Anniston, Alabama? Acc to this http://www.ordmusfound.org/ APG's stock is being moved to Virginia. Article dated today.
__________________
"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.
The date may be today's but it seems to be written into the page on the webserver. A quick check with archive.org shows this page has the same text
and varying dates. I haven't worked through the archive.org snapshots to figure out when the likely article date was.
As far as I know the Aberdeen collection has been dispersed to Fort Lee, VA, some of the artillery to Fort Sill, OK and the residue to storage at Anniston.
Regards,
Charlie
-- Edited by CharlieC on Monday 9th of February 2015 01:22:18 AM
The demise of many, many tanks, artillery, and support vehicles at Aberdeen is a sad story. After the armistice, literally tons of German material was brought back to the USA; ostensibly for evaluation. There was so much that most wasn't even examined.( Hundreds of vehicles sat on the warves at Hoboken, NJ for a couple years waiting for transit to Aberdeen. (Finally, they were all reloaded on barges and dumped in the Atlantic.) The Aberdeen collection sat undisturbed until the WW2 scrap drives. Then a decision was made to get rid of all WW1 items, hence the disappearance of the A7v, 42CM möser, and a host of artillery pieces. The only surviving WW1 items were the Ruski 152mm Howitzer, and the 8,8cm K Flak; and then only because they were mistaken as WW2 items. Oh, but our administrators weren't through, The Korean War gave fresh effort to thinning out the storage grounds and more stuff went in 1954 during yet another scrap drive ( yes, after the 1953 armistice ). Some more rare stuff went again, tanks and more tanks; to include the rare Jap Engineer mine clearing armored vehicle.
I might add all this was done by uniformed Army field grade personnel; not civilian administrators. But lest you chose to forget, the Brits are also culpable in this shameful behavior; remember the ultra rare Ausf. F Panther turret used on the target range over there.
We can hardly point the finger when you consider our Crystal Palace episode.
But what strikes me now is that I've lost track of surviving WWI vehicles in the US. At one time they were all comfortably in two or three locations (Fort Knox, Aberdeen, etc) but now they seem to be dispersed ever more widely. Is there an up-to-date list of where everything is?
__________________
"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.
But lest you chose to forget, the Brits are also culpable in this shameful behavior; remember the ultra rare Ausf. F Panther turret used on the target range over there.
As an aside, that was many years ago, firstly sat outside Bovington (I remember seeing it in the 1970's*) as a rusty object, now it's been cleaned & painted, and put inside. Sturmtiger & Bergepanther were consigned to the ranges too. Our junking of captured A7V is well know to members. None of these items, however, were in the national museum's care. That's what annoys me the most.
It's the way they've been left outside to rot that bugs me, even we managed to get the WW1 stuff undercover 30+ years ago.
Oh, I could not agree with you more. We, in America, may not have the corner on historical ignorance, but I'm sure we're near the top. Examples of naivety are endless. As an example, shortly after the war, the French government sent 48 box cars( 40 or 8 as they were refereed to by the AEF ), one for each US state. Most are gone today; rotted, stolen, or torn apart for metal scrap. In the early 20s the army tried to get rid of surplus war booty at Aberdeen by making cannon available for display at the newly crated American Legion parks. Most of them were allowed to rust away into ugly oblivion.
However, once in awhile someone steps forward and rescues these pieces from extinction; even as Ralph Lovett did with the only surviving( that I'm aware of) Ger. articulated MG wagon from the artillery range at Ft. Hood.
A bit off topic, but its not only Historic Landships that are lost, Historic Seaships can suffer the same fate. This happened in 2004, please note the comment at the end of the fist paragraph http://www.prinzeugen.com/S97.htm
This gladdens the heart though. http://www.bmpt.org.uk/boats/S130/index1.htm
-- Edited by LincolnTanker on Friday 13th of February 2015 08:24:22 PM
__________________
ChrisG
The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity(Dorothy Parker)
One of the more interesting tanks ex-Aberdeen was the M1922 - it's the only surviving tank with a snake track and cable suspension. It seems the Ordnance Corps were
interested in exploring Johnson's designs and reworked the M1921 medium tank prototype with the advanced track and suspension. I haven't seen any recent images
of the M1922 at Anniston - I hope it just hasn't rotted away.