Railway guns: When normal artillery didn't cut it

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Railway guns: When normal artillery didn't cut it
Credit: Image: Buyenlarge/Getty Images

Railway guns

When normal artillery just didn't cut it.

Chris Wild

1916-1944

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An artillery unit poses on a massive railway gun in France. Credit: Buyenlarge/Getty Images

Mounting heavy artillery on mobile railroad cars was first proposed by Russian Gustav Kori in 1847, and was first used in combat in the American Civil War.When World War I began, France and Germany appropriated naval cannons and coastal defense batteries and deployed them to the front via rail. Once in place, railway guns were mounted on specially constructed semicircular tracks, which allowed them to be pointed in the direction of targets.In World War II, Germany built the utterly massive Schwerer Gustav gun, which could fire 31-inch, seven-ton shells and hit targets up to 30 miles away.As these guns were hugely expensive and vulnerable to air attacks, after World War II they were phased out in favor of bomber aircraft and surface-to-surface missile launchers.These photographs span the history of railway guns, from the very first used by Confederate forces in the American Civil War, to Autochrome photos of guns on the western front of World War I, to then near-obsolete behemoths of World War II.

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A Krupp 42 cannon on a flat wagon. Credit: Albert Harlingue/Roger Viollet/Getty Images
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A 274-millimeter railway gun used in France in World War I. Credit: Photo12/UIG/Getty Images
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An eight-inch Mk. VI railway gun in use during World War I at Aberdeen Proving Grounds in England. Credit: Keystone View Company/FPG/Getty Images
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A 12-inch railway gun in action at the Somme, France. Credit: Robert Hunt Library/Windmill Books/UIG/Getty Images
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French soldiers camouflage a 370-millimeter railway gun on the western front in World War I. Credit: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images
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French soldiers camouflage a 370-millimeter railway gun on the western front in World War I. Credit: Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images
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A 16-inch gun which was used on the Hindenburg Line in France. Credit: The Print Collector/Print Collector/Getty Images
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German railway guns used in World War II. Credit: Culture Club/Getty Images
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A railway gun painted for use in desert combat. Credit: PhotoQuest/Getty Images
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An Italian soldier fires a 194-millimeter railway gun during the battle of Monte Cassino in Italy. Credit: Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
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A German railway gun in action in France. Credit: ullstein bild/Getty Images
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American soldiers pose on a captured German railway gun. Credit: Keystone-France/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images
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An American soldier examines a German 10-inch railway gun on the Cherbourg Peninsula in France. Credit: Photo12/UIG/Getty Images
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