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Artillery firing from Landing Craft or barges in WW2


bigkahunasix
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Gentlemen, I am having a long distance conversation with an older Marine Artilleryman who is questioning the use/firing of artillery from landing craft and/or barges during some of the amphibious landings, specifically in the ETO.

 

I have searched both Google and Bing images with no success, but I know they exist because of some lengthy discussions at Aberdeen on its practicality after seeing pictures of barges with M2 105mm howitzers firing from them in the museum. It was decided there that while it COULD be done that the practicality and accuracy was greatly suspect.

 

Anyone have a photo or two tucked away that can help?? I will give full credit to the photo owner, this is just a discussion between friends not an internet slap fight.

 

Thanks in advance.

 

BK6

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I my be going out on a limb, but I think I remember reading about it being done during the D-Day invasion in an impromptu manner because of the carnage at the beachhead. Pretty sure I read that in "The Longest Day", but I could be wrong.

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I am pretty sure it was trialed at the Sicily landing and then used intentionally again on D-Day. But I have no idea where to find those pictures again. I searched last night until my eyes just gave out. Figured here would be my best bet for someone having copies or a book on it.

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If you have the book "Spearheading D-Day" American Special Units in Normandy" by Jonathan Gawne (a member here) there is a picture and a caption that specifically addresses this question. On page 22-23 there is a great picture showing a LCT with 4 105 mm howitzers pointed inland and they were used specifically to provide supporting fire to the landing beaches. The guns were chained to the deck of the boat and then upon landing they were unchained and towed off to the beaches..

 

I don't want to post a picture without Jonathan's permission...

 

Leigh

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If you have the book "Spearheading D-Day" American Special Units in Normandy" by Jonathan Gawne (a member here) there is a picture and a caption that specifically addresses this question. On page 22-23 there is a great picture showing a LCT with 4 105 mm howitzers pointed inland and they were used specifically to provide supporting fire to the landing beaches. The guns were chained to the deck of the boat and then upon landing they were unchained and towed off to the beaches..

 

I don't want to post a picture without Jonathan's permission...

 

Leigh

 

 

 

That was one of the pictures I was speaking of, some of the others showed the howitzers and even a few calliope rocket launchers on flat barges firing in support of a landing.

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post-32632-0-82441000-1423079348.jpg PTO: From; 'The Jungleers'. 41st Div in WWII. My Dad's Comments; Here is Batt 'B' 205th FA Bn making like Naval gunners. Fortunately this idea was never used in real battle. I missed this operation, my section was ashore someplace. No doubt surveying part of Australia as a training exercise.
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attachicon.gifImage (210).jpg PTO: From; 'The Jungleers'. 41st Div in WWII. My Dad's Comments; Here is Batt 'B' 205th FA Bn making like Naval gunners. Fortunately this idea was never used in real battle. I missed this operation, my section was ashore someplace. No doubt surveying part of Australia as a training exercise.

Great picture! looks like an Iowa class battleship. Do you have an idea which ship?

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I'd swear I've seen photos of such a thing, but I question how practical it would be. You would have the motion of the boat to calculate into your firing solution, without the support that you would have on a naval ship for a weapon of that size. All you could do is point it in the general direction of the enemy for harassing fire rather than precision fire.

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Salvage Sailor

That is a LST deck. Also, Gil is absolutely right. Without the stabilizing gear inherent to Naval Gunfire Support, you're just guessing on where your shot will fall as you have no reliable azimuth reading.

 

Long? Short? Hit a wave? In the treeline?

 

This would only be reliable on a duck pond with no wind, a direct line of sight, and wooden ducks as targets.

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As I mentioned in the OP, while we could do it the accuracy was very suspect. In the review and discussion it was surmised that it was employed for volume of fire....not its effectiveness.

 

I would classify it as "harassment" fire more than anything.

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I swear I've seen video somewhere of this occurring but for the life of me I can't find it. IIRC it was priests firing but not any towed pieces. I know this doesn't help much but its something.

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I know of mortar illumination being fired off the flight deck of an LPH or LHA (can't remember the exact ship) in the '89/'90 time frame. The purpose was to assist in the search for a helicopter that went down. It was from the BLT of the MEU we replaced.

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Great picture! looks like an Iowa class battleship. Do you have an idea which ship?

 

 

I believe it's the deck of an LST.

 

Ahhh, I see it now. I must have had a brain spasm, why would a battleship need any howitzers aboard? I guess I forgot what armament they carried..lol

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Salvage Sailor

I swear I've seen video somewhere of this occurring but for the life of me I can't find it. IIRC it was priests firing but not any towed pieces. I know this doesn't help much but its something.

 

I have seen that footage of M-7's firing from either an LCT or LCM as they approach a landing. Don't recall if it was in training or actual live fire.

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As I recall, they found it wasn't terribly accurate at the assault training center, but it "put more fire on the beach" so why not do it. a stray round might hit something, and the Germans would see even more fire at them-

 

the rockets were a totally different thing.

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Salvage Sailor

Aye,

 

The "Elsies" and specifically those LCI's converted to LCI( R) Rocket, LCI(G) Gunboat & LCI(M) Mortar

 

But rocket batteries firing in salvos synchronized with a ships' gyroscope and fire control gear is very different from field pieces chained to a deck firing with guesstimated data.

 

LCI rocket firing gun boats attack the shores of Iwo Jima, Feb. 17, 1945

 

 

 

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I have seen pics of guns firing from landing craft.

 

Think "situational" or "field expedient" better yet, insert Common Sense.

 

Need and opportunities also come to mind.

Probably not an intended nor proper use, but sometimes you got to do what works.

Thankfully we have folks who are able to think and act on that level.

That is what heroes is about.

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