Category Archives: weapons

Anyone seen Shane MacGowan’s Lee-Enfield?

If you recall, Irish folk singer Shane MacGowan of The Pogues recently passed just before last Christmas.

Sadly, Shane’s gun is missing and MacGowan’s widow, Victoria Mary Clarke, is seeking its quiet return, no questions asked.

The gun is, in typical Irish fashion, not just any old Glock or Enfield. It’s a Lee-Enfield 303 and has the name H Munn etched on it.

Shane MacGowan of the Pogues with his Enfield 303

Supposedly it is from the 1916 Easter Rising (perhaps on the British side) and was given to MacGowan as a 60th birthday present by the singer-songwriter Glen Hansard of The Frames.

And with that, I leave you with The Pogues’ version of The Band Played Waltzing Matilda.

Pom-poms, Sammies, and Cocoa!

Just a Saturday morning in the Norwegian Sea, some 80 years ago today:

Crew members of the British carrier HMS Furious have an early breakfast of ham sandwiches and hot cocoa around an eight-barrel 2-pdr “Pom Pom” QF Mark VIII AA gun after successful attacks on German convoys off Kristiansund, Norway on 6 May 1944. Fairey Barracuda and Supermarine Seafire aircraft from Furious sank two enemy merchantmen– the tanker Saarburg and freighter Almora— that day. 

 

IWM – Hudson, F A (Lt) Photographer Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205155280

Indirect Fire Support, Direct from Anzio

How about this great series of period photos, all captured 80 years ago today by the same British Army shutterbug, showing 46th (Liverpool Welsh) Royal Tank Regiment tracks in use in the indirect artillery role in the Anzio bridgehead, 5 May 1944. The Shermans look like M4A2 welded hull models with VVS (vertical volute spring) suspension.

Army photo by SGT. Radford, No 2 Army Film & Photographic Unit. IWM NA 14603

“Empty 75mm HE shell cases being collected from 46th (Liverpool Welsh) Royal Tank Regiment M4 Sherman tanks, used in the indirect artillery role in the Anzio bridgehead, 5 May 1944. L/Cpl J. Owens– left– of 82 Milman Road, Liverpool, and Sgm E.A. Woolley of 42 Church Road, Rhos-on-Sea, Colwyn Bay, N. Wales.” Note Woolley’s ciggy and cross-draw service revolver hanging low and at the ready. 

Army photo by SGT. Radford, No 2 Army Film & Photographic Unit. IWM NA 14606

“75mm HE shells being loaded into a 46th (Liverpool Welsh) Royal Tank Regiment Sherman tank, used in the indirect artillery role in the Anzio bridgehead, 5 May 1944. LT D. Bayfield of Hove, Sussex, hands a round through the revolver port. In the background in SGT H.S. McCormac of 34, Munsell Road, Fairfield, Liverpool.” Note the good lieutenant’s RTR black beret and squared-away pistol belt. IWM NA 14605

Formed as the duplicate of the 40th (King’s) Royal Tank Regiment in Liverpool in 1939 upon mass mobilization, the 46th (Liverpool Welsh) RTR, the two regiments joined with the 50th RTR to form the 23rd Armored Bde as part of the 8th Armored Division. Shipping out to Suez in May 1942, where they were given a mix of Valentines and Matildas with which they fought across Egypt, Libya, and Tunisia under Monty.

By the time of the Salerno landings (Operation Avalanche) in September 1943, the 46th had been re-equipped with the Shermans they would use throughout their climb up the Italian boot and their eventual transfer to Greece as part of Arkforce in August 1944, where they would remain through until demobilization after the end of the Second World War.

The First American Goulash Kalash at 55

Republic of Vietnam, 3 May 1969: “Offical caption: Historical Arsenal– Captain Anthony F. Milavic (Miami, Fla.) examines the first Hungarian AKM rifle to be captured in Vietnam. The weapon is the latest development in the AK-47 rifle used by the North Vietnamese Army. Also displayed are 20 different enemy weapons captured by Leathernecks of the 4th Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division. The long-barreled rifle (center) is an enemy sniper rifle that was manufactured in 1953, but it is of the Mosin Nagant design that dates back to the 1890s.”

