Certainly looks like an Ehrhardt gun. The closest match I can find is the British QF 15 Pounder Mark I (7.62cm Feldkanone M00) but the breech actuator is somewhat different on the British gun.
If the gun was captured in Nicaragua in 1912 the timing is possible since the Ehrhardt gun was replaced by the QF 13 Pounder progressively from 1904 although some 15 Pounders were still colonial service at the start of WW1.
An oddity of the Ehrhardt gun was the telescoping sprung trail to help absorb the recoil. In practice this wasn't satisfactory and the British pinned the telescoping section so it couldn't
move - a detailed examination of the gun may show this feature.
The foresight on the left side of the carriage suggests a gun which predates panoramic gun sights which were introduced from about 1905.
I note that the barrel on the San Diego is not in battery position - I'd guess it's moved back about 70-100mm (3 - 4" for Americans). The lack of the recuperator spring keeper underneath
the breech suggests the recuperator spring is missing so the barrel has moved back on the receiver.
There are drawings of the QF 15 Pounder in Len Trawin's "Early British Quick Firing Artillery" - if you can't find the book PM me.
Regards,
Charlie
Later - I found a brief reference that Ehrhardt guns were exported to South America in the 1900s so an Ehrhardt gun in Nicaragua may not be surprising.
-- Edited by CharlieC on Monday 21st of October 2013 01:34:46 AM
During February 2013, on a visit to the Marine Corp Recruit Depot [MCRD] Museum in San Diego, I noticed an outside display improperly marked gun.
I brought this to the attention of the Museum Director and about a month ago I received [edited response] the following email.
Also, Glen Williford worked on identifying it and he can not.
- - - - -
TO: Charles Bugajsky
FROM: Ellen Guillemette, Historian Command Museum MCRD, San Diego
Mrs. McCurtis, the museum director, passed on your contact information as well as your take on the gun that was identified as a Japanese 75mm Type 38 M1905 Gun.
For the past 18 months I have been looking into the correct identity of that gun myself, because the one thing it is not is what it has been identified as being.
When we installed different photographs in our early days exhibit, one of the photographs depicted a gun that looked identical to the one we are referring to, located to the right of an octagonal guard shack in front of Gate 3, which used to be the main gate. That photograph was taken in the late 1920s.
In 1924, Gen Joseph Pendleton, USMC, the first commanding general of this base, requested that a 3-inch gun, captured by the Marines at Coyotepe, Nicaragua, 1912, be relocated permanently from the Marine Barracks at the Philadelphia Navy Yard to Marine Corps Base at San Diego. In his personal papers, from May and June 1924, there is a letter making this request and copies of 9 endorsements okaying and facilitating this transaction. In these endorsements, there is mentioned the name of the ship which transported the gun from Philadelphia to Hampton Roads and the name of the ship which transported it here to San Diego, along with dates, and the Bill of Lading Number.
The gun that came here was known by the Nicaraguans as "EL Heraldo" and in his November 1914 papers, there is mention of this gun, its significance and the wording of a plaque that he wanted to go with the gun. It is also noted that "El Heraldo" was located on the parade grounds of the Marine Barracks at the Philly Navy Yard.
To make a long story very short, when I contacted the photo curator at the Marine Corps History Division in Quantico, sending her a copy of the 1920s photo, she referred me to another researcher who sent me a photograph of what appears to be our gun captured at Coyotepe.
According to the curator at the Royal Artillery Museum in England, our gun is an Ehrhardt-type field gun and it is very similar to their QF 15 pounder. I have contacted a historian at Rhinemetal in Germany (this company took over Ehrhardt) to see what he could tell me. (He mentioned that they do not keep track of their guns by serial numbers.) It would be nice to know which country procured these guns for Nicaragua.
In addition to Rhinemetal & the Royal Artillery Museum, I have sent photograph of the gun as it looks now, the old photograph and the gun at Coyotepe to the U.S Army's Artillery Museum's current and retired curators, as well as Ken Smith Christmas, who worked both for the Marine Corps and Army museums, and Alfred Houde, chief ordnance at the National Museum of the Marine Corps. All agree that our gun is not Japanese and the researcher who sent me the photo of the gun at Coyotepe, the retired artillery museum curator and Ken Smith Christmas are adamant in their belief that we have made the correct identification.
