WW1 weapons

  • The First Machine Gun

    The First Machine Gun
    In 1884 Hiram Maxim invented the first automatic machine gun. It was said to be able to fire up to 600 rounds per minute and could take the place of around 80 rifles. It's bullets were fed on a belt which allowed it to hold many rounds of ammunition. The barrel had a water cooled barrel which was at times ineffective. Another bad thing about this weapon is that the gun itself weighed around 160 pounds and still required a stand and ammunition. This meant that it would need 3 or 4 men to operate.
  • Zeppelins

    Zeppelins
    Zeppelins were first made in 1900 by Germany to be passenger ships but once the war started in 1914 they started using them to drop bombs on Britain. At the time Britain had no way of defending themselves from these huge ships except to try to get out of the way of the bombs being dropped.
  • Pre WW1 Weapons

    Pre WW1 Weapons
    Before the first World War began the top of the line rifles that were used were repeating, bolt action rifles. There were also carbines with were mainly used by the cavalry units. At this point there weren't any handheld fully automatic machine guns.
  • WW1 Begins

    At the beginning of World War 1 the British issued a Lee-Enfield bolt action rifle. It was fed by a magazine which could hold 10 bullets and could be fired at a rate of 15 shots per minute in the hands of a trained soldier which made it an effective weapon in trenches. The Germans however were issued a Mauser Gewehr 98, this also had a bolt style action but was not magazine fed and with a longer barred it did not fit well in the trenches.
  • British Decline Machine Gun Offer

    Once the war started Hiram Maxim first offered his machine gun design to the British but they said they didn't see how this weapon would help them. Once the war started the German's came up with their own machine gun design almost exactly like Maxim's and started mass producing it for their own use in the war. After seeing how effective the machine gun was the British later developed a machine gun of their own called the Vickers machine gun.
  • The Unseen

    The Unseen
    In WW1 the Germans gained a huge advantage by creating U-boats which were a type of submarine. Up until this time submarines had not been used and this new technology hindered the British's powerful navy because they had no way of defending themselves from the U-boats or no good way of detecting them.
  • The First Gas Attack

    The First Gas Attack
    In the spring of 1915 Fritz Habor a German scientist was pushing to place 5,730 gas cylinders within a 4 mile area near the Allied trenches. Once the wind changed to the right direction blowing toward the enemy trenches the were able to release the gas as a weapon for the first time in history. Before this day in 1915 many people didn't believe that using the gas as a weapon would work but on the first try more than 1,100 enemy soldiers were killed marking the start of chemical warfare.
  • Barbed Wire

    Barbed Wire
    Barbed wire was first invented originally invented in America to aid ranchers with their cattle became a very helpful tool in the first world war. Both sides used the wire to slow down attackers because the barbs would catch on clothing and equipment and slow attackers down to make them easier to shoot.
  • Artillery

    Artillery
    Artillery used in world war 1 caused the death of many soldiers on both sides. Artillery cannons such as the British Howitzer Mark 1 could two 290lb shells a minute and hit targets that were miles away. The Germans however had a much bigger cannon called the Paris Gun. It had a 118 foot long barrel and could hit targets up to 74 miles away. This is a picture of the Paris Gun.
  • The First Tanks

    The First Tanks
    Tanks weren't made until the first world war was well under way in 1916. the first tank was produced by the British and was first deployed on the Somme battlefield. These tanks greatly helped the British but they also had many problems that needed improvement.
  • Work Cited continued

    Sarah, Everts. "When Chemicals Became Weapons of War." chemicalweapons.cenmag.org/. Accessed 27 Jan 2017
  • Work Cited

    Ronan, Abayawickrema. "A history of World War One in 10 deadly

    weapons."

    Independant.IE, 5 Nov 2014,
    http://www.independent.ie/life/world-war-1/a-history-
    of-world-war-one-in-10-deadly-weapons-30249206.html.
    Accessed 27 Jan 2017
    Historynet staff. "Weapons of World War 1." Historynet.com, 25 Jul
    2014,
    http://www.historynet.com/weapons-of-world-war-i.htm.
    Accessed 27 Jan 2017.