U.S. Marine Photo A193022 by CPL. Dennis Randolph.

Manufactured by the Fegyver- és Gépgyár (FÉG) state arms plant in Hungary, the central European People’s Republic got in the Kalashnikov game around 1963 with the AKM-63, followed by the AMD-65, and after 1977, by the AK-63 (AMM/AMMS) and AMP-69.

The AMD-65. Notably, the Hungarians were one of the first AK makers to go with plastic furniture rather than wood. 

Of course, many Americans outside of AK nerds know FEG better for their excellent PJK Hi-Power copies that flooded the market in the 1990s.

One interesting thing to note about the Marine officer in the top image, Anthony F. Milavic (born 1936) enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1953 and, by 1966 was a warrant officer, then shortly after earned his O-1 commission. He earned the Legion of Merit for his 1968-69 Vietnam tour working in the 3rd MARDIV’s G-2 shop. Retiring from the Marine Corps in 1978 as a major, he was a very prolific writer for several years on military intelligence and firearms subjects, founding the old MILINET bulletin board. 

We’re living in the age of real comic books: Enter the Manta

Out of nowhere, DARPA and Northrop Grumman this week debuted the Manta of the deep sea.

No, not quite the above, but possibly cooler:

(Photo: Northrop Grumman)

As noted by DARPA:

The Manta Ray prototype uncrewed underwater vehicle (UUV) built by performer Northrop Grumman completed full-scale, in-water testing off the coast of Southern California in February and March 2024. Testing demonstrated at-sea hydrodynamic performance, including submerged operations using all the vehicle’s modes of propulsion and steering: buoyancy, propellers, and control surfaces.

Manta Ray aims to develop and demonstrate a new class of long-duration, long-range, payload-capable UUVs ready for persistent operations in dynamic maritime environments. DARPA is engaging with the U.S. Navy on the next steps for testing and transition of this technology.

(Photo: Northrop Grumman)

And at that, drink in this very relevant recent video commentary by Rear Admiral Tim Gallaudet, U.S. Navy (Retired) from the USNI on sea-going ocean drones.

D-Day Typhoons: 80 Years Apart

Among the thousands of Allied aircraft filling the skies over Normandy for Operation Overlord in June 1944 were four RAF Typhoon Squadrons (Nos. 193,197, 257, and 266) flying out of Needs Oar Point ALG near Lymington in Hampshire. They were heavily involved from April 1944 onwards in low-level attacks against targets in France and really stepped up the sortie rate when D-Day went live.

Flying Officers Spain and Spencer of No. 257 Squadron RAF wait on standby in their Hawker Typhoon Mark IBs, and are attended by their ground crews, at Warmwell, Dorset. The further aircraft is JP494 “FM-D.” IWM (CH 11993)

Dating back to the Great War, No. 257 (Burma) Squadron RAF flew Hawker Hurricanes during the Battle of Britain and converted to the Typhon in July 1942. With a Burmese Chinthe sejan lion on their badge and the motto “Thay myay gyee shin shwe hti” (Death or glory), they made it count.

To honor the unit– and all Allied aircraft that flew into the fray some 80 years ago– the RAF’s Typhoon Display Team from 29 Squadron has repainted one of their Eurofighter Typhoon FGR4’s, ZJ913 (Serial #: BS004/047), in the 1944 colors of No. 257 Squadron, complete with invasion stripes.

