- Armoured train
An armoured train is a
train protected with armour. Usually they are equipped withrailroad car s armed withartillery andmachine gun s. They were mostly used during the late 19th and early 20th century, when they offered an innovative way to quickly move large amounts of firepower into position. Their use was discontinued because modern road vehicles became much more powerful and offered more flexibility, and because armoured trains were too vulnerable to track sabotage.Design and equipment
The
railroad cars on an armoured train are designed for many roles. The typical roles include:
*Artillery - fielding mixture ofgun s and machine guns
*Infantry - designed to carry infantry units, may also mount machine guns.
*Machine gun - dedicated to machine guns
*Anti-air - equipped with anti-air guns
*Command - similar to infantry wagons, but designed to be a train command center
* Anti-tank - equipped with anti-tank guns, usually in atank gun turret
* Platform - unarmoured, with purposes ranging from transport ofammunition or vehicles, through track repair or derailing protection torailroad plough s for track destruction.
*Troop sleeper s
* The Wehrmacht would sometimes put a 'Fremdgerät', such as captured French Somua or Czech Pzkw 38-t light tank or Pzkw II on a flatbed car which could be quickly offloaded by means of a ramp and used away from the range of the main railway line to chase down enemy partisans.
* Missile transport - theUSSR had railway-based ICBMs by the late 1980s; no such systems remain in operation todayFact|date=July 2007. The US at one time planned to have a railway-based system but this never got past the planning stages.Different types of
armour were used to protect from attack by tanks. In addition to various metal plates,cement andsandbag s were used in some cases.Armoured trains were sometimes escorted by a kind of rail-tank called a
draisine . One such example was the panzertrolley 'Littorina' which had a cab in the front and rear, each with sets of controls so it could be driven down the tracks in either direction. On it were mounted two Pzkw I dual 7.62mm machinegewehr turrets.History
Origins
Armoured trains saw use during the 19th century in the
American Civil War (1861-1865), theFranco-Prussian War (1870-1871), the First and Second Boer Wars (1880-81 and 1899-1902), the First (1914-1918) and Second World Wars (1939-1945) and theFirst Indochina War (1946-1954). The most intensive use of armoured trains was during theRussian Civil War (1918-1920).During the Boer War, on
15 November 1899 ,Winston Churchill , then a war-correspondent, was travelling onboard an armoured train when it was ambushed byBoer commandos. Churchill and many of the train's garrison were captured, though many others escaped, including wounded soldiers who had been carried on the train's engine.World Wars
The Czechoslovak Legion used heavily-armed and armoured trains to control large lengths of the
Trans-Siberian Railway (and of Russia itself) during theRussian Civil War at the end ofWorld War I ."First World War" - Willmott, H.P.;Dorling Kindersley , 2003, Page 251]After the First World War the usage of armoured trains declined. They were used in
China in the twenties, most notably by thewarlord Zhang Zongchang , who employed refugee Russians to man them.Poland used armoured trains extensively and successfully during the Invasion of Poland. One observer noted that "Poland had only few armoured trains, but their officers and soldiers were fighting well. Again and again they were emerging from a cover in thick forests, disturbing German lines" ["Wie das Gesetz es befahl" - Karschkes, Helmut, DVG Deutsche Verlagsgesellschaft, ISBN 3920722698]This in turn prompted
Nazi Germany to reintroduce them into its own armies. Germany then used armoured trains to a small degree during World War Two. However, they introduced significant designs of a versatile and well-equipped nature, including railcars which housed anti-aircraft gun turrets, railcars designed to load and unload tanks, and railcars which had complete armour protection with a large concealed howitzer gun. Germany also had fully-armoured locomotives which were used on such trains.During the
Slovak National Uprising the Slovak resistance used armoured trains. Two, "Hurban" and "Štefánik", which were made in theZvolen railway manufactory, are preserved and can be seen near the Zvolen castle.A total of 5 armoured trains were built during the
Estonian War of Independence on the Estonian side. The armoured trains were organized by military commanderJohan Pitka . [ [http://www.hot.ee/vabadussoda/pitka.htm Admiral Johan Pitka] (inEstonian language . Accessed 2008-09-11.)]Later uses
In the
