elephants! Anyway, as a consequence of that engagement they became the only regiment authorised to wear cap badges on both the front and the back of their caps.
I'm sure the casings were saved for reloading. It's a relatively simple means to economize ammunition expenditures.
Yes, that makes totally sense. I think safety plays a part too, after live ammo shooting any instructing NCO doesn't want to have somebody walking around with an abusively chambered gun.
The zouaves: an interesting theme I think. If I am correct the French zouave units were disbanded in the 60's. They were always elite, and fierced fighters despite their 'clowny' trousers. They had their origins in French colonial support units from Marocco (Berber) but later they were recruited from French (living there) only, if I am right. The men on the picture are wearing that typical fez, a 'chechia' but I don't know if that's the official French military name for it.
In Dutch history they played a remarkable (and not totally forgotten) role as in the Pope's zouave army more than 3000 Dutch young (unmarried) men served. With them (but not so many) French, Flemish and Canadians! All together they formed a fighting force of 11.000. The popal appeal on young catholic men to defend his realm must have been great I guess. But unlike the French zouaves these were'nt very well trained. Fighting Garibaldi and the Italian monarch, with French support, the case was lost in 1870 when the French were occupied elsewhere. Rome was taken and the zouaves were sent back home.
Rectalgia, Reinserting the rounds back into the feed tray seems to have been the original design for the Perino HMG 1901.... according to this article in "Small Arms Review" on the Fiat-Revelli HMG 1914....
...before moving away from the St.Etienne, I wanted to share this interesting pic. What is the half-disk devise attachment on this AA machine gun ? Can't be a wire cutter,... but what is it ... some sort of counter-weight ?
-- Edited by 28juni14 on Friday 23rd of July 2010 04:49:22 PM
Rectalgia, Reinserting the rounds back into the feed tray seems to have been the original design for the Perino HMG 1901.... according to this article in "Small Arms Review" on the Fiat-Revelli HMG 1914....
Excellent Ivor - that is all new to me. The Italians persevered with a number of design features then (cartridge lubrication pump and retention of expended cartridges) finally "getting it right" with the M37 but in their specialised MG 8x59 calibre this time.
So the retention of expended cases was an old idea of uncertain purpose (as I still believe reloading to be a doubtful proposition for all the reasons I have given). As Kieffer has said, retaining the expended cartridges makes good sense for operation in a confined space (also those things are bloody *hot*, trust me) yet when the Italians modified their M37 for tank operation (their M38 Breda) they used a more conventional top-mounted magazine and, it follows, "loose" ejection
The Italian site - I love it that the Italian gunners with the "very unreliable" M1907 Saint Etienne 8mm Lebel (Si trattava di un'arma poco affidabile) had a special blue-white insignia to distinguish them from the Fiat-Revelli gunners with their red-white insignia. I can only imagine the esprit de corps that would engender
Hi 28juni14 it looks like some kind of angle device, it seems to have a hand....
Agree - it looks like nothing else so much as as a 16th century gunner's "quadrant" (though a full half-circle rather than quarter, to suit both elevation and depression angles). In AA service I could imagine it graduated in corrected range factors to suit the angle of elevation/depression (that is, ranging from "0x" at either end through "1x" at the mid-point according to the cosine of the angle). How often it might be used to shoot straight down is a matter of conjecture.
This may be of interest - a replica St Etienne built by a friend of mine, Paul Harris (who also took the photograph)
Hi Rob, what a nice replica your friend built! Is it possible to reveal some secrets, about the material, and did your friend model the inner parts too?
As replica's here are forbidden (and sometimes not, regulations are a bit of a puzzle to me) I sometimes ask myself where the line is between let's say creative or artistic 'freedom' and the real world. Long time ago I mentioned the Italian artist Pino Pascali, world famous sculptor who made very interesting models of realistic machine guns and artillery, but all of these are his own designs.
But why is it attached on the gun itself (as far as I can see on the picture) and not on the tripod? Or, how can you 'read' the angle here?
Having some guesses here. It has to reference the bore-line, I guess that was just a convenient attachment point they found. There were much better (or at least more modern-looking) bubble-type quadrants available but they did not handle extreme angles, those were mostly for indirect-fire applications probably.
