
The Big Guns
Artillery was the most dominant of all
weapons in the First World War; it set the nature and conduct of battles,
transformed the landscape, and caused the most casualties. In the fighting
in France and Belgium, Australian gunners were employed in every main area
of British operations.
The 9.2-inch Breech-Loading (BL) Howitzer
was the largest artillery piece used by Australians in the war, and remains
the largest used in land battle in the history of the Royal Regiment of
Australian Artillery. These guns, the composition of their crews, and many
of the areas of their operations, were different from the rest of the
Australian Imperial Force (AIF).

Will Longstaff,
Australian 9.2-inch howitzer
1919, oil on canvas,
92 x 153 cm,
AWM ART03004
Only one Australian battery – the 55th
Heavy Artillery Battery – was equipped with the 9.2-inch (233-millimetre)
howitzers. At first, the battery had just four guns, and this was later
expanded to six. The battery, and the 54th Heavy Artillery Battery, which
had 8-inch (203-millimetre) howitzers, on wheels, were placed together as
the Australian Heavy Artillery Group (HAG). These two siege batteries, and
their headquarters, moved from Britain to France in March 1916 and became
the first Australian units to go into battle on the Western Front.
Unlike other formations of the AIF, which
were created from civilian volunteers, the heavy batteries had been formed
mostly from permanent artillerymen of the Royal Australian Garrison
Artillery, with some reinforcements from the militia; the same regulars and
citizens’ force soldiers who had been manning the forts guarding
Australia’s ports and coastline. Early in the war, after it was decided
that there was little direct threat to the coastal cities, the brigade was
drawn together in Melbourne from the different states’ drafts, and sailed
for overseas service in July 1915. On arrival in Britain the unit, with its
two batteries, was numbered the 36th (Australian) HAG.

The 36th HAG was placed under the command
of Lieutenant Colonel Walter “ Wacky” Coxen. He was a soldier who was
impressive in both mind and manner. Before the end of the war he would
become the senior artillery commander of the Australian Corps. Major John
Hurst was the first to command the 9.2-inch battery. His early career also
followed in some of Coxen’s footsteps. He accompanied the heavy battery
overseas, then, in July 1916, was appointed to command the 22nd Australian
Field Artillery Brigade. He returned to the heavy artillery in January 1917,
taking over as commanding officer following Coxen’s promotion, and
remained there until the end of the war.
In England the 55th Battery took delivery
of its brand-new 9.2-inch howitzers in December 1915. They were modern
monsters, and the gunners spent a further two months training on them at
Taunton in Somerset. The guns, which had only recently entered service, met
a particular need on the Western Front. Firing from their stable base, with
a high angle, a low muzzle velocity and slow rate of fire, the guns could
place heavy shells on enemy positions accurately over a long range. It was
possible to fire two rounds within one minute, although this rate could not
be sustained.
The 9.2-inch howitzer, which had a working
crew of 14 men, threw a 132- kilogram projectile almost 10 kilometres. The
howitzer was fired from a fixed and stable position on a beam platform set
into the ground. Moving the gun to new locations was a time-consuming and
heavy task, requiring the gun and mounting to be broken down into three main
loads. The all-up weight was 12 tonnes.
There were better ways of moving the
howitzers from place to place than using horse-teams. Instead, a
100-horsepower Holt caterpillar tractor hauled the transporting wagon, with
two attached loads bearing sections of the carriage body. The ungainly train
moved at walking pace over the cobbled roads in Flanders and France, causing
heavy wear on the metal tracks, making them slippery in the frost and wet,
and creating constant vibration that left drivers exhausted even over short
distances.
Establishing a position for firing was a
slow process. To lay the two-beam platform and assemble and prepare the gun
needed a detachment of 25 men. In muddy ground it could take two days to set
the platform and a further 12 hours to deploy the gun. An earth box
containing about 10 tonnes of ballast was attached to the front of the gun
to keep it balanced when firing.
When fired, the howitzer gave a mighty
blast. In France during 1916 an Australian chaplain came too close to one
gun. “I thought the end of the world had come, and I was lifted violently
off my feet and thrown against the ground. I had walked unwittingly …
right in the angle of blast,” he recalled. Despite this, gunners did not
wear ear protection and usually ended up suffering various degrees of
deafness.