Along the way, it was suggested that our gun might be one of the Ehrhardt gun procured by the Army and the Navy in the early 20th Century, but photographic comparisons ruled that out.
There are a few facts it would be nice to have, such as a mention of the serial number (which is now only on the breech), a copy of the paper work that would have come with the gun, photographs of the gun at the Marine Barracks at the Philly Navy Yard and any information which may have appeared in the log books of the two ships that carried the gun from Philadelphia to San Diego. There are log books for these ships in the National Archives from 1924, but so far, my requests regarding them have not been replied to. I have also contacted one of the Marine Corps' archivists regarding what Marine Corps records to look at in the National Archives.
The breech serial number for our 7.62cm Ehrhardt-Type Field Gun is "180639."
There is no carriage plate. It has be really hard to know just how to refer to this gun. "Three-inch" is the standard American reference. "75mm" seems to be the standard metric measurement, but I believe Ehrhardt used 7.62cm, which is what our gun measures.
When I conducted my research there was some speculation that our gun was a British QF 15 pounder, or a Krupp 75mm Field Gun, but both the British Royal Artillery Museum and other sources, dispute that.
A researcher, Nelson Lawry, who supplied me with photos of both the Navy's Mark VII landing gun and the gun we believe is ours at Coyotepe, said in an email, ..." it bears a strong resemblance to the British stopgap 15-pounder QF field gun, although there are some differences in the muzzle end.
At the breech end, the gun does NOT resemble Ehrhardt's famous Model 1901 75mm field gun sold to Norway. I do not agree with Al that the piece as now standing has American wheels, other than perhaps their hubs. American wheels for a fieldpiece of this size would have been made by Archibald of Lawrence, Mass., and bear its traditional 16 spokes, NOT 12 as shown in every photo, whether at Coyotepe, MCBSD [Marine Corps Base San Diego] in the 1920s, or MCBSD in the second decade of the 21st century.
I just noticed that much of the narrative of my initial posting was cut off.
The below is the rest of the email sent by the MCRD.
--------
continued from initial post...
Nelson continues, "... from what I can see of your gun, it appears to be of Ehrhardt design and manufacture. Its sizable pole trail is a hallmark of Ehrhardt NOT Krupp --field guns of the period. I quote Peter Chamberlain and Terry Gander's Light and Medium Field Artillery (Arco, 1975) describing these very guns, "For its time the design was conventional and featured the pole trail that was an Ehrhardt design trademark."
The gun in question also bears a rounded housing under the barrel for the recoil/counter-recoil mechanism, which is associated with Ehrhardt, rather than the squared housing that reveals a Krupp gun of the period. It is difficult the differentiate the lower carriages, however, because the Krupp and Ehrhardt designs of the period are nearly identical.
One of the problems too frequently encountered is that if a captured gun was of German manufacture, then it was automatically described as "Krupp". Perhaps some more modern Krupp pieces were also taken during that campaign, but the several photos of interest to us show, IMO, an Ehrhardt field gun.
Our gun is missing the breech shield and trail spike.
- - - - - -
This is a trophy gun captured in Nicaragua in 1912.
"UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS FIELD ARTILLERY "
BY CAPT. R. O. UNDERWOOD, UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS Pages 296-310 describes the capture.
is attached to the initial posting.
The museum has all sorts of opinions as to what the gun is not - they need to know what the gun is, so if you dont know there is no reason to again tell then what it is not.
With any identification they need some form of verification in the form of documentation.
The breech on the San Diego gun is functionally very similar to the British 15 Pounder although it looks different. On the 15 Pounder the actuating lever was below the breech, it actuated a spiral gear located on a post on the right (from the rear). This gear rotated the interrupted screw breech block, then the breech block could be swung out. On the San Diego gun the actuating lever is on the top of the breech but the actuation part looks the same. The Norwegian M1901 Ehrhardt guns had a Nordenfeld breech, similar to the French 75mm M1897.
The attached is a 1901 image of the British 15 Pounder - it has axle tree seats and no gun shield. The British fitted a gun shield and removed the axle tree seats.
There is a suggestion in your text that the San Diego gun is a Mark VII Landing Gun - I know a collector in Sydney who has one of these - the carriage looks nothing like the San Diego gun.
