Illustrated with six photographs, the attached article is one of the very first pieces of journalism to document the planning, construction, testing and deployment of the rail-based artillery batteries that were manned by the U.S. Navy in W.W. I France.
“They dreamed a dream wherein a squadron of colossal trains, sheltered in armor plate, cruised constantly on dry land behind the battle lines. On each train a hundred bluejackets and their officers lived, ate, slept and worked the giant guns that rested upon mechanically perfect mounts and hurled explosive shells to the limit of their extreme ranges. In short, they dreamed the United States Naval Railway Batteries just as complete to the firing lines a few months later.”
The article was penned by Kendrick Scofield, who was the Associate Editor of The American Rifleman
at the time.
Click here to read about the U.S. Navy railroad guns of W.W. I.
KEY WORDS: Shore-Based Naval Artillery in ww1 France,deployment of US Navy Railway Batteries in WW1 France,rear admiral CP Plunkett ww1 naval rail artillery,admiral Ralph Earle during ww1,rear admiral Ralph Earle US Navy Ordnance Bureau 1917-1918,US Navy Ordnance Engineer Commander Harvey Delano WW1 US Navy Railway Artillery,US Navy Railway Artillery Reserve crews serving in ww1 France,US Navy Department of Ordnance in France 1918,design and construction of naval rail artillery during WW1,ww1 artillery article by Kendrick Scofield 1918,naval gun factory Washington DC 1918,US Navy Captain A.L. Willard at the naval gun factory Washington DC,US Navy Captain A.L. Willard rail artillery during ww1,Navy department of ordnance expertise during WW1,14 inch 50-caliber naval guns during WW1