And the result is stunning:

The RAF Typhoon Display Team has revealed the newly painted display aircraft for the 2024 Display Season at RAF Coningsby. The aircraft paint scheme includes features commemorating D-Day, with 2024 being the 80th Anniversary of the Allies invading Europe. (MOD)

Bold features, including the RAF Tactical Recognition Flash and the D-Day invasion features, bring heaps of heritage to the display team this year. The display aircraft ZJ913 will be a regular at airshows around the UK and will be nicknamed Moggy. Flt Lt David Turnbull from 29 Sqn RAF will be the display pilot for 2024. (MOD)

The bird carries the recognition marks of “Moggy” FM-G, which recalls the aircraft flown by Pilot Officer Denzel Jenkins on D-Day.

As noted by the RAF:

Jenkins began the war as an airman and was commissioned as an officer in Jan 1944. Later, he became Officer Commanding (OC) 257 and was decorated with the Distinguished Flying Cross.

F-16s over the Falklands?

Meanwhile, in other potential RAF Typhoon news, with the blessing of the U.S., Argentina’s defense minister signed a 2.1 billion kroner ($300 million) deal on 15 April to buy 24 of Denmark’s recently retired Cold War-era F-16AM/BM Block 15 MLU fighter jets. While a surprise move for sure, reports are that it came to upset a planned buy of newly built Chinese/Pakistani-made JF-17 fighters by Buenos Aries and a resulting pivot towards Bejing for the nominal U.S. ally.

The move will give Argentina its most modern fighters since its unsupportable French-built Mirage IIIEAs retired in 2015.

The Deputy Prime Minister of Denmark and Minister of Defence Troels Lund Poulsen last month attended an agreement signing at Skrydstrup Air Base in Denmark attended by Argentine Minister of Defense Luis Alfonso Petri that included a sheep-dipped twin-seat F-16BM repainted in Argentine Air Force (Fuerza Aérea Argentina) livery.

 

While the RAF has long-maintained a four-ship QRF of Typhoons at Mount Pleasant in the Falklands, which has always been seen as more than sufficient, once Argentina takes possession of their new (to them) 1980s F-16s in quantity, should things get hot down there again, it could get dicey.

But what are the odds of that ever happening? 

Springfield Armory Enters the Retro Carry Handle Space

Back in 1986, the Colt AR-15A2 HBAR was where its at…

Back 20-25 years ago, fixed carry handle A2 style ARs with a 20-inch barrel were about the only thing you could find on the black rifle market, and even those were typically neutered by the Federal AWB (which ran 1994-2004) so that they didn’t have such evil features as a bayonet lug and shipped with 10-round mags. Still, they were good enough for DCM/CMP matches.

These days, with the M4 being the standard post-9/11, rifle-length fixed carry handle ARs are hard to find and only a few niche sources exist to get one– Bushmaster, Fulton, and H&R (the latter sold through PSA)– with prices starting at $1,299, and they are frequently sold out.

Talk about not being in Kansas anymore…

So, interestingly enough, Springfield Armory just introduced a very nicely done homage to the M16A2 in the form of the SA-16A2, which includes all the correct throwback features (forged 7075 T6 aluminum receivers, a 20-inch 1:7 twist government profile chrome lined barrel, round handguards with heat shields, a full-length fixed stock with rear compartment, a fixed A2 carry handle with adjustable/dual aperture sight, A2 F-height front sight post/gas block, rifle length gas system, a full-auto profile BCG with a phosphate exterior with a hard chrome-lined interior, mil-spec trigger, and a hollow GI grip) you expect.

The SA-16A2. (Photo: Chris Eger/Guns.com)

The SA-16A2 has some upgrades to enhance performance that the 1980s M16A2 never did, including an Accu-Tite tensioning system to cut down on the slop between the upper and lower receivers and M4 feed ramps.

The lower receiver features “Government Property” rollmarks as well as a non-functional “Burst” selector marking in an ode to the M16A2. (Photo: Chris Eger/Guns.com)

A full look in my column at Guns.com.

Warship Wednesday, May 1, 2024: A Wandering Dutchman

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, May 1, 2024: A Wandering Dutchman

Image via the Koninklijke Marine Fotoafdrukken in the Netherlands Institute of Military History (NIMH), photo number NIMH 2158_010350.

