10.
John Dahlgren served in the U.S. Navy for nearly 35 years, sometimes in a sea-keeping capacity but mostly developing large naval artillery. To-day, his name, when recognised by students of naval ordnance, is associated with teh Dahlgren or ‘soda bottle shaped’ gun of 9 to 11 inch calibre. He designed, developed and lived to see his guns installed aboard warships and used to considerable effect, especially in the American Civil War. However, a nearly indistinguishable external design of gun was developed for the Army by T. J. Rodman, an officer now even less known than Dahlgren and whose researches and contributions are virtually forgotten. This paper and that in Ref. [1] attempt to appreciate (along with other technical questions of the period) the different ways pursued by these men towards the final development of the ‘soda bottle shaped’ gun, though it is a matter still not entirely understood.
Both names are totally omitted from several ‘classic’ books on artillery and this is a grave misfortune. Besides trying to throw factual light on the Dahlgren-Rodman controversy and the priority issue (though not one pursued with acrimony by the men themselves at the time), the paper describes Admiral Dahlgren's general career, the books he wrote, the technical problems he attacked and the problematic ordnance discussions of his day, to which he gave his life.
The work of Dahlgren and Rodman, in particular, saw the elevation of American gun design from the level of mere copying (of early Columbiads in the first decades of the century) to that which compelled attention from, and study by, the super-powers of the day, Great Britain, France and Russia. 相似文献