Item:
ONJR22PPSR102

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Original French WWI Lot of Four Inert Canon de 75 Modèle 1897 75mm Shell Casings - 75mm Field Gun

Regular price $295.00

Item Description

Original Items. Only One Lot of Four Available. This is a lovely set of four 75mm HE shell casings as used with the M1897 75mm Field Gun. The casings are completely INERT per BATF compliance and cannot be used as an explosive device. Like all deactivated ordnance, these shells are Not Available For Export.

The shells are all 13¾” tall with a 3⅜” base diameter. They all have wartime or pre-war dates, with one being dated 1907. The shells are all in varying conditions with two being particularly shiny, while one is heavily covered by verdigris and oxidation. They are great for any WWI display, as Americans even used these guns toward the end of the war.

This is a great lot of shells, ready for further research and display.

The French 75 mm field gun was a quick-firing field artillery piece adopted in March 1898. Its official French designation was: Matériel de 75mm Mle 1897. It was commonly known as the French 75, simply the 75 and Soixante-Quinze (French for "seventy-five"). The French 75 was designed as an anti-personnel weapon system for delivering large volumes of time-fused shrapnel shells on enemy troops advancing in the open. After 1915 and the onset of trench warfare, other types of battlefield use demanding impact-detonated high-explosive shells prevailed. By 1918 the 75s became the main agents of delivery for toxic gas shells. The 75s also became widely used as truck mounted anti-aircraft artillery. They were the main armament of the Saint-Chamond tank in 1918.

The French 75 is widely regarded as the first modern artillery piece. It was the first field gun to include a hydro-pneumatic recoil mechanism, which kept the gun's trail and wheels perfectly still during the firing sequence. Since it did not need to be re-aimed after each shot, the crew could reload and fire as soon as the barrel returned to its resting position. In typical use the French 75 could deliver fifteen rounds per minute on its target, either shrapnel or melinite high-explosive, up to about 8,500 m (5.3 mi) away. Its firing rate could even reach close to 30 rounds per minute, albeit only for a very short time and with a highly experienced crew.

At the opening of World War I, in 1914, the French Army had about 4,000 of these field guns in service. By the end of the war about 12,000 had been produced. It was also in service with the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF), which had been supplied with about 2,000 French 75 field guns. Several thousand were still in use in the French Army at the opening of World War II, updated with new wheels and tires to allow towing by trucks rather than by horses. The French 75 set the pattern for almost all early-20th century field pieces, with guns of mostly 75 mm forming the basis of many field artillery units into the early stages of World War II.

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