Above we see the Holland-class pantserdekschip (armored cruiser) Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant steaming out of Den Helder for her inaugural deployment to the Dutch East Indies, on 28 January 1901, leaving a crowd of well-wishers ashore. Note the scrollwork on her gleaming white bow and large naval ensign.

She would see much overseas work, including some early peacekeeping, and would endure until the inferno of the 1940 blitzkrieg of the Netherlands.

The Hollands

The Hollands were the Dutch answer to the Royal Navy’s Apollo-class second-class protected cruisers (3,600-ton, 19.75 kts, 6×6-inch, 6×4.7-inch) and the class leader was ordered in 1894.

The first flight of three cruisers (HollandZeeland, and Friesland) had a displacement of 3,840 tons while the second batch (of which Gelderland was the lead followed by Noord Brabant and Utrecht) went 4,100 tons as they held 12 Yarrow boilers as opposed to 8 in the original design and went just a couple feet longer, with maximum speed varying between 18 and 20 knots. To extend their range, they were fitted with an auxiliary sailing rig deemed fast enough to carry the ships at 7-8 knots. 

They carried a thin coating of Harvey nickel steel armor including two inches covering the decks and four in the conning tower while the guns had shields and the engine room glacis had a five-inch belt. 

They were handsome craft and could both show the Dutch flag in the Caribbean-protecting the Netherlands Antilles, the Pacific where Holland held the sprawling Netherlands East Indies, and of course in metropolitan waters in Europe.

Pantserdekschip Noord-Brabant period diagram

The main battery consisted of two 14.9 cm L/37 (5.86″/37 cal) Krupp No. 3 guns– which was essentially an export model of the German Navy’s extensively used 15 cm/40 (5.9″) SK L/40— arranged one fore and one aft behind 6-inch armored gun shields. The secondary battery consisted of a half-dozen 12 cm L/37 (4.72″/37 cal) Krupp No. 3 singles, typically with 1-inch gun shields. Tierciary anti-boat armament came in the form of six 75mm/37cal Krupp No.1 deck guns while an impressive array of a dozen 37mm Hotchkiss 1-pounders (including eight RF breechloaders and four Gatling guns) were ready for the light stuff.

For heavy anti-ship work, the Hollands carried a pair of submerged 17.7-inch torpedo tubes, bow and stern, although the below plans of Noordbrabant would seem to imply a set of amidships black powder charged torpedo guns just above the waterline– which may have been a tactical surprise as that feature isn’t listed in any of the period naval journals.

They were fetching ships, especially in their original all-white scheme.

Amsterdam, August-September 1898, the inauguration Hr.Ms. Queen Wilhelmina, showing new pantserdek ships Holland and Zeeland along with the torpedo boat Ardjoeno. Note the revolving Hotchkiss cannon on the bridge wings of Holland and the large searchlight atop her wheelhouse.

Meet Noordbrabant 

Our subject, named like the rest of her class for Dutch provinces, was laid down for the Dutch Navy on 31 August 1897 at the Koninklijke Maatschappij de Schelde, Flushing, launched 17 January 1899, and commissioned 1 March 1900, with a total construction cost of ƒ 3.045.607,00.

Noordbrabant seen in Den Helder circa 1900. NIMH 2158_010346

A great stern shot of Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant, showing off her aft 5.86″/37 mount. NIMH 2158_010356

Noordbrabant shortly after commissoning. Note her white hull and bow scroll. NIMH 2158_010342

HL 1182 Het stokersverblijf van de HMS Noordbrabant

HL 1182 Sergeanten adelborst aan boord van de HMS Noordbrabant

Pre-War Colonial Service

Noordbrabant was almost immediately sent aboard, her first “dance” being the Kiel regatta the summer she was commissioned, where she hosted the Kaiser himself.

In February 1901, she set off for a four-year deployment to the Dutch East Indies with sisters Gelderland and Utrecht.