First Indochina War , theFrench Union used the armoured and armed trainLa Rafale as both a cargo-carrier and a mobile surveillance unit. ["Le 5e Régiment du Génie d'hier et d'aujourd'hui : l'aventure des Sapeurs de chemins de fer", Lavauzelle, 1997, p. 73] [ [http://www.servicehistorique.sga.defense.gouv.fr/04histoire/articles/articles_rha/audacedurail.htm "L’audace du rail : les trains blindés du Sud-Annam" in "Revue historique des armées" #234, Alexis Neviaski, 2004, quoted in the French Defense Ministry archives] ] In February 1951 the first Rafale was in service on theSaigon -Nha Trang line,Vietnam [ [http://www.ecpad.fr/Ecpa/PagesDyn/notfot.asp?id=515&page=1&dossierid=&photo=&Npage=1&collectionid= French Defense Ministry archives ECPAD website] ] [ [http://www.ecpad.fr/Ecpa/PagesDyn/notfot.asp?id=3881&page=1&dossierid=&photo=&Npage=1&collectionid= French Defense Ministry archives ECPAD website] ] while from 1947 to May 1952 the second one which was escorted by onboard Cambodian troops of the BSPP ("Brigade de Surveillance de Phnom Penh") was used on thePhnom Penh -Battambang line,Cambodia . [ [http://www.ecpad.fr/Ecpa/PagesDyn/notfot.asp?id=519&page=1&dossierid=&photo=&Npage=1&collectionid= French Defense Ministry archives ECPAD website] ] In 1953 both trains were attacked by theViet-Minh guerrilla s who mined and destroyed stone bridges when passing by. [ [http://www.ecpad.fr/Ecpa/PagesDyn/notfot.asp?id=749&page=1&dossierid=&photo=&Npage=1&collectionid=# French Defense Ministry archives ECPAD website] ] .Fulgencio Batista ’s army operated an armoured train during theCuban revolution though it was derailed and destroyed during theBattle of Santa Clara .Facing the threat of Chinese cross-border raids during the
Sino-Soviet split , the USSR developed armoured trains in the early 1970s to protect theTrans-Siberian Railway . According to different accounts, four or five trains were built. Every train included tenMain Battle Tank s, two light amphibious tanks, several AA guns, as well as severalArmoured Personnel Carrier s, supply vehicles, and equipment for railway repairs, all mounted on open platforms or in special railcars. Different parts of the train were protected with 5-20 mm thick armour. These trains were used by theSoviet Army to intimidate nationalist paramilitary units in 1990 during early stages of theNagorno-Karabakh War . ["Sovetskaja Armija v gody "cholodnoj vojny" : (1945 - 1991)" - Fes·kov, Vitalij I; Kalašnikov, Konstantin A; Golikov, Valerij I; Tomsk Izdat.Tomskogo University . 2004, Page 246- ISBN 5-7511-1819-7] [ [http://www.otvaga2004.narod.ru/publ_w1/2006-10-27.htm Last armored trains of the Soviet Army] (inCyrillic /Russian language ) - Markovian, Victor; "Мир оружия", 9/2005]An improvised armoured train named '
Krajina ekspres ' (Krajina express) was used during the war in Croatia (part of theYugoslav wars ) of the early 1990s by the army of Republika Srpska Krajina (self-proclaimed republic of Serbs living within Croatia that sought to remain in Yugoslavia). The train mounted aM18 Hellcat and was used successfully as a mobile artillery battery (some AA guns were also mounted) due to lack of danger from the air (Croatia then possessed only a few aircraft - mostly converted ex-crop dusters used as bombers). It was reportedly hit on a few occasions with some antitank self-propelled grenades, but the damage was minor, as most of the train was covered with thick sheets of rubber which caused the grenades to explode somewhat too early to do real damage. The train was finally destroyed by its own crew lest it fall into enemy hands during the Croatian offensiveOperation Storm which overran the Srpska Krajina. The remains are now on display inGradačac .Towards the end of the
Cold War , both superpowers began to develop railway-basedICBM s mounted on armoured trains; the Soviets deployed theSS-24 missile in 1987, but budget costs and the changing international situation led to the cancellation of the programme, with all remaining railway-based missiles finally being deactivated in 2005.One armoured train that remains in regular use is the private train of
Kim Il-sung andKim Jong-il , which the former received as a gift from theSoviet Union .Armoured tram
Armoured
tram s also existed, though apparently not purpose-built as some of the armoured trains. The just-formedRed Army used at least one armoured tram during the fighting for Moscow in theOctober Revolution in 1917. ["First World War" - Willmott, H.P.;Dorling Kindersley , 2003, Page 231.] The Slovak National Uprising, more well-known for its armoured trains described above, also used at least one makeshift example. [" [http://books.google.com/books?id=kpEc8ltyqnUC&pg=PA482&lpg=PA482&dq=%22armoured+tram%22&source=web&ots=SeF-O5kp3c&sig=6dY-uYW_Eg6GKeklZLORvbkMyug&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result The Czech and Slovak Republics] " (excerpt fromGoogle Books ) - Humphreys, Rob,Rough Guide , 2002, ISBN 1858289041, Page 482]See also
*
List of armoured trains
*Battle of Mokra
*Railway gun References
External links
* [http://wio.ru/rr/ww2sov.htm Soviet armoured trains]
* [http://www.tankmuseum.ru/train.html Russian armoured trains]
* [http://www.ecpad.fr/Ecpa/PagesDyn/result.asp?reportageid=188 Photos of French Indochina armoured trains La Rafale I] / [http://www.ecpad.fr/Ecpa/PagesDyn/result.asp?reportageid=359 Rafale II]
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