Hi Charlie heres a patent from Gustav Ehrhardt April 1902, which I think is the same as the San Diego gun this seems to predate the tests by the US army though, I expect there would also be an earlier German version of this patent... slightly later US Patents also exist as well as a wedge type.
Either this is a modified version of the Breech for the British gun or vise versa its difficult to say, do you have any pics of the original US order? Included the US M1902 breech as a comparison.
Theres a article in the NYT archive that might suggest modifications to the M1902 prototype took place after september 1902..
The patent certainly refers to the same type (ogival) breech block as the British guns had - I don't know whether it refers to the US guns in particular since the
subject of the patent is the modification to the firing pin mechanism.
I haven't been able to find any images of the US Ehrhardt guns - I think the only way to find images is to dig through the old journals (sigh).
Hi Charlie, I guess the question remains as to whether or or not the San Diego gun is ex US, I cant say I'm convinced largely because of that NYT article I posted, which would suggest an altered production carriage and would rule out the San Diego gun as ex US...
Breech Markings: 3inch US Field Model 1902. Carraige: Nr124 Model of 1902 Rheinische M.V. A.M. Fabrik 1904
Kosar seems to list the first 50 of the M1902s as produced by Ehrhardt,
From "Modern Guns and Gunnery" 1907 edition pg35
"On the otherhand, the downward bending strain on the trail is
undesirably heavy. For the wholesystem of gun, buffer, and cradle
turns about the axle tree, and the buffer is interposed between gun
and axletree, rendering the distance between the gun and the pivot
upon which it turns unduly great. That is to say that the force of
the recoiling gunacts at the end of a comparatively long lever
tending to break or bend the trail, which has to be made stiff and
heavy in order to stand the strain..
Hence we find the tubular trail, once so popular, being replaced,
In equipments of this description, by trails of box or girder section.
The tubular trail is strongest all round, but since the strength is
principally required to resist a vertical bending strain it is found
better to use a form giving more vertical and less lateral stiffness.'
In the Ehrhardt 1903 equipment ,for instance, the original cylindrical
trail is replaced by one of U section."
The M1902 is listed as the "THE AMERICAN 1903 Q.F. EQUIPMENT" in this volume and apparantly the info was taken from "The Journal of the U.S. Artillery" (unknown volume but likely 1903-7) so it maybe there is a good deal more to be found there...
Relevant Journal (1903) here see page 287 on "The New Field Artillery":
Interesting background information you have found on the US 3 inch M1902 and M1905 Field Guns.These are fairly common in the US and were used in the 1916 Punitive Expedition in Mexico.US Field Artillery units trained with them stateside before deploying to Europe in 1917-18.It seems that these were not used by US forces in Europe and I have been able to find no indication that they made it overseas.From time-to-time someone will claim that they were, but I have never seen anyone making these claims that could show documentation to support it. Case-in-point, the US Artillery Museum at Ft Sill has changed their interpretive signs since 2009 to say they did not have WW1 overseas service.The US chose to go with the French 75mm mle/97 for a number of reasons including standardization of ammunition with France.
I know of only one US 3-inch gun in the US that was actually manufactured in Germany by Rheinmetal (Ehrhardt).It is located in New Mexico and has recently been cosmetically restored (new wheels and paint). Most were manufactured by US government depots, such as Watervliet Arsenal. There was also a gun developed with basically the same barrel/breech-ring with a split trail and a Saint Chamond recoil mechanism designated the 75mm M1916. These were just experimental guns and only a few were produced.
I think you're building a case that the US didn't receive any unmodified Ehrhardt guns except for at least one M1901 Norwegian pattern gun. The obvious similarities between the Ehrhardt gun
and the M1902 wasn't a case of borrowing a design but rather a modification of the Ehrhardt gun for US service. The rejection of the tubular trail is sensible since the original Ehrhardt
gun had an auxiliary recoil absorber built into the trail - without this building a box section trail will likely be stiffer and lighter.
Kosar says that Ehrhardt built 50 M1902 guns, the guns (formerly) at Aberdeen and in New Mexico (thanks Ralph) may be survivors of the 50 Ehrhardt-built guns.
I don't think the idea that the Nicaraguan gun was originally American can be sustained. It's still an open question what the source of the Nicaraguan gun was.
(Somewhere) I've got a scan of the M1902/1905 manual - might be interesting to compare that to the 15 Pounder manual.