Noordbrabant, showing framing set up for awning to be set for Far Eastern service. 2158_010345

(Lef to right) The Dutch East Indies squadron in profile showing the pantserdekschepen Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant, Hr.Ms. Gelderland, Hr.Ms. Utrecht, and Hr.Ms. Regentes along with the flottieljevaartuig (colonial gunboat) Hr.Ms. Nias in Sabang Bay on the island of Pulau, North Sumatra, circa 1902-1904. NIMH 2000-1385-041

It was during this extended deployment to the South Pacific that she called on Australia, Singapore, and Indochina then, on her return cruise back to the Netherlands for refit in 1905, would make calls at Perim, Port Said, Algiers, and Tangiers.

Pantserdekschip Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant is seen in a visit to Algiers, circa 1905. Note most of her awning frame has been taken down. NIMH 2158_010358

Her 1905-06 refit included removing her auxiliary sail rig and installing new generators for ventilation fans, shell lifts, and electric lights. Her armament was also homogenized, landing her two 5.86″/37s in favor of a full 10-gun battery of 4.72″/37 guns. Likewise, her 75mm/37cal and 37mm batteries were much reduced (from 6 and 12 to 2 and 4, respectively) and a 75mm mortar was installed for use in both lobbing star shells and in shore bombardment– though useful in her work in the Pacific.

After some calm duty in European waters, with occasional sorties into Scandinavian and Mediterranean waters, Noordbrabrant would again be sent to the Pacific for another tour in 1908 that would include calling at San Francisco in October 1909, as well as Hawaii.

While in the Bali Strait on gunnery exercises on 31 May 1910, she reefed on an uncharted rock and had two be lightened to be pulled off.

Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant hard aground on a reef in Bali Strait, with Hr.Ms. Hertog Hendrik and Hr.Ms. Holland standing by to assist.

Steaming to Soerabaja under her own power, once dry docked, it was found that she suffered a gash across two frames and required six months in repairs before taking to the sea once again.

Damage to the bow sustained by Noordbrabant during a trip to the Soenda Islands (Lombok, 1910), while in dry dock in Surabaya, Java. NIMH 2158_090652

Closer detail of the above. NIMH 2158_090653

Noordbrabant with dark stacks and extensive canvas awnings, in Surabaya with accommodation ship Koning der Nederlanden to the left corner. Her apparent list could be due to damage. NIMH 2158_010349

She returned home from her second Pacific tour in June 1913.

Peacekeeping

In November 1913, the freshly-refit Noordbrabant carried the Dutch military mission to the burgeoning state of Albania, which had been established in the aftermath of the Balkan Wars by the six Great Powers at the London Conference the previous June.

The mission, consisting of 13 Army field officers (joined by another 11 the following February), was to form the fresh new country’s police force, a tall order considering the region was awash with Greek, Bulgarian, Italian, Kosovar, and Mirdita irregulars, bandits of all stripes, and some 200 Ottoman troops of Essad Pasha’s gendarmerie who were in no hurry to leave.

Off the Balkans, 1913-1914, before the outbreak of the war. Royal Netherlands Army officers aboard Noord-Brabant including (left to right) Major Kroon, skipper Ktz Oudemans, Gen. De Veer, and Major Roelfsema. Note the 4.72″/37 deck gun, lacking its sheifd. NIMH AKL000310.

Major Lodewijk Willem Johan Karel Thomson, a regular Dutch Army officer with some 30 years of service behind him including winning the Order of William during the Aceh War in the Far East, was made commander of the new International Gendarmerie of the Principality of Albania, which had planned to grow to a 5,000 member force carefully cultivated by the Dutch.

The plan was doomed to fail, with a series of peasant revolts instigated by outside powers leading to a clash at Durres on 15 June 1914 that left Thomson dead, and many of his fellow officers (briefly) captured. The Gendarmerie was taken over by Austrian and German officers who arrived two weeks later and shortly afterward was disbanded.

Thomson was initially buried in Albania, with full military honors and a fez-clad honor guard of his International Gendarmerie on post.

