The Biggest Weapon Ever Built: Hitler’s Secret Gun — Schwerer Gustav D

5 June 1942, Sevastopol, the Soviet Union. An explosion arrives without warning. About   sixteen kilometres behind the front,  a massive railway gun has just fired,   using a 32-metre barrel to launch a seven-tonne  shell at a speed of roughly 720 metres per second.   Operated by a crew of around 500 men, the weapon  can strike its target located 25 km away in   just 35 seconds.

At Sevastopol, one of the most  heavily fortified positions in the Soviet Union,   the shell penetrates metres of reinforced concrete  before detonating, destroying gun emplacements and   setting the position ablaze. At the firing site,  the crew begins cleaning and cooling the barrel:   an hour-long process before the next  shot, which can destroy the strongest   fortifications in the world. The name of  this monstrous gun is Schwerer Gustav.

The origins of Schwerer Gustav or Heavy Gustav,  lie in a problem that occupied German military   planners for much of the early 1930s. Along  its eastern border, France had constructed   the Maginot Line which was a system of  steel-reinforced concrete fortifications,   underground tunnels, retractable artillery  turrets, and interconnected strongpoints   that was widely regarded as impenetrable to  any existing weapon of that time.

The Line’s   deepest forts were buried under tens of metres of  reinforced concrete, their gun turrets encased in   steel armour of a thickness that rendered them  immune to conventional bombardment. In 1934,   the German Army High Command secretly commissioned  the Krupp firm of Essen to design a gun capable of   destroying these fortifications from beyond  the range of French counter-battery fire.

The requirements were precise and almost  impossibly demanding: the weapon had to be   able to punch through seven metres of reinforced  concrete or one full metre of steel armour plate.  Krupp’s engineer, Erich Müller, performed the  calculations and arrived at specifications that   strained the limits of industrial possibility.

The  task would require a calibre of approximately 800   millimetres and a barrel at least thirty metres in  length, and a projectile with a weight of around   seven tonnes. A weapon matching these requirements  would weigh over 1,000 tonnes when assembled,   far exceeding the load capacity of any road  bridge or conventional transport system.   The only possible means of moving it would  be on specially reinforced double railway   tracks.

In March 1936, Adolf Hitler visited the  Krupp factory in Essen and asked Gustav Krupp,   the company’s senior director, what would be  needed to breach the Maginot Line. Krupp was able   to answer in detail. Hitler approved the project  and construction was authorised in early 1937.  Construction began at Krupp’s facilities in  mid-1937, but forging the massive, complex   barrel proved enormously difficult, and there were  serious delays throughout the development process.

The Second World War began on 1 September  1939 when Nazi Germany invaded Poland.   By late that year, a test model had been completed  and sent to the Hillersleben proving ground near   the city of Magdeburg, where an armour-piercing  shell successfully penetrated the required seven   metres of concrete and one metre of steel plate.

It was clear, however, that the gun would not meet   Hitler’s March 1940 deadline. Acceptance trials  for the completed weapon were eventually conducted   in early 1941 at the Rügenwalde proving ground,  now Darłowo in Poland, with Hitler in attendance.   Alfried Krupp, the son of Gustav and by then one  of the most important figures of the company,   personally hosted the occasion.

Hitler, visibly  impressed, allegedly referred to the weapon as   ‘meine stählerne Faust’ – my steel fist.  In keeping with Krupp company tradition,   no payment was requested for the first gun. The  second, which would cost 7 million Reichsmarks,   was ordered alongside it. The gun was named  Schwerer Gustav after the senior director of   the firm, Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach.

The other gun of the same type was named Dora,   after the wife of Erich Müller, the head of  the Krupp design bureau. Given the complexity   and high cost of manufacturing parts  for these cannons, it remains a fact   that these two cannons were likely never  actually used in combat at the same time.  The physical dimensions of the completed weapon  were unlike anything in the history of artillery.

Fully assembled, Schwerer Gustav measured 47.3  metres in length and stood 11.6 metres tall.   It sat on a specially designed carriage running  on two parallel railway tracks, with a total of   eighty wheels distributing its weight across the  rails. The barrel alone was 32.5 metres long. The   gun could fire a 4,800-kilogram high-explosive  shell to a maximum range of 47 kilometres,   or a 7,100-kilogram armour-piercing shell  to a range of 38 kilometres.

The rate of   fire was approximately one round every thirty to  forty-five minutes under sustained operations,   limited by the need to swab and cool the barrel  after each discharge. Loading was a complex and   complicated process: shells were delivered by  rail to the rear of the gun, hoisted by cranes   to the firing deck, and loaded by hydraulic ram.

Operating the gun at full capacity required a   crew of 500 men and weeks of preparatory work  including thousands of workers and soldiers.  There was one fundamental irony at the heart of  the weapon’s existence. Schwerer Gustav had been   designed specifically to destroy the Maginot Line,  but when the Battle of France began in May 1940,   the gun was not ready.