The M1916 gun was built in modest numbers, it turns up in strange places until the 1940s. The Holt and Christie light SPGs were armed with the M1916 - the French Mle 1897 couldn't be
easily mounted because of the traverse system used in the French guns. When the US sent field guns to the UK in 1941, along with the 18 Pounders built as 75mm, there were also M1916 guns. These were used for coastal defence during WW2. After WW2 M1916 guns turn up in the Arab Legion (Jordan) and the Syrian Army - there are images of truck mounted M1916s and an M1916 on a Lorraine tractor.
Regards,
Charlie
-- Edited by CharlieC on Friday 29th of November 2013 01:38:04 AM
Some additional info from "The progress of modern field artillery" (1908 but originally from a French article 1904) pg 79 on:
"The following countries, not mentioned in the table, have
also adopted the rapid-fire gun: Bolivia, China, Peru and
Persia.* The latest competition between guns occurred last
summer (1907), the object being to select a suitable gun for
the Greek Artillery, Seven guns (one Armstrong, two
Krupp, two Ehrhardt and two Schneider) were entered,
with the result that an order was given to Ehrhardt for
thirty-six 4-gun batteries, while the order for ammunition
was divided between this firm and Armstrong, the latter
getting the high explosive shell. In firing, most of the tests
for accuracy and effect were carried out at a range of only
1,750 yards, which is generally regarded as too short. The
test for mobility and strength of material consisted in form-
ing the seven guns into a battery and marching over 250
miles of road, and no miles of rocky hillside at a walk and
trot. All of the carriages suffered from the latter test. The
Schneider wheels were weak, one Ehrhardt limber broke
down, one Krupp shell exploded in the limber, and various
minor defects were revealed. Ehrhardt has abandoned the
axle pivoting system and telescopic trail."
The British 15pdr Ehrhardt gun features in an earlier table I believe but doesnt say its make, the table shown is the Translators additional information.
Presumably this means that Ehrhardt abandoned the telescopic trail some time before, the other mentioned references seem to point to around 1903, so it would follow then that the San Diego gun is 1903 or pre 1903 production, the breech seems to conform with the Ehrhardt 1902 breech firing pin patent (a similar safety device also incorporated in the US M1902 breech) so this might fix the date of production more firmly.
So with no apparent evidence to the contrary I would suggest the San Diego gun was produced between 1902-1903, is of the general type supplied earlier to the British but not exactly and was acquired as part of a small order by forces in Nicaragua about that time or a little later.
In any case it seems Nicaragua was involved in almost continues war at this time under Jose Santos Zelaya so doubtless there would have been a ready market for any modern guns and the will to acquire and use them.
Please allow me to share some thoughts on this gun. By all aspects the SDiego gun looks like an original Ehrhardt-manufactured 3 inch gun from the 50 batch order supplied to the US. It has the pole trail and the Ehrhardt screw breech block (though some parts are missing) as shown in the Rheinmetall 50 years remembrance book. It's a pity there are no other markings on the weapon.
Now the question is how this gun got to Nic.
I find it highly unlikely that the gun was supplied directly by Ehrhardt to the Nic rebels.
I have been reading a bit online and in Max Boot's Savage wars about the Nic campaign. It is more or less sure the gun was captured at Coyotepe from the Nic rebels, as it was Col Pendleton himself who led the charge. But US Marines and sailors had been in and out of the country on operations for the last three years, propping up their local allied forces. Also, Boot mentions two light field guns on the US side in the battle of Coyotepe. No type specified.
I am tempted to believe, like one of you already suggested, that this gun was delivered by the US to the Nic govt, possibly of just a small batch of guns (maybe four) to help arm their forces. Consequently this gun may have ended up somewhere along the lines in rebel hands. It may have also come along one of the earlier US Marines' expeditions to Nic and left in the hands of the locals afterwards.
But was the original Ehrhardt ever used by the Marines or Navy as landing gun? If yes, that would be a good sign for this theory.
Hi Nuyt can you supply a scan of the pic in "Fünfzig Jahre Rheinmetall Düsseldorf 1889-1939" you mention....
unfortunatly the only way I could get hold of a copy would be via the library and that might take sevetral weeks..
There are pics of some US guns in the artical attached to the original post(field artillery journal april-june 1915) it looks like none are Ehrhardts...