Nederlandse militairen in Albanië. Thomsons graf. NIMH AKL000295

However, it was decided to repatriate his remains home, with the rest of the returning Dutch military mission. They were carried back by Noord-Brabant.

De kruiser Hr.Ms. Noord-Brabant vaart de sluizen van IJmuiden binnen, met aan boord het stoffelijk overschot van L.W.J.K. Thomson. 14 July 1914. Note the canvas covering on her bridge wings and her dark scheme. NIMH AKL000307

Noord-Brabant delivered the remains of Major Thomson to IJmuiden, Netherlands, on 14 July 1914, with his casket being carried by an honor guard of sailors.

Schilderij van de aankomst van het stoffelijk overschot van lkol L.W.J.K.Thomson met het Noord-Brabant te Amsterdam. NIMH AKL001364

Ultimately, Thomsom was re-buried with great public ceremony in Groningen and is seen as the first of a long line of Dutch peacekeepers killed overseas including no less than 28 who have perished on UN missions since 1949, primarily in Lebanon (UNIFIL), Mali (MINUSMA) and, ironically, the Balkans (UNPROFOR).

War!

A cautious neutral since 1830, the Netherlands spent the Great War walking a careful line. Although outwardly friendly to the Germans– Queen Wilhelmina’s husband was a German prince, Anthony Fokker set up a factory in Germany to produce what went on to become a legendary line of fighter planes, and the Kaiser would ultimately retire into exile in Holland in 1918– the country also had sympathy for their occupied neighbors in Belgium (there were over a million Belgian refugees in the Netherlands by Christmas 1914 along with 30,000 escaped Belgian soldiers) as well as close ties to France and Britain (the majority of the British 1st Royal Naval Brigade was interned in Holland).

To enforce their neutrality, on 31 July 1914, the Dutch government ordered full mobilization, putting both the Army and Navy on a war footing.

However, as classmates Friesland and Utrecht were decommissioned in 1913 before the conflict and had been scrapped already, the country had just four Hollands left on the navy list.

The four remaining Holland class cruisers in the 1914 Jane’s entry. The armament listed was the original circa 1900 fit, rather than what was refit in 1906

While something like 300 Dutch mariners and fishermen lost their lives offshore to both the Germans and the British, the Dutch navy did what it could to police their territorial waters against all comers while standing by to assist survivors of the conflict found in need.

One such incident involved Noordbrabant who, while on patrol in January 1916, encountered the foundering HM Submarine E17 a sandbank off Texel Island

As noted by RN Subs: 

E17, believing the Cruiser was belligerent submerged, but owing to the damage was forced to surface again. E1 signaled the unidentified cruiser for assistance and her crew was taken off and interned. E17 finally sank at 1140 on Thursday 6th January 1916.

Rescuing all of E17’s 31 officers and ratings, led by LCDR John Robert Guy Moncrieffe, RN, Noordbrabant landed them at Den Helder from which they were later moved to Groningen where other Royal Navy internees were held for the duration.

Pantserdekschip Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant seen in her Great War paint scheme, circa 1916-18. NIMH 2158_010354

Another from the same period. Note her recognition stripes on her stacks and a good detail of her No. 1. mount. 2158_010353

At Den Helder, with all of her boats away. NIMH 2158_005455

Doldrums

Post-war, Noordbrabant was decommissioned in 1920 and laid up. Meanwhile, sisters Holland, and Zeeland, were likewise decommissioned and disposed of, while only Gelderland was retained in service– as a gunnery training ship.

Disarmed, from 1922 to December 1925, Noordbrabant was loaned to the Departement van Justitie as a logementschip (accommodation ship) for wayward youth and orphaned boys.

Seen while she was an accommodation ship for the Dutch Justice Department. NIMH 2173-225-066

Returned to the Navy in January 1926, Noordbrabant was further modified and converted to a opleidingsschip (training ship) to be based at Vlissingen, where the old cruiser would become the first stop for new recruits (leerling-matroos= apprentice sailors) to learn seamanship, military bearing, and drill.

