The steel required for the recuperators in these 155-millimeter howitzers, and also for those of the 155-millimeter guns, was of special composition; yet all the forge capacity in this country was being utilized in other war manufacture. New facilities for the manufacture of these forgings had to be developed by increasing the capacity of the Mesta Machine Co. of Pittsburgh, until it could meet our requirements. The Government itself contracted for these forgings and supplied them to Dodge Bros.
Each howitzer required some 200 items of miscellaneous equipment, such as air and liquid pumps and other tools. These were purchased from many sources, and many of these contractors had just as much difficulty with the small parts as the larger firms had with the more important sections of the howitzers.
Many of the problems involved in turning out the complete unit could not be known or understood until they were met with in actual manufacture. Mechanical experts representing Schneider et Cie. were on hand at all times to help solve difficulties as they arose.
The Government turned to France for an auxiliary supply of carriages for the American-built howitzers, placing orders for 1,361 with French concerns. Of this number 772 had been completed when the armistice was signed, and the French expected soon to turn out the carriages at the rate of 140 per month. It might also be noted here that we placed an order in England for 302 British 6-inch howitzers, a piece very like the French howitzer. The British contract was to be completed April 1, 1919.
The various parts of the 155-millimeter howitzer were assembled into complete units and tested at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds. After being assembled and tested, the whole unit was taken apart and packed into crates especially designed for overseas shipment. One crate held two howitzer carriages with recuperators in less space than would have been occupied by one carriage on its wheels.
It will be noted that the first gun body of the 155-millimeter howitzers made in this country was delivered in February and the first recuperator in July. Before the recuperators were ready, the other parts of the howitzer had been proof-tried by using a recuperator of French manufacture.
During the months of August and September, 1918, the first regiment equipped with 155-millimeter howitzers was made ready at Aberdeen. The big weapons were packed and on the dock for shipment overseas when the armistice was signed. These first ones were to be followed by a steady stream of howitzers. All arrangements had been made to assemble units and crate them for overseas at the Erie Proving Ground at Port Clinton, Ohio.
None of the 155-millimeter howitzers built here reached the American Expeditionary Forces, but French deliveries of the weapon up to the signing of the armistice totaled 747.
| Unit. | Contractor. | Number ordered. | Number completed Nov. 11, 1918. | Number completed Apr. 17, 1919. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 155-mm. howitzer carriage | Osgood Bradley Car Co. | 900 | 136 | 369 |
| 155-mm. carriage replacement parts. | do. | 49 | 0 | |
| 155-mm. howitzer carriage | do. | 250 | 93 | |
| Do. | American Rolling Mill Co. (old Mosler Safe contract). | 1,270 | 18 | 26 |
| Do. | Rock Island Arsenal | 172 | 0 | |
| 155-mm. howitzer carriage limbers | Maxwell Motor Co. | 2,575 | 273 | 700 |
| Do. | Rock Island Arsenal | 100 | 0 | |
| 155-mm. howitzer caisson | Ford Motor Co. | 8,937 | 4,373 | 8,937 |
| 155-mm. howitzer cannon | American Brake Shoe & Foundry Co. | 1,172 | 1,789 |