Australian gunners load a shell into a 9.2-inch howitzer. From this position
guns fired in support of Australian troops at Pozières in July 1916.
AWM EZ0147
The heavy artillery gunners did not see a
lot of their countrymen. The two batteries were Army Troops and could be
employed anywhere they were required along the front. At different times
they could be under British, French, Australian or Canadian command, and
sometimes also supported New Zealand, South African or Belgian troops. The
batteries and their headquarters were not always together; they were mostly
associated with, and developed an affinity with, British units of the Royal
Artillery.
The separation of the heavy gunners from
the rest of the AIF was evident in other ways too. Having been largely drawn
from the permanent army, members of the brigade were allowed to continue to
wear the “RAA” badges instead of the general service Australian
“Rising Sun” that was common throughout all other units of the AIF.
The 9.2-inch howitzer battery spent less
time in the Somme region than most of the Australian divisions. Its main
sphere of operations was north of Arras, around Vimy, sometimes supporting
the Canadians, and in Flanders around Ypres. The guns did go to the Somme in
mid-1916 to support the British offensive, and were there in July, when they
fired in support of the Australians’ attack on Pozières.
During their spell near Arras in 1917, the
9.2s assisted the Canadians in their famous capture of Vimy Ridge. Then the
guns moved north into Flanders in time to fire for the battle of Messines in
June. This was followed by the third battle of Ypres, when all five
Australian infantry divisions took part in the fighting, and again the guns
were in the general area of AIF operations.
Mud was a big problem, particularly in
Flanders. It was hard to get a firm base in the sodden ground. Guns became
so bogged that they could not be moved, and the supply of ammunition was
difficult. An example was when the Australians were eventually relieved
after the Ypres fighting in late 1917 and their howitzers had to be left
behind. They were handed over to the Canadians while the Australians took
over some of their guns in a quieter area – “a home away from home”
– before moving by night to Villers-Plouich in preparation for the
forthcoming Cambrai battle.

A gun of the Australian 9.2-inch battery in action at Voormezeele, Belgium,
in September 1917.
AWM E00694
Working the big howitzers was constant and
heavy work. It was vital that the guns, or their flash, not be seen by the
enemy. They were generally set up, under cover well behind the front line,
to fire over long range; and they were usually fairly safe. One of the
Australian officers wrote: “Thank God I am a gunner and not an unfortunate
infantryman; they do have a thin time.” However, when the guns were set
well forward, or German heavy artillery got their range, the immobile heavy
howitzers became very vulnerable.
One of the worst moments was on 4 October
1917, in the opening of the Broodseinde battle beyond Ypres, when the
howitzers suddenly came under heavy shelling. The battery commander wrote:
“ We lost about 15 killed and 30 wounded. Had a bit of a job getting the
killed and wounded away and getting the guns back into action as [they] had
been a bit knocked. Most of the lads did great work.” Many of the wounded
had to be carried out on duckboards. Lieutenant Percy Dobson, who was there,
commented sadly: “The battery lost some good men that day.”
In a three-day period the battery lost a
quarter of its gun-line strength, killed or wounded.
An even greater danger was a sudden enemy
breakthrough, making it impossible to extract the heavy howitzers in time.
This happened on 30 November 1917 when the 9.2-inch battery was located just
south-west of Cambrai. The howitzers had been brought up a few weeks earlier
and emplaced at night just 800 metres behind the front line, ready to be a
part of a great British attack about to begin. Following a successful
battle, in which tanks played a leading role, the Germans counterattacked,
placing the guns at risk. The Germans retook a lot of ground. Although they
were finally held, and the line stabilised, it was a disaster for some of
the British artillery, with many of their guns overrun. Even the heavies
further back were exposed. In the late morning, with the enemy advancing,
the Australians had received the message: “Prepare to destroy your guns
and evacuate.” By early afternoon the battery was under fire.

