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  2. 8-inch gun M1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8-inch_Gun_M1

    Battery A of the 575th also went to the Cassino front attached to the 697th Field Artillery Battalion, and was used in the counter-battery role against long-range German 170 mm guns. By September 1944, the 8-inch guns of the 575th had been withdrawn from Italy, and soon saw action in France where they were particularly effective against ...

  3. M110 howitzer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M110_howitzer

    The 8-inch (203 mm) M110 self-propelled howitzer is an American self-propelled artillery system consisting of an M115 203 mm howitzer installed on a purpose-built chassis. Before its retirement from US service, it was the largest available self-propelled howitzer in the United States Army 's inventory; it continues in service with the armed ...

  4. BL 8-inch howitzer Mk VI – VIII - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BL_8-inch_howitzer_Mk_VI...

    The BL 8-inch howitzer Marks VI, VII and VIII (6, 7 and 8) were a series of British artillery siege howitzers on mobile carriages of a new design introduced in World War I. [ note 1 ] They were designed by Vickers in Britain and produced by all four British artillery manufacturers but mainly by Armstrong and one American company.

  5. Artillery battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artillery_battery

    In military organizations, an artillery battery is a unit or multiple systems of artillery, mortar systems, rocket artillery, multiple rocket launchers, surface-to-surface missiles, ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, etc., so grouped to facilitate better battlefield communication and command and control, as well as to provide dispersion for its constituent gunnery crews and their systems.

  6. 36th Field Artillery Regiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/36th_Field_Artillery_Regiment

    It was inactivated at Hampton, Virginia on 31 January 1968. The 4th Battalion, 36th Field Artillery, tracing its lineage from Battery D, 36th Field Artillery, was activated in the US Army Reserve on 1 June 1959 at Akron, Ohio, as an 8-inch howitzer battalion. It was inactivated at Akron, Ohio on 31 January 1968.

  7. 135th Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/135th_Siege_Battery,_Royal...

    The battery was equipped with four 8-inch howitzers. [5] [6] At this stage of the war the 8-inch howitzers in use (Marks I–V) were improvised from cut-down and bored-out barrels of 6-inch coast defence guns, with the recoil checked by enormous wooden wedges. [7] [8]

  8. M115 howitzer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M115_howitzer

    The T3 was standardized as the 8-inch howitzer M1 in 1940. Like the British 8-inch howitzer of the First World War (and most other large artillery), the M1 uses a Welin screw for its breech. The carriage was the same as used for the US 155 mm gun and was also adopted by the British for their BL 7.2-inch howitzer.

  9. 203 mm howitzer M1931 (B-4) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/203_mm_howitzer_M1931_(B-4)

    203 mm howitzer M1931 (B-4) (Russian: 203-мм гаубица обр. 1931 г. (Б-4), GRAU index: 52-G-625) was a 203 mm (8 inch) Soviet high-power heavy howitzer. During the Second World War, it was under the command of the Stavka's strategic reserve. It was nicknamed "Stalin's sledgehammer" by German soldiers.