Ten Inventions That Inadvertently Transformed Warfare
Some of the most pivotal battlefield innovations throughout history began as peacetime inventions
- By Mark Strauss
- Smithsonian.com, September 19, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Locomotive: Justus Scheibert, an officer in the Royal Prussian Engineers, spent seven months with the Confederate Army observing military campaigns during the Civil War. “Railroads counted in both sides’ strategies,” he quickly concluded. “Trains delivered provisions until the final moments. Therefore the Confederacy spared nothing to rebuild tracks as fast as the enemy destroyed them.”
Although railroads had been occasionally used during the Crimean War (1853-1856), the Civil War was the first conflict where the locomotive demonstrated its pivotal role in rapidly deploying troops and material. Mules and horses could do the work, though far less efficiently; a contingent of 100,000 men would require 40,000 draft animals.
Civil War historians David and Jeanne Heidler write that, “Had the war broken out ten years before it did, the South’s chances of winning would have been markedly better because the inequality between its region’s railroads and those of the North would not have been as great.”
But, by the time war did break out, the North had laid more than 21,000 miles of railroad tracks—the South had only about a third of that amount.
Telegraph: The Civil War was the first conflict in which the telegraph played a major role. Private telegraph companies had been in operation since the 1840s—a network of more than 50,000 miles of telegraph wire connected cities and towns across the United States when war erupted.
Although some 90 percent of telegraph services were located in the North, the Confederates were also able to put the device to good use. Field commanders issued orders to rapidly concentrate forces to confront Union advances—a tactic that led to victory in the First Battle of Bull Run, in 1861.
Arguably the most revolutionary aspect of the device was how it transformed the relationship between the executive branch and the military. Before, important battlefield decisions were left to the discretion of field generals. Now, however, the president could fully exercise his prerogative as commander in chief.
“Lincoln used the telegraph to put starch in the spine of his often all too timid generals and to propel his leadership vision to the front,” writes historian Tom Wheeler, author of Mr. Lincoln’s T-Mails. “[He] applied its dots and dashes as an essential tool for winning the Civil War.”
Caterpillar tractor: During World War I, engineers sought to design a war machine robust enough to crush barbed wire and withstand enemy fire, yet agile enough to traverse the trench-filled terrain of no man’s land. The inspiration for this armored behemoth was the American tractor.
Or, more specifically, the caterpillar tractor invented in 1904 by Benjamin Holt. Since the 1880s, Holt’s company, based in Stockton, California, had manufactured massive, steam-powered grain harvesters. To allow the heavy machines to traverse the steep, muddy inclines of fertile river deltas, Holt instructed his mechanics to replace the drive wheels with “track shoes” made from wooden planks.
Later, Holt sought to sell his invention to government agencies in the United States and Europe as a reliable means for transporting artillery and supplies to the front lines during wartime.
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Comments (11)
Thanks!....This information VERY HEPLFUL ;) Please continue to post this. I APPRECIATE IT.
Posted by Rebecca Ruby-Smithison on March 12,2013 | 01:13 PM
They forgot duct tape! It was developed before WW2 to seal insulative batts around duct work. During the war it sealed off openings in tanks before being shipped on boats, seal ammo box lids, repaired tents, boots, clothing and anything else in need of a quick fix.
Posted by Bill Wilson on February 21,2013 | 10:06 AM
The mobile `phone has been used by the "insurgents", to detonate pre-set roadside bombs, (IEDs), both in Iraq and Afghanistan. The IRA also used them to some extent.
Posted by bill Khan on January 18,2012 | 10:29 AM
In the real war the Norden bombsight did not work well.
Posted by D BROWN on November 16,2010 | 02:44 AM
Aircraft were not invented for war fighting, yet they inadvertantly found their way into battle quickly.
Posted by john b on November 16,2010 | 05:30 PM
Seems to me the article would be better titled as "Ten Non-Military Inventions that Changed Modern Warfare."
The only one of anything close to military character in its origin was the bayonet, and it was first used by hunters.
As for why other inventions weren't included, in any short list you have to make a choice of what to leave out and what to include. That list doesn't claim to be final or exclusive. It's "Ten Inventions . . . " not "THE Ten Inventions . . ."
Posted by Jeb Raitt on October 28,2010 | 04:21 PM
Gentlemen, please! TNT also qualifies, but is better known to a broader public. And the title does limit the article to "ten" inventions that "inadvertently" changed modern warfare.
Posted by Shir-El on October 15,2010 | 05:22 PM
And how does the airplane/aircraft not make the list???
Posted by John on October 13,2010 | 01:53 PM
Good as far as it goes, and with the addition of Mr. Gubas' comments. But what about the Norden bombsight, nuclear fission, and the internal combustion engine?
Posted by Kenba on October 12,2010 | 07:46 AM
Excellent article! Very interesting and informative. Thanks.
TIY
Posted by Thomas I Young on October 9,2010 | 02:01 PM
Smokeless gun powder
optical observation tools and
REjection of red, blue and other uniforms as a result of both?
Posted by Larry Gubas on September 27,2010 | 01:07 AM