Three 3 inch guns, several 1pdrs guns and machine guns are mentioned as in use by the Nicaraguans at Coyotepe as far as I can make out..
I'll take a heretical view and propose that there never were 50 Ehrhardt guns delivered to the US - the 50 guns were early production 3 inch Model 1902 field guns based
on the Ehrhardt design but modified by the US Ordnance Dept after trials of a number of guns.
As supporting evidence I cite:
1. There are no images or survivors of Ehrhardt guns in the US as far as is known, except for the San Diego gun, which came from Nicaragua. This is strange since guns seem
to survive better in the US than other countries perhaps because of the cultural tradition of using guns as memorials which seems to go back to the Civil War.
2. The 1902 Report of the Chief of Ordnance discusses field trials of guns designed to replace the 1880s vintage field gun then in service. There seem to have been 4 entrants,
2 from Bethlehem steel, 1 built by the Ordnance Dept and an Ehrhardt gun similar to the Norwegian pattern guns. As a result of the trial it was concluded the Ehrhardt gun was superior
in most respects but the tubular trail was thought unsatisfactory. The Ordnance Dept recoil/recuperator was thought to be slightly superior to the Ehrhardt gun but this was not adopted perhaps because it was bulkier since it was a multi-tube design.
3. A quick comparison of the British 15 Pounder (Ehrhardt) and M1902 guns shows that aside from the trail and breech the mechanisms and structure of the guns are remarkably similar.
4. There are at least two surviving M1902 guns which were built by Ehrhardt (Aberdeen and in New Mexico), or at least the carriages were built by Ehrhardt. It seems as if 50 M1902 guns were built by Ehrhardt.
If this view is supported (supportable) then the source of the Nicaraguan gun at San Diego is an open question.
"I'll take a heretical view and propose that there never were 50 Ehrhardt guns delivered to the US - the 50 guns were early production 3 inch Model 1902 field guns based on the Ehrhardt design but modified by the US Ordnance Dept after trials of a number of guns."
Hi Charlie I totally agree and its the conclusion that I'd come too..... the question perhaps might be"why would the US order 50 straight Ehrhardt guns when the decision had already been made for a modified weapon" I've found nothing to suggest that such an order took place...
The Ordnance report 1902 State 8 guns tested:
1. Gun and carraige recoil as unit
Armstrong 3 inch rifle with Clarke pattern Trail- rejected.
75mm Cockrill Nordenfelt, recoil by shoes under wheels.
2. Short recoil on carriage, hydraulic cylinders, counter recoil springs.
Ordnance model 1900 3 inch rifle gerdom breech.
Vickers Maxim 75mm.
3. Long Recoil Guns, hydraulic cylinder, counter recoil springs
Bethlehem No2 3 inch Rifle, Lewis carriage.
Bethlehem No3 3 inch Rifle, Bethlehem carriage, counter recoil springs in trail.
Erhardt 3 inch Rifle, Norwegian pattern with Nordenfelt breech.
Ordnance department model 1901 3 inch rifle Gerdom Breech, design of the gun is credited to Capt Charles B Wheeler,
one other gun Bethlehem No1 (which would actually make 9)was withdrawn early.
Much more detail is included in the Article.
A complete Description of the new Field Gun in detail is included in "Journal of the United States Artillery 1903" (published 1904) pg 293 on (photos below) which also gives the ref for C.B.Wheeler designing the carriage(pg 293)
1. It was not Kosar who invented the 50 guns delivered to the US. This info also appears in the 50 Jahre R'metall book.
2. The barrel in NM is marked 1903 Rheinische MW.
3. The low numbers of survivors (after a whopping 110 years - let's be realistic) do not convince me that they were never there. It might mean that the guns were distributed over a long period to various places, possibly even to Navy garrisons or allies around the world. Or, the barrels might have been used for the 1902, 1903 and 1905 gun models.
4. The wiki page on the 3 inch gun says there were various model years. Most pictures on the net appear to show the 1905 model (not sure though), with 16 spokes wheels, that Germanic shield (looks like the FK96 nA one) and the U shape box trail.
5. It may have been hard to manufacture the barrels of nickel-steel, a German speciality. In 1900-02 US factories might not yet be ready or able and the US may have continued to import Rheinische barrels. Military authors hardly ever write about that. Industrial capacity is often the key to development. I have researched Dutch attempts to build Krupp field guns during WW1 with US private sector assistance. The required nickel-steel construction proved elusive even then.