This one, although it covers the complete range of elevation and depression angles, doesn't look like a combat-ready contrivance and it would need a "spare" member of the gun crew to read off and relay the the dial indications which, in truth, could be better just estimated by an experienced gunner when chasing a rapidly-moving target whose actual range is only approximately known anyway. Maybe that was the point of it, for training - to develop in the the MG crew a "feel" for the range adjustment factors they would have to estimate for themselves in actual combat.
Tracer bullets would be simpler but I guess they are more expensive, they are more a substitute for the sights rather than an aid for the use/offset estimation of the sights and they can't always be used without attracting counter-fire. A bit of clay target/trap shooting is good training for machine gunners too (air-to-air or ground-to-air), but sometimes it is difficult to convince the officers of that.
However the peculiar demands of AA marksmanship training were met, a top-notch MMG crew could deny free use of the skies to enemy aircraft wanting to operate at between 200 - 2,000 feet over an area of maybe 2 square miles, so it was well worth putting in some effort to produce the necessary skills and reflexes. Specialised sights are maybe a better idea for that sort of effectiveness but I guess those were not yet developed. Besides, the use of those still needs a lot of training and practice.
Regards,
Steve
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Saturday 24th of July 2010 06:47:32 PM
... and just one more photo of the St.Etienne, and then I'll move on to the Puteaux. This is the only pic I have of the St.Etienne with a shield. Though it does not appear to be a field improvision, I suspect they were not common. Could this have been a fortress adaptation system ?
-- Edited by 28juni14 on Sunday 25th of July 2010 12:32:22 AM
... This is the only pic I have of the St.Etienne with a shield. Though it does not appear to be a field improvision, I suspect they were not common. ...
That will be a rare picture indeed, it is marvellous that you have one (and share it). The shield is a standard fitting, seldom used because its weight limited mobility, but shown (with a drawing) in the French site that Ironsides linked to in his earlier post. The rampart/bulwark mount Affűt de rempart modčle 1907. It is mentioned somewhere else too, I have forgotten, but I have never seen a photo of it in use before.
... and now, the Mle1905 Puteaux. You will note both photos depict the same team moments apart. I believe they date from the 1912 manoeuvres. The brass cooling rings are easily distuiguishable in these crisp old images.
Great pictures again, and thanks for sharing them!
we're on manoeuvres again, and the foldable bucket is there too. The cloth on the caps: I guess they are 'the enemy'. I read somewhere, that the MG sections consisted of two MG's, where the Puteaux had interchangable parts only with its companion of the section it belonged, the parts having engraved numbers. The St. Etienne had interchangable parts with all others. If that's true it would imply that these guns were almost hand built in pairs? I read that in French, mine is a bit rusty, so I might have misunderstood that. Can anyone confirm or correct that?
To finish this tread, I've added the following photos of early MG use with the French Cavalry. These are all the Mle1905, and illustrate the limber used with these MGs.
Magnificent shots once more, many thanks. The middle one "Campagne de Maroc 1907-1908" - I admit to abysmal ignorance of the history of the la mission civilisatrice but suspect 1907-1908 reflects only a portion or phase of the campaign in Morocco.
Great pictures indeed! A little detail: the bar on the tripod (last picture). On some ww2 reels of the Pacific War you can see the practise too, Japanese carrying their MG ( even using bambu..). The limber: in the Franco-Prussian War the concept of using the Mitrailleuse Montigny as a field artillery piece failed, only at Gravelottes the mitrailleuse was used in the 'proper' way and with an effective outcome. That seems to be the way these things go: inappropriate use of a new invention taken up by opponents, this time using them with devastating effects (though I don't know if the German army in ww1 already had the tactics but at least they were equipped with MG's in bigger numbers). The guns: the Etienne, the Puteaux and most off all the Chauchat had their reputation of being unreliable, which of course was true in a military context. But even the Chauchat, called sometimes 'roughly' built is a rather elaborate piece of machinery, a closer look reveals much more innovative technical solutions as one should think at first sight. It didn't work under battle conditions but that's another story.
Hi Rob, what a nice replica your friend built! Is it possible to reveal some secrets, about the material, and did your friend model the inner parts too?
The only secret is extremely good mastership! It's made out of wood, so no inner parts etc - there are some metal parts but mostly wood. I've got a Lewis gun made by him and having a .303 Hotchkiss made too, he's also done MG08's, 8mm Hotchkiss etc