The Memorial’s 9.2-inch howitzer. It is probable that this particular
howitzer was used in action by the 55th Siege Battery in France in 1917. It
is now on display in ANZAC Hall.
AWM RELAWM15742
The situation worsened. The Germans came
on and there was no time to destroy the howitzers, so attempts were made to
disable them. The breech-blocks were removed and buried. In desperation,
fires were set under each gun, using the ammunition bag charges. An officer
recalled: “As the Huns seemed to be north, east, and south, we decided on
[withdrawal] due west. Nobody knew what was happening”. Finally, the
Germans were stopped before they got the guns. The gunners went back, and
the howitzers, now burnt and damaged, were hauled away to safety and for
repair. But it had been an inglorious moment.
Part of the problem throughout this ordeal
was caused by the absence of the battery commander, Major Arthur Bates, who
had been away for several days. A university-educated regular soldier, he
had already been mentioned-in-despatches for “distinguished and gallant
conduct”, and had been appointed to command the battery several weeks
earlier. But this day ruined his career. Dismissed from the service for
being absent without permission and for failing to return during the salvage
operations, he went home in disgrace in June 1918. Command of the battery
passed to Major George McDonald; when he was mortally wounded in March 1918,
Major Gordon Manchester took over, commanding the battery until the war’s
end. Manchester had not joined the unit until October 1917, having been held
back in Australia in charge of the Thursday Island defences.
The technical aspects of artillery work
advanced rapidly as the war progressed. Guns of different sizes fired a
range of shells, including high-explosive (HE), shrapnel, gas, and smoke.
The 9.2s used HE almost exclusively. The effectiveness of these shells was
increased by the new No. 106 Percussion Fuze, which was first widely adopted
by the heavy batteries from 1917. This was an instantaneous fuze that
detonated the shell on top of the ground before it had penetrated. Artillery
work had become a precise science, although the heavy gunners still simply
described their main tasks as divided between “counter-blasters”
engaging enemy batteries, and “trench-punching”.
In December 1917 there were changes for
the Australian heavy batteries, now back in Flanders resting and refitting
following the Cambrai battle. A new permanent brigade structure was
announced. Batteries of 6-inch howitzers and 60-pounders were added, and,
with the two existing batteries, they were now named the 36th Heavy
Artillery Brigade; the 8-inch and 9.2-inch batteries becoming the 1st and
2nd Siege Batteries. The brigade was posted to the Australian Corps and it
looked like the heavy gunners might see out their service alongside the AIF
divisions. However, nothing came of this as most of the Australian divisions
were quickly sent back to the Somme to try to stop the German advance there
in March 1918, and to later be a part of the local counter-offensive. The
heavy guns could not accompany them. When the Australian Corps eventually
took part in the 1918 advances they were supported by 9.2-inch howitzers
from British units, while the Australian battery continued its work in the
north.
The German offensive of early 1918 was not
restricted to the Somme. There was also pressure on the Ypres front, where
the enemy made substantial gains. In early April 1918, some of the
Australian 9.2-inch howitzers were overrun by the Germans near Ploegsteert
Wood, where they had spent several weeks. In attempting to withdraw two
guns, the gunners were defeated by the mud and slush and found that some
tractors could not even pull themselves out. One 9.2-inch carriage was only
hauled out by using three tractors, but little else could be done. The
brigade was withdrawn towards St Omer, and was later re-equipped and back in
action around Meteren.
Only the 1st Australian Division stayed on
in Flanders, not rejoining the rest of the Australian Corps on the Somme
until August 1918. There were some occasions when the Australian heavy
howitzers fired in support of the division’s operations. This work in the
Strazeele-Hazebrouck sector, during May and June, was mentioned in the award
of the Distinguished Service Order to Lieutenant Colonel Hurst. It was the
last occasion that the guns were involved in assisting the Australian
infantry. The big howitzers remained a part of the overall British firepower
in the Ypres area, supporting operations there until the end of the war.
The Australian Heavy Artillery Brigade was
a very small part of the AIF’s contribution to the war on the Western
Front. Still, it had done good work, having been heavily committed in action
for a total of 860 days, during which it suffered 71 fatal casualties and
had almost 300 wounded.
Some of the officers, being career
soldiers, felt that their brigade’s isolation from the main body of the
AIF had reduced their chances for promotion. Despite this, many of them had
been recognised and Coxen had risen to the highest level in the artillery
– by 1918 he was the AIF’s “boss gunner”. There were little more
than a dozen original officers who had come away in 1915, and from them
Major George McDonald had died of wounds, and Major Charles Morris, who was
54, was returned to Australia suffering severe shell-shock, while some
transferred to other units.

John Longstaff,
Brigadier General Walter Coxen
1919, oil on canvas,
76.4 x 63.4 cm,
AWM ART02989
There were interesting characters in the
ranks too; none more than Gunner Walter Schwarz. This 19-year-old felt that
he would not be allowed to go to the front with the brigade because of his
German name, and so he deserted while in England. But, determined to serve,
he enlisted in the British army under another name. He went on to be
commissioned, promoted to captain, was twice awarded the Military Cross for
bravery, and received his division’s card of honour four times, until he
was severely wounded, resulting in the loss of one leg. Before returning to
Australia he confessed to being a deserter, and received a pardon from the
King in 1921.
The Australian War Memorial displays a
9.2-inch howitzer in ANZAC Hall. It is a reminder of the work of this unique
artillery battery and the many stories surrounding it. The big guns
sometimes served with distinction in the same area as the AIF divisions,
while at other important times, such as the battle for Vimy Ridge and at
Cambrai, they provided Australian representation where there was little
other involvement.
Author
Peter Burness is Senior Curator, Gallery
Development, at the Australian War Memorial.
FROM AUSTRALIAN
WAR MEMORIAL