6. Of course the R'metall book may have been wrong, and the company did not export complete guns as the book says, but just the barrels and breech blocks (the book says "Geschuetze").
7. The use of the pole trail did not end here. It certainly was no dogma. The US built 1917 75mm "British" guns had them as well.
8. What few authors mention is that the Russian 1902 3 inch field gun had the Ehrhardt screw type breech. Intriguingly, the Rheinmetall factory museum in Unterluss still has such a gun. Of course no mention of that in the R book, whihc was published in the heydays of the 3rd Rch.
What I missed in the Rmetalll book is the picture of a 3 inch field gun, shown in the same paragraph as the info on the US order.
I still go for the Rheinmetall order. US Ordnance may have redesigned the original Ehrhardt prototype gun a bit, like the carriage. But the Germans manufactured the first batch, which I suppose would be the 1902 model. Later model years would then be produced in the US, with different production methods and detail differences. The total number in service of these guns by 1917 was 600 according to Hogg. I have also seen later models with a considerably thicker barrel (the rear three quartes). Maybe because they were made of cheaper American steel (like the cheaper Russian steel in the Russian version)?
Cant scan the breech block for some IT reason. It is similar however to the SDiego one, not the 1902 one as shown in the pic.
-- Edited by nuyt on Sunday 1st of December 2013 01:42:23 PM
1. The US sources don't mention numbers produced or even Ehrhardt but do make a big point about the carriage being US design, but its clear that some M1902's were produced by Ehrhardt including carriages and barrels, its possible that the original reference to 50 guns comes from an earlier book "Rheinische Metallwaaren- und Maschinenfabrik 1889-1914"....
3.quite agree a few Ehrhardt manufactured guns might survive if small numbers were produced, and this seems to be the case.. whats perhaps surprising is that any have survived at all.
4. M1902, M1904, M1905 versions are specifically mentioned in the manuals.
5. what seems to be mentioned a number of times in different contemporary artillery books, is the difficulty of producing the springs, US industry was'nt up to the task initially and they continued to be purchased presumably from Ehrhardt for some time.
"Experiments with various models began in 1899, and issue of the 1902 model began in 1904. Manufacture was delayed because of the necessity of obtaining the counter-recoil springs and panoramic sights from abroad, but by 1904, these items were being manufactured in the United States." from "The Organizational History of Field Artillery 17752003" CMH 60-16-1
6. see1.
7. The References I refer too about the pole trail are contemporary and varied, and relate specifically to Ehrhart field artillery not other manufacture like the 13/18pdr/US 75mm M1917 etc.
8. cant add anything but its interesting.-)
The whole point though was not to discover details about the M1902, but rather where the Coyotepe/SanDiego gun came from, the 1901-1902 trials and the M1902 gun derived from them turns out to be crucial in some ways, in that it effectively means the guns did'nt come via the US government.
So the question still remains where did the Coyotepe gun came from, the most logical answer has to be from Ehrhardt, the Nicaraguans where not very friendly with the US at that time but were on good trade terms with the Germans.. and the Germans were not shy about arming the South Americans...
So, the SDiego gun is most likely a direct German delivery. It may be a unique piece, differing from all the other known variants of this weapon.
By the way, the Taschenbuch fuer den Artilleristen, a Rheinmetall publication, also mentions the sale of 50 pieces "after extensive trials and amidst heavy competition".
Nickel steel isn't hard to make in a furnace - the trick is how to get clean ingots without defects as the feedstock for barrel manufacture. The process to get very clean steel
was a commercial secret which the various manufacturers protected.
The recuperator springs were probably pushing the limits of the technology of the time. It isn't hard to make a spring - start with 0.5 - 0.7% Carbon steel wire, form the spring and heat
treat. The springs for recuperators are required to handle very high preloads (Krupp springs were loaded at 50% of gun weight), absorb large amounts of recoil energy, handle many cycles
of compression without diminution of properties. The trick is in the heat treatment to give the properties required. As for the steel making the heat treatment processes in spring manufacture
Talking bout secrets... There is a hilarious story in Hogg's The Guns 1914-1918 about the inability of US industries to built the French 75. In the end it was just a small thing and ze Frensh kept it so secret...