As such, most of the rates in the Dutch Navy for the next 15 years began their service on Noordbrabant’s decks.

She was given a topside makeover, with her empty gun mounts and superstructure covered by a deck house while her engine spaces– unneeded moving forward– were reduced to a single stack, used for venting cooking and heating exhausts. 

Pantserdekschip Hr.Ms. Noordbrabant as a opleidingsschip (training ship) in Vlissingen. Note the large skylights in deck house. NIMH 2158_010373

Note her extensive deckhouse, complete with skylights. NIMH 2158_010377

The opperdek (quarterdeck) of Noordbrabant while she was being used as an accommodation ship at Vlissingen. Note the horseshoe buoy, Marines complete with short swords, a stand of Mannlicher rifles, and Navy bugler. The skylights can be seen above. NIMH 2158_010391

Seen circa 1926-40 at Vlissingen with enlisted racing crews in summer whites. NIMH 2158_010376

She hosted Queen Wilhelmina on 17 April 1931 for the official opening of the Buitenhaven, Vlissingen’s outer port which is still in use today.

April 1931. Noordbrabant in Vlissingen with her glad rags flying. The crew cheers when HM Queen Wilhelmina disembarks after the visit. NIMH 2158_010372

Queen Wilhelmina inspected the crew of Noordbrabant in Vlissingen, in April 1931. Note the men on her yardarms and officers in full ceremonial dress including fore-and-aft bicorne hats, white gloves, and frock coats with braided epaulets. NIMH 2158_010370

Another of Queen Wilhemina leaving, escorted by VADM Laurentius Johannes Quant. Noordbrabant in the background. NIMH 2158_010369

Noordbrabant in dry dock dock at Hellevoetsluis, May-June 1931. NIMH 2158_010365

 

War! (again)

Rated a wachtschip (guard ship), with a small battery of light 75mm guns aboard, Noordbrabant made ready for her second world war in 1939 even though her engine room had been a cold iron watch for almost two decades and her machinery had been looted to keep Gelderland running.

It should come as no surprise that, when the Germans closed on Vlissingen in May 1940, the only thing left for the crew of Noordbrabant to do was to burn her in place.

A crispy Noordbrabant seen as a wachtschip (guard ship), in September 1940 after the ship was set on fire by her crew crew on 17 May. NIMH 2158_010380

Post-war, her hulk was sold for scrap.

As for her last sister, Gelderland, she was captured by the Germans, converted to a floating anti-aircraft battery, and sunk in Finnish waters by the Red Air Force in 1944. 

Epilogue

There are a few relics of our subject preserved.

Her cherished ship’s bell (scheepsklok) is in the Noord-brabant Provinciehuis at Hertogenbosch, alongside an information plaque.

The exquisitely detailed 83cm x l 190cm builder’s model from 1900 is in the collection of the Dutch Rijksmuseum.

Rijksmuseum NG-2000-13

She is also well remembered in maritime art.

The photo of a young Noordbrabant, steaming from Den Helder for the Far East in 1901, was turned into painting by maritime artist Flip Hammes in 1955.

NIMH 2158_010343

De Noord-Brabant als wachtschip rond 1938 te Vlissingen. Tekening: Ron van Maanen.

A 1950 Our Naval Committe postcard showing 10 Dutch warships lost between 10 and 15 May 1940 during the German attacks invasion including the kanoonneerboot Hr.Ms. Johan Maurits van Nassau flanked by the torpedoboot Hr.Ms. Z 3, the torpedobootjager (destroyer) Hr.Ms. Van Galen, mijnenlegger Hr.Ms. Hydra, mijnenvegers Hr.Ms. Pieter Florisz and Hr.Ms. Abraham van der Hulst, our Noord-Brabant in the bottom left with the kanonneerboot Hr.Ms. Friso alongside, as well as the kanonneerboot Hr.Ms. Brinio, and mijnenlegger Hr.Ms. Bulgia in the distance to the bottom right. NIMH 2158_090416

The Dutch Navy recycled her name in 1948 for a new 2,600-ton Holland class onderzeebootjager (destroyer) that would remain in service until 1974.

