Pershing & Super Pershing Tanks
Pershing & Super Pershing Tanks
Just to keep the facts straight, The M26 or T26E3’s, Pershing Tanks, there were 310 shipped to Europe, of which 200 were issued to units. Of these only 20 saw action. Now the Super Pershing or T15E4-1, only 2 of these monsters saw action, as some people get the two types confused! In PG we currently only have the more common one, the M26 in Iron Curtain and hopefully the Rhine might included both types. Below are some interest combat reports:
The Demise of 3AD Pershing Named "Fireball" By Dan Fong, Web Staff In early 1945 a mission was formed, code named Zebra, to facilitate the introduction of new equipment in the European Theater of Operations. Among the equipment being introduced was the T-26E3 Pershing 90mm heavy tank. The first shipment of Pershings consisted of 20 vehicles. This group of 20 was given to the First Army and was divided evenly between 3rd Armored Division and 9th Armored Division (10 each).
Out of this group of 20 Pershings, 3 were knocked out by enemy action. 2 of those knocked out belonged to the 3rd Armored. The following is a brief account of what happened to one of the two assigned to the 3rd Armored.
FIREBALL was the nickname of T-26E3 serial number 38, registration number 30119848 and was assigned to Company F, 1st Battalion, 33rd Armored Regiment, Taskforce Welborn, Combat Command B. FIREBALL was the first Pershing to be knocked out. On the night of 26Feb45 at Elsdorf, Germany, FIREBALL was positioned to cover a roadblock and was backlit by a burning coal pile that silhouetted the turret to the enemy. FIREBALL was engaged and hit 3 times with 88mm AP from 100 yards range by a German Tiger 1 from Heavy Tank Company "Hummel."
The first round hit the turret coax machinegun aperture and, penetrating into the turret, killed the Loader and Gunner.
The second round hit