Nor, as it turned out, was  it needed – rather than attacking the Maginot Line   directly, German armoured columns swept through  the Ardennes, bypassed the entire fortification   system, and drove deep into France. The Maginot  Line’s garrisons were cut off and eventually   surrendered without the fortifications having been  seriously attacked. France fell in June 1940 and   the weapon that had consumed years of industrial  effort and nearly incalculable resources had been   rendered irrelevant before firing a single shot.

Many senior officers in the Wehrmacht, the German   armed forces, regarded it as an expensive folly  and argued that the resources could have been   better spent elsewhere. Hitler overruled them and  insisted that development continue. The gun was,   in some way, his personal project, and he was  determined that a use would be found for it. After Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union on 22  June 1941, the opportunity arose for the Schwerer   Gustav as well.

Sevastopol, the great naval  fortress on the Crimean Peninsula and the home   port of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet, was one of  the most formidable defensive positions in the   world. German and Romanian forces reached Crimea  in autumn 1941 and overran most of the peninsula,   but Sevastopol held. Its garrison repelled  repeated assaults through the winter of 1941   and into 1942 with extraordinary tenacity.

The  city’s fortifications were layered, extensive,   and deep and attacking it required the most  powerful siege artillery Germany possessed.   On 8 January 1942, Heavy Artillery Unit 672 was  formally established with 1,420 men under the   command of Robert Böhm, with the specific purpose  of deploying Schwerer Gustav against Sevastopol.  In February 1942, the unit began the long journey  south to Crimea.

The train transporting the gun   consisted of twenty-five cars and stretched 1,5  kilometres in total length. The assembly of the   weapon began in early May 1942. By 5 June, after  five weeks of preparation involving thousands of   men, Schwerer Gustav was ready to fire. The gun’s  combat record at Sevastopol was concentrated   and technically remarkable, though strategically  modest.

On 5 June, it fired eight armour-piercing   shells at Soviet coastal gun batteries at a  range of 25 kilometres, and a further six at Fort   Stalin. Seven shells followed at Fort Molotov on  the next day. The most extraordinary moment came   when nine shells were directed at a target known  as White Cliff, an underground Soviet ammunition   depot buried approximately thirty metres below  the surface of the water.

It was the ninth shell   that found it: an armour-piercing round that  penetrated through rock and seawater before   detonating inside the depot, producing  an explosion that shook the entire bay,   destroyed the Soviet supply infrastructure  to the northern port fortifications,   and sent up a column of debris and smoke  visible from the German lines kilometres away. 

By the time the siege ended on 4 July 1942 and the  city fell, Schwerer Gustav had fired 47 rounds in   total. It had worn out its original barrel,  which had already been used for approximately   250 test rounds during development. The spent  barrel was shipped back to the Krupp factory   in Essen for relining, and a spare was fitted.

The gun was then dismantled and moved north,   to the Leningrad front, where a major assault  on the city was being planned. It was positioned   approximately thirty kilometres from Leningrad,  near the railway station of Taytsy near the town   Gatchina, and declared fully operational.  The planned offensive was then cancelled,   leaving Schwerer Gustav assembled and ready near a  city it would never fire upon.

It spent the winter   of 1942 and into 1943 in the north before being  returned to Germany for refurbishment. The second   gun – Dora, had meanwhile been transported  to Stalingrad in August 1942, arriving at   an emplacement fifteen kilometres west of the  city and declared ready to fire on 13 September. Sources differ regarding its operational  deployment, and according to some, it was   not used during the fighting, because before  it could engage in the battle, the threat of   Soviet encirclement, forced a hasty withdrawal.  According to this theory the Dora was loaded   back onto its rail transporter and taken west  without having fired a single round in combat.   Its entire operational career lasted  less than a month and produced nothing.

Schwerer Gustav was refurbished and later  considered for deployment against the Warsaw   Uprising of 1944, but the uprising was crushed  by other means before the gun could be brought   to readiness. It played no role in that operation,  though its presence in Germany during this period   led some later sources to confuse it with the  heavy siege mortars, Karl-Gerät weapons of the   600-millimetre class, that were actually used  against the city.

By early 1945, with forces   of Western Allies advancing from the west and  Soviet armies closing from the east, the weapon   had become a liability. Too large to conceal, too  slow to move, and impossible to protect from air   attack during assembly, it could not be defended  and could not be hidden. On 14 April 1945, one day   before American troops arrived, German personnel  destroyed the gun with explosives to prevent its   capture.

Its ruins were discovered on 22 April  1945 by American soldiers in a forest fifteen   kilometres north of Auerbach in eastern Germany,  close to today’s border with Czech Republic.   In the summer of 1945, Soviet specialists were  brought to examine the wreckage. In the autumn,   the remains were transferred to Merseburg,  where the Soviets were collecting captured   German military material for study.

The second  Schwerer Gustav or Dora met a similar end:   it was moved to Grafenwöhr, a town in eastern  Bavaria and destroyed there on 19 April 1945.   Its debris was discovered separately by American   troops and eventually scrapped in the 1950s. Schwerer Gustav was, by any technical measure,   the largest rifled weapon ever built and the  heaviest mobile artillery piece in the history   of warfare. It was also a strategic failure  measured against the resources it consumed.

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