Photos WW1 British, Commonwealth & US Forces

WWI. Meuse - Argonne Offensive. France. September 1918. A US Army gun crew from the Regimental Headquarters Company, 23rd Infantry Regiment, firing a French Canon d'Infanterie de 37 modèle 1916 TRP infantry support gun during an advance against entrenched German positions.

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WWI. Battle of Arras. France. April 1917. Forward scouts of the 9th Hodson's Horse (Bengal Lancers), Indian Army, pause to consult a map near Vraignes. Photo by Lieutenant Ernest Brooks. [IWM Q 2061]

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“Lewis gunners of the 12th Battalion, Royal Scots, wearing box respirators during a gas attack on a front line trench, Meteren, 25 June 1918.” Photo taken by photographer John Warwick Brooke.
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US troops prepare to fire a French 37 mm gun with a scope attached at some German snipers near Diefmatten, France (June 25, 1918)
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There was a lot of new technology brought to the battlefield during World War I. Two of those were used in tandem – and somehow managed to perfectly compliment each other. It was the fighter plane and the machine gun, mounted perfectly for the pilot's use, without shooting up the propeller that kept the bird aloft.
Was it the gun that was designed to fire through the propeller or the propeller designed to be used with the machine gun? Yes.
The system worked because of its synchronization gear which kept the gun from firing when the propeller would be hit by the bullet. While airborne the prop would actually be spinning five times as fast as the weapon could fire, so there was little margin of error.
The problem was solved by the addition of a gear-like disc on the propeller that would only allow the gun to fire in between the blades' rotation.
Often called an "interrupter" the disc did not actually interrupt the firing of the weapon, it merely allowed it to fire semiautomatically instead of at an even pace.
When the prop spun around to a certain position, it would allow the weapon's firing mechanism to fully cycle and fire a round. Usually, when the round was supposed to be interrupted, the weapon was actually just in the process of cycling.
Synchronization gear was also needed for later planes, such as the German Me-109 fighter, seen here below in World War II.
So pulling the trigger would essentially connect the weapon to the propeller, and the prop would actually be firing the gun. Letting the trigger go would disconnect the weapon from the propeller.
Later versions, such as the Kauper interrupter used on the Sopwith Camel, allowed for multiple machine guns at different rates of fire. The interrupter was a welcome change from the early days of combat aviation, where props were sometimes metal plated just in case mechanically uncoordinated rounds hit the propeller, so the bullet would ricochet.


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Siamese troops arrive in France, July 1918.
More than 1,200 Siamese military pilots, nurses, soldiers and volunteers were sent to Europe in July of 1918.

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A trio of Italian-made FIAT 3000 M/30 light tanks...later designated L5/30....perhaps the ultimate evolution of the original WW1 Renault FT?
Italy began manufacturing its own licence-built version of the tank after WW1 and as such it became their first mass-produced tank.
The design was "tweaked" during its production run with different armament and engine combinations being used.
It was succesfully exported to a number of European countries and some African countries in the Italian sphere of influence like Libya and Ethiopia...even China acquired some!
Although long since obsolete some were even deployed to oppose the Allied landings in Sicily.

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A trio of Italian-made FIAT 3000 M/30 light tanks...later designated L5/30....perhaps the ultimate evolution of the original WW1 Renault FT?
Italy began manufacturing its own licence-built version of the tank after WW1 and as such it became their first mass-produced tank.
The design was "tweaked" during its production run with different armament and engine combinations being used.
It was succesfully exported to a number of European countries and some African countries in the Italian sphere of influence like Libya and Ethiopia...even China acquired some!
Although long since obsolete some were even deployed to oppose the Allied landings in Sicily.

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A pair of British "Tommies" of the 8th Battalion, London Regiment, 58th Division, examine a captured German MG 08/15 machine-gun, Malard Wood, near Amiens, August 18th, 1918.
Note the second example on the wall behind them, plus the captured Mausers and other German equipment.
The MG 08/15 was an attempt to create a "lightweight" man-portable version of the MG 08 which was a heavy fixed-position machine-gun mounted on a substantial tripod.
However, although lighter, it was still a cumbersome weapon, but nevertheless manufactured in quite large numbers.
There was also an air-cooled aircraft version of the weapon.
Surviving MG 08/15s were re-conditioned between the wars and some were actually kept in service into WW2 where they were primarily installed in fixed defensive positions such as the Atlantic Wall.
(IWM)

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WWI. Bruay, France. 26 March 1918. A flight of Sopwith Camels of No. 4 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps (AFC). The machines have just been made ready for further operations against the advancing Germans. [AWM E01878]
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Members of the Canadian Motor Machine Gun Brigade clean and repair an assortment of machine-guns: a captured Maxim MG-08 (centre); Vickers Mk 1 (left); Lewis Mk 2 aircraft machine-gun (right). Machine-gun crews were equipped with a cleaning kit, tool kit, and spare parts wallet for each machine-gun that they were issued, and it was the crew that was responsible for minor repairs to worn or broken parts and the daily cleaning of the gun. Despite this cleaning and repair, the average lifespan of a water-cooled barrel in a Vickers machine-gun was between 15,000 and 20,000 rounds. If more rounds were fired than this, the gun would steadily loose accuracy and effectiveness.
https://amzn.to/37BAFpJ

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An Austin Armoured Car of the British Army on patrol in the vicinity of Biefvillers-lès-Bapaume, a small farming village located just outside Bapaume in the Pas-de-Calais department, August 25,1918.
These Austin vehicles were originally a part of a Russian contract and differed from the standard British production model in that the Russians specified twin turrets and pairs of roadwheels at the rear.
However, the October Revolution of 1917 meant that the export contract was not able to be completed so the 80 or so vehicles which had already been produced were taken into British service instead.
(IWM)

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This World War 1 era photo is of Flanders Field in Belgium which was heavily bombarded with artillery shells from both British and German forces reducing once an area of growth into barren wasteland.
The location also inspired the poem.

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