I have been studying the 42cm 'Big Bertha' for several years. As anyone who has also studied it knows, that the historiography of the howitzer is shrouded in myth and misinformation starting with what is 'Big Bertha" and finishing with the scrapping of the last guns (you will note I wrote the plural) at Aberdeen Proving Ground (APG). In between there is also plenty of misinformation about the number of howitzers built, their operation, performance at Liege and Namur, and so on.
Conventional wisdom is that there was one 42cm Big Bertha at APG and that it was scrapped either during WWII or in the early 1950s. I believe that is a myth - because there were two Big Bertha's at APG - one was a fully assembled gun scrapped sometime around 1942 and the other was kept disassembled in its five loads. That version was scrapped in the 1950s.
So why do I think this? First, we know that two of the howitzers were handed over to the AEF near Verdun in November 1918. Below is a US Army photo (taken from a page of this website) of two gun barrels. There are other Army photos that show the same two guns. Then we commonly see photos of an assembled howitzer mounted on a concrete pad on display at APG (see second photo below).
In my research I have found a few interesting photos of the howitzers at Aberdeen. First, is a photo of the assembled gun at APG taken, perhaps, in late 1942. The caption (see below) states that this gun is about to be scrapped.
Next is a photo of a transport wagon for 'Big Bertha.' It comes from an Army inventory document which shows that the wagon was in the inventory of the museum in 1952 (and then gone in 1955). The inventory photo itself is dated July 1946, almost four years after the assembled gun was photographed before its destruction.
For this reason, I submit that both 42cm Big Bertha's captured in 1918 near Verdun were transported to APG and maintained there until one was scrapped in 1942 and the other in the 1950s. Any thoughts?
i think you could be right. Certainly two of them went to the USA, but i had no idea where the other one ended up. It is quite possible that it ended up at APG, but the question remains that if it did why was it not cut up with the other one in 1942? the wagon is certainly a transport wagon for BB but there does not appear to be any significant parts of BB on it. The bits on the wagon could be accessories for the assembled one. Unless of course you have more photos of the other wagons with more gun parts on them?
An article in "Bore Sight" some years ago carried a 1954 pic of a 5 ton truck dragging the Moeser off Aberdeen property. The post CO at the time justified the action as part of the Korean War (1950-53) Scrap Drive. In actuality, he simply wanted to make space( virtually all WW1 ordnance was gotten rid of at the time; to include the ultra rare Japanese Engineer Flame tank ). The Moerser was sold to a scrap dealer who tried unsuccesfully to torch the thing into smaller chunks. As the story goes, after a few months he gave up and it was dumped into the Atlantic. I shared all this here on the forum a few years ago.
An article in "Bore Sight" some years ago carried a 1954 pic of a 5 ton truck dragging the Moeser off Aberdeen property. The post CO at the time justified the action as part of the Korean War (1950-53) Scrap Drive. In actuality, he simply wanted to make space( virtually all WW1 ordnance was gotten rid of at the time; to include the ultra rare Japanese Engineer Flame tank ). The Moerser was sold to a scrap dealer who tried unsuccesfully to torch the thing into smaller chunks. As the story goes, after a few months he gave up and it was dumped into the Atlantic. I shared all this here on the forum a few years ago.
Do you happen to have a copy of the article? As a researcher, it is hard to evaluate the veracity of a "story" without being able to evaluate the source. For example, was the author a first person observer? Or, someone else?
Let's imagine this a moment - let's assume, that because of its size, the Big Bertha did not go far - perhaps to a scrap dealer in nearby Havre de Grace or perhaps even Baltimore. Let's further assume that the scrap dealer was able dispose of everything but the barrel and breech (which weighed around 13 tons). So then, is it plausible that the scrap dealer would rent a ship (or perhaps a barge) and take the barrel 150 miles or more down the Chesapeake Bay to the Atlantic Ocean and dump it there? Or would the main channel of the Chesapeake be good enough? And, how much would that cost? Of course, this is speculation, but seeing the article would help greatly. Otherwise - unfortunately - the "story" remains just that, a story.
I think these are good questions! All reminds me at the story of the Lionel toy train company. Alledgedly to get rid of some of their casts and dies by throwing them in what I think it was the Hudson river. Collectors keep that story alive, though somebody calculated the huge weight and the costs of the 'dumped' left overs, plus the efforts and the hinderance of throwing and dragging tonnes of metal from a railway bridge...
regards, Kieffer
-- Edited by kieffer on Tuesday 8th of February 2011 10:05:11 AM
It is simultaneously fantastic (i.e., a great resource) and horrifying (oh, to see the Big Bertha cut up that way). After seeing the howitzer's barrel cut by the acetylene torch, one has to wonder about the story of the scrap dealer some ten years later, in the 1950s, not being able to cut up the howitzer into smaller chunks.
In this footage you can also see one of the two(?) barrel wagons just behind that 15cm Feldkanone i.R. cut in pieces by the acetylene torch. So it is relally a little bit confusing seeing that tube in the scrap hall in 1943 ... (Or I didn't catch the whole story?)
Cheers, Peter
__________________
"Siplicity is the ultimate sophistication" -Leonardo Da Vinci-
Good eye. That certainly does look like a Big Bertha barrel wagon. Therefore, it is right to conclude that two Big Berthas were at APG. Maybe the barrel wagon just missed the cutting torch in 1943.
To go with the wonderful photos (top of thread) Marc posted of the Big Bertha at Aberdeen is this one from this Russian webpage. Clearly the top of the barrel has been retouched (probably it faded too much into the sky in the original) but otherwise it appears genuine and is dated November/December 1928. I wonder what photos there are in Aberdeen's archives? I've seen a few in books and magazines but there must surely be more...
A friend recently copied this photo at NARA of two 'Big Bertha' barrels in the museum storage building at Aberdeen Proving Grounds. The photo is dated 1921. It is further proof that the AEF brought home two of the guns.
Definitely needed for scrap. For those of you who're too young to remember WWII, anything that could be recycled for the war effort was . . . scrap metal, paper, cooking fat in tin cans (thank you ladies for bringing in your fat cans!) , aluminum foil . . . you name it, we saved it. As a boy scout, I spent many a day in the back of a town truck collecting such items . . . man, it was cold in winter after a few hours.
U.S. Army holt tractors are hooked up to large wheeled trailers loaded with parts of German 42cm "Big Bertha" howitzers, captured by American Expeditionary forces (AEF) near end of World War 1. Camera pans along the line of tractors. Closeup profile of a Holt tractor with several Army mechanics working around it. Camera pans along tractors and Big Bertha carriers and parts. Camera focuses into rifled barrel of one of the howitzers. Several U.S. soldiers are seen waving to the camera, through the barrel. Several American soldiers climb upon a carrier holding one of the 42cm barrels. One soldier crawls through the barrel. Two soldiers display a 42cm shell casing for the camera. Writing on one of the captured German vehicles reads: "Ersatzbremsflussigkeit (Perglyzerin)" describing substitute brake fluid. The convoy of tractors, led by a staff car and accompanied by soldiers on motorcycles, proceed along the road to Beaune
However the only Beaune I could trace lies under Dyon??
Beaune is a famous wine town in Burgundy. Of course, 'proceeding along the road to Beaune' does not mean the captured guns actually went to Beaune. They likely went to a railhead somewhere in the direction of Beaune.
There are quite a few photos at NARA of the two guns in American hands at Spincourt. They are certainly the same guns in the video from Critical Past.