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Title
Great guns ready to take over the hills to their emplacements in Japanese siege-Port Arthur. Copyright 1905 by Underwood & Underwood
Contributor
[none noted]
Date Created and/or Issued
1905
Publication Information
Underwood & Underwood
Los Angeles: Occidental College Library, 2008
Contributing Institution
Occidental College Library
Collection
Occidental College Stereographs
Rights Information
Please contact the contributing institution for more information regarding the copyright status of this object.
Description
[transcribed text] You are beside the Russian railway between Dalny and Port Arthur, about four miles northeast of the town. These enormous steel mortars resting on wooden rollers have just been lifted be a derrick off flat-cars on the railway track behind you. From this point they are to be hauled by gangs of soldiers-three hundred tugging at once on stout cables (see No. 7591), and so moved nearly six miles farther. These monster howitzers were made over in Japan for coast defence; the soldiers call them the "Osaka babies." Their use in the bombardment of the Russian forts and war-ships is regarded as one of the most remarkable feats in all military history. After being hauled into place they were mounted on foundations of solid concrete eight feet deep and fed with shells weighing 500 lbs. apiece. The shells were heavily charged with Shimose powder, a new contact explosive of terrific power invented by a Japanese. By the almost phenomenal accuracy of their fire (there were twenty of these that came to the help of the two or three hundred smaller guns), they succeeded in wrecking every one of the Russian battleships hidden in the harbor and in so battering the Russian forts that General Stoessel could by no possibility hold out against them. The most extraordinary fact about the whole thing is that these guns fired from down behind a screen of two ranges of hills, hidden entirely from the desperate Russians, the battery officers getting instructions as to direction and range of fire by telephone from distant observers on Takushan and 203 Metre Hill! (See No. 7587 for gun-loading; 7559-7560 for the firing, a shell actually visible in its flight). From Notes of Travel, No. 20, copyright, 1905, by Underwood & Underwood. Written in: English, French, German , Spanish, and Russian Great guns ready to move into place in Japanese lines-Port Arthur.
Several large artillery are readied for transport by Japanese soldiers to the battlefront in Port Arthur. Soldiers and guns sit at edge of railroad tracks.
This card is one of about 300 stereographs printed by Underwood & Underwood about the Russo-Japanese War. A 100 card selection was also offered as a boxed set. "Stereographs of the Russo-Japanese War are, in many respects, the most action-packed and successful war views ever published." (Darrah, The World of Stereographs, 187)
The Klamm Collection has a partial set of stereographs, including 33 multicolor lithoprint stereo views, from the Russo-Japanese War series.
Type
image
Format
image/jpeg
Extent
18 X 9 cm.
Identifier
7590
Sckla0075
http://callimachus.org/cdm/ref/collection/p131301coll1/id/98
Language
English
Subject
Russo-Japanese War, 1904-1905
Port Arthur (China)
Artillery (Weaponry)
Arms & armament
War
War, cannons, soldiers, artillery, russo-japanese war
Place
New York, London, Toronto-Canada, Ottawa-Kansas, Arlington NJ, Westwood NJ, Washington D.C.
Source
Occidental College Library.
Relation
Special Collections. Charles D. Klamm Stereograph Collection. (sckla)

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