Covered war carts were used by the Scots against the English in the mid-15th century, and Leonardo da Vinci sketched his famous "tank" design in the 1480s. Later centuries saw attempts to create wind-powered "land ships" and various steam-powered contraptions. — BBC Website
|
Model of Leonardo's Original Concept |
Sirs, the victory in this war will belong to which of the two belligerents which will be the first to place a gun of 75[mm] on a vehicle able to be driven on all terrain.
— Lt. Col. Jean-Baptiste Eugène Estienne, 23 August 1914
|
Col. Estienne |
It was Mr. Churchill who, as First Lord of the Admiralty, gave the first order for eighteen tanks, or "land ships" as they were then called, on 26 March 1915. He did not inform either the War Office or the Treasury — an almost unprecedented and certainly unconstitutional reticence, dictated by fear that conventional minds might stifle a great idea.
— Sir Winston S. Churchill, quoted in Colin Coote, ed., Maxims and Reflections, 1949
|
"Little Willie," First Completed Tank Prototype
|
Probably the best tank museum anywhere is located at Saumur, France on the Loire River where the French Cavalry School is located.
ReplyDeleteT. Morgan