Garland grenade
The Garland grenade was a
Background
The Garland grenade was invented by
Mark I
The first version of the grenade was made from empty food tins that were filled with explosive, barbed wire and spent bullet cases.[2] This version was activated by manually lighting a fuse with a match. This was usually a two-man operation with the thrower holding the grenade behind his back with a match pressed against the fuse. An assistant would then rub a match box striker against the match, calling "ready" when the fuse was lit. The thrower would then hurl the grenade at the target. One user of the grenade during the Gallipoli campaign described them as "unreliable and dangerous". The Mark I grenade was the only grenade available to the British Empire troops at Gallipoli until May 1915.[2]
Mark II
The Mark II version of the Garland grenade was typically used in conjunction with the
References
- ^ "Lawrence of Arabia's lost hero scientist". BBC News. 4 December 2012. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
- ^ a b c d "Bimbashi Garland". Priaulx Library. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
- ISBN 978-1-85367-653-6.
- ^ Garland Grenade Mark II and Howitzers for Firing Same: Particulars of Construction and Use. Government Press. 1915.
- ^ "Garland trench mortar grenade : The Nek, Gallipoli". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 2 February 2021.