How the Maxim Machine gun changed the face of warfare
In
1881 the American inventor, Harim maxim, visited the Paris Electrical
Exhibition. While he was at the exhibition he met a man who told him: "If
you wanted to make a lot of money, invent something that will enable these Europeans
to cut each other's throats with greater facility."
Maxim moved
to London and over the next few years worked on producing an effective
machine-gun. In 1885 he demonstrated the world's first automatic portable
machine-gun to the British Army.
Maxim used the energy of each bullet's recoil force to eject the spent
cartridge and insert the next bullet. The Maxim Machine-Gun would therefore
fire until the entire belt of bullets was used up. Trials showed that the
machine-gun could fire 500 rounds per minute and therefore had the firepower of
about 100 rifles.
Maxim gun |
The
gun since became associated with colonial expeditions in Africa. In addition to its devastating effects, it
had a significant physcological impact which often played a much greater role
in defeating native attackers than its bullets.
It was first used by Britain’s Colonial forces in the 1893-94 Matabele
War in Rhodesia. During the Battle of
the Shangani, 700 soldiers fought off 5,000 native warriors with just 4 maxim
guns. The extreme lethality against grouped infantry was applied to its full
extent, as the hail of maxim rounds made charging tactics obsolete. Whenever natives were lured into pitched
battle on open terrain, the result was determined by whichever side had the
machine gun, inevitably the conquerors.
It’s impact in colonial conflicts was enshrined by the words of Hillarie
Belloc in his poem ‘The Modern Traveller’ – ‘Whatever happens, we have got the
Maxim gun, and they have not’. Sadly this line reflects the course of many
thousands of battles, as Maxim totting Europeans swiftly conquered the continent
of Africa during the 19th century.
British unit with a Maxim gun in Uganda |
Use of
Maxims however, did not always guarantee victory against lighter armed foes as
the British discovered in the Boer war.
Its effectivity is limited to open ground, but was susceptible to guerrilla
tactics. The military observer, Bloch,
noted the effectiveness of such weaponry and how it made the attacking
principle of Clausewitz redundant, article here. With
such knowledge, he accurately predicted the nature of the First world war in
his 1898 work: ‘Technical, Economic and Political Aspects of the Coming War’. Sadly,
the European military chiefs did not heed Bloch’s wisdom, despite its
confirmation during the Russo-Japanese War, and still adhered to the outdated
ideas of Clausewitz at the onset of the First World war. Such limited thinking was the cause for the disproportionate
causalities in the first months of the conflict.
French machine gun crew, WWI |
The
prevalence of machine guns of greater capacities than maxim’s original progeny helped
to facilitate the stalemate of World War One, in which the weapons proved ideal
for the defence of trenches, especially in fortified concrete pillboxes. Such technology made warfare an act that
favoured the defender, and made the attacker the victim of massive casualties
as they had no other way but to approach the machine guns head on through
suffocating mud and cruel barbed wire.
Anzac troops advance across no mans land |
Comments
Post a Comment