Hr.Ms. Noord-Brabant (D 810) July 1965 jumping waves NIMH 2009-014-147_004


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


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Museum Tin Can Upgrades

We’ll always cover museum ships here on the blog and a pair of preserved greyhounds have some important recent updates.

First, the USS Kidd (DD-661)— one of just three Fletchers on display in the U.S. and by far the one that is in the most “WWII correct” condition– closed to the public on 24 April as she left her Baton Rouge berth along the banks of the Mississippi for the first time since 1982, bound for the Thoma-Sea Marine Constructors (TMC) shipyard in Houma, Louisiana, for her first major dry dock preservation project since leaving Navy custody.

Second, to honor the famed USS Samuel B. Roberts (DE-413), the destroyer escort that “fought like a battleship” and heroically charged the Japanese fleet with the destroyers of Taffy 3, the only member of her class preserved in America, USS Stewart (DE-238), has recently been repainted in a WWII camo scheme that approximates Measure 32.

As noted by the Galveston Naval Museum:

We are painting the USS Stewart in Sammy B’s camouflage pattern in honor of the 80th Anniversary of the Battle off Samar. Our mission is to tell the story. There are no other DEs that can render such a tangible honor to one of the greatest fighting ships in American history. Our goal is to ensure that American schoolchildren will know the name Samuel B Roberts, and why America is a Nation worth fighting for.

Steyr, Now Czech Owned

Legendary Austrian firearms maker Steyr Arms has been purchased by the Czech Republic-based RSBC Investment Group.

RSBC, with its corporate headquarters in Prague, has been in the small arms business for almost a decade, having previously acquired Slovenian gunmaker AREX Defense in 2017. The group announced last week that it had assumed a 100-percent stake in Steyr from the German-based SMH Holding group.

Steyr, between its Austrian operation and Steyr USA subsidiary, employs over 200 and includes the legacy Mannlicher brand. It dates to at least 1864 when it was founded by gunmakers Josef and Franz Werndl.

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The Werndls had fast success in their innovative 11mm M1867 Werndl–Holub breechloading rifle, of which some 600,000 were ordered by the Austrian military and police. Changing the company’s name to OWG (Osterreichische Waffenfabriksgesellschaft = Austrian arms factory company), it followed up with Ferdinand Mannlicher’s bolt-action magazine-fed rifle platform in 1886, of which over 3 million were built before 1918.

And who can forget the Steyr 1912?

Remaining foremost a firearms company, it branched out over the years into bicycles, trucks, and automobiles and evolved first into Steyr-Werke AG in 1924 and then to Steyr-Daimler-Puch in 1934.

Following World War II, Steyr made the FN FAL under license for the Austrian military as the StG58, then found international success with the SSG precision rifle and MPi 69/81 submachine gun.

The Austrian Bundesheer’s MG 74 is an MG42/59 variant licensed from Beretta and manufactured by Steyr Mannlicher used since 1974

In 1977, Steyr introduced the revolutionary AUG bullpup rifle, adopted by the Austrian military as the StG 77, followed by the pioneering GB and M series pistols, and the Steyr Scout bolt-action rifle.

A Royal Oman Army soldier with an Austrian-made Steyr AUG, standard issue not only in Austria and Oman but also in Australia Bolivia, Ecuador, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malaysia, New Zealand, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, and Pakistan

By 1989, with the breakup of the Steyr-Daimler-Puch conglomerate, the firearms and air gun business spun off into the firm of Steyr Mannlicher before morphing into Steyr Arms in 2019. It was purchased by SMH Holding in 2007.

RSBC plans to fold Steyr and AREX into a division headed by current AREX CEO, Tim Castagne, to “enable both companies to offer an all-encompassing portfolio in the future.”

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