Mortar Test Page: Difference between revisions

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In 1906 the batteries with sixteen mortars were administratively divided into two batteries of eight mortars each (2 mortar pits). This was followed with a longer term program of physical removal of two mortars from many of the mortar pits. All of these changes combined with improved fire control improved the efficiency and accuracy of the mortar batteries. Naval armament improvements and aircraft soon rendered most coast mortar batteries obsolete because of their limited range and vulnerability to air attack. Most mortar batteries remained in service until 1942 when their value as scrap exceeded their military value.
In 1906 the batteries with sixteen mortars were administratively divided into two batteries of eight mortars each (2 mortar pits). This was followed with a longer term program of physical removal of two mortars from many of the mortar pits. All of these changes combined with improved fire control improved the efficiency and accuracy of the mortar batteries. Naval armament improvements and aircraft soon rendered most coast mortar batteries obsolete because of their limited range and vulnerability to air attack. Most mortar batteries remained in service until 1942 when their value as scrap exceeded their military value.
{| class="wikitable sortable" width="1100px"
|+ Quad Mortar Batteries
|-
! Fort
! Original Battery
! New Battery
! HD
! Config
! Mortars
! Final Mort/Carr
! Start-Comp-Xfer
! Stop
! Rebuilt
! Cement
|-
|[[Fort Preble]]||[[Battery Kearny]]||[[Battery Chase]]||[[Harbor Defense of Portland|Portland]]|||Quad||16/6||M1890MI/M1896MI||1896-1901-1901||1942||Original||Both
|-
|[[Fort Banks (2)|Fort Banks]]||[[Battery Lincoln]]||[[Battery Kellogg]]||[[Harbor Defense of Boston|Boston]]||Quad||16/12||M1886/M1891||1892-1896-1896||1942||Rebuilt||Rosendale/Both
|-
|[[Fort Andrews]]||[[Battery Cushing]]||[[Battery Whitman]]||[[Harbor Defense of Boston|Boston]]||"L"||16/10||M1890MI/M1890||1898-1904-1904||1942||Remodeled||Portland
|-
|[[Fort Adams (1)|Fort Adams]]||[[Battery Greene]]||[[Battery Edgerton]]||[[Harbor Defense of Narragansett Bay|Narragansett Bay]]||In Line||16/8||M1890MI/M1896MI||1896-1898-1898||1942||Original||Rosendale PF
|-
|[[Fort Slocum (2)|Fort Slocum]]||[[Battery Haskin]]||[[Battery Overton]]||[[Harbor Defense of Eastern New York|Eastern NY]]||Quad||16||M1886/M1891||1892-1892-1897||1919||Original||Both
|-
|[[Fort Hancock (2)|Fort Hancock]]||[[Battery McCook]]||[[Battery Reynolds]]||[[Harbor Defense of Southern New York|Southern NY]]||Quad||16||M1886M/M1891||1891-1894-1898||1920||Original||Rosendale
|-
|[[Fort DuPont (1)|Fort DuPont]]||[[Battery Rodney]]||[[Battery Best]]||[[Harbor Defense of the Delaware|Delaware]]||Quad||16/8||M1890MI/M1896||1897-1899-1900||1942||Original||Both
|-
|[[Fort Monroe]]||[[Battery Anderson]]||[[Battery Ruggles]]||[[Harbor Defense of Chesapeake Bay|Chesapeake Bay]]||In Line||16/8||M1890MI/M1896MI||1896-1898-1898||1942||Original||Rosendale
|-
|[[Fort Moultrie]]||[[Battery Capron]]||[[Battery Butler]]||[[Harbor Defense of Charleston|Charleston]]||Quad||16/8||M1890MI/M1896MI||1897-1898-1898||1942||Original||Rosendale
|-
|[[Fort MacArthur]]||[[Battery Barlow]]||[[Battery Saxton]]||[[Harbor Defense of Los Angeles|Los Angeles]]||In Line||8||M1912/M1896MIII||1916-1919-1919||1943||Original*||Portland
|-
|[[Fort Miley]]||[[Battery Livingston]]||[[Battery Springer]]||[[Harbor Defense of San Francisco|San Francisco]]||In Line||16/8||M1890MI/M1896MI||1899-1902-1902||1942||Original*||Portland
|-
|[[Fort Winfield Scott (2)|Fort Winfield Scott]]||[[Battery Stotsenburg]]||[[Battery McKinnon]]||[[Harbor Defense of San Francisco|San Francisco]]||In Line||16/8||M1890MI/M1896MI||1897-1898-1900||1942||Original||Portland
|-
|[[Fort Winfield Scott (2)|Fort Winfield Scott]]||[[Battery Howe (1)]]||[[Battery Wagner (1)]]||[[Harbor Defense of San Francisco|San Francisco]]||Quad||16||M1896/M1891||1893-1895-1900||1920||Original||Portland
|-
|[[Fort Casey (1)|Fort Casey]]||[[Battery Schenck]]||[[Battery Seymour]]||[[Harbor Defense of Puget Sound|Puget Sound]]||In Line||16/8||M1890MI/M1896MI||1898-1899-1902||1942||Original||Portland
|-
|[[Fort Worden]]||[[Battery Brannan]]||[[Battery Powell]]||[[Harbor Defense of Puget Sound|Puget Sound]]||In Line||16/8||M1890MI/M1896MI||1899-1901-1902||1942||Original||Portland
|}

Revision as of 11:17, 23 April 2014

The first Endicott Period mortar batteries were based on experiments by Colonel Henry L. Abbot (Cullum 1632) with muzzle loading 13" mortars. Abbot configured the mortars into "quads", four mortar pits with four mortars in each pit arranged in a rectangle. The objective was to salvo the mortars so that they provided a pattern of coverage that greatly increased the probability of hitting a moving target.

As the first 12" breech loaded mortars (BLM) became available (M1886) the first batteries were constructed along the lines of Colonel Abbot's quad design. The service battery at Sandy Hook (later Fort Hancock) was one of the first built and because of the proximity to the proving ground at Sandy Hook the first set of set of proof firings yielded important test results. Volleys of all sixteen mortars at the same time took place on 11 Apr 1895 and yielded important results that seemed to validate his earlier experiments.

Abbot Quad Battery, Fort Hancock, Battery Reynolds Mortar Pit B (2010). Imagine 100 troops and four large mortars in this pit.
The Service Battery at Sandy Hook became Batteries Reynolds and Battery McCook

Colonel Abbot reflected in 1896 that some 40,000 rounds of mortar ammunition were expended in perfecting the quad concept and that group control was essential to achieving perfection. He also acknowledged that the enormous expenditure of munitions required to equip a battery "(1700 tons to equip a sixteen-mortar battery with 200 rounds)" presented "troublesome engineer conditions."

Five mortar batteries were under construction at the time of the tests, all using the Abbot quad configuration and a total of seven were built with the last started in 1897. After the salvo tests it became clear to some that the servicing of sixteen mortars simultaneously in confined spaces presented challenges in terms of the numbers of people required, the efficiency of the crews in the crowded mortar pits and safety. The first change came by arranging the four mortar pits in-line all with open backs. This change was followed in most batteries constructed after 1896.

In 1906 the batteries with sixteen mortars were administratively divided into two batteries of eight mortars each (2 mortar pits). This was followed with a longer term program of physical removal of two mortars from many of the mortar pits. All of these changes combined with improved fire control improved the efficiency and accuracy of the mortar batteries. Naval armament improvements and aircraft soon rendered most coast mortar batteries obsolete because of their limited range and vulnerability to air attack. Most mortar batteries remained in service until 1942 when their value as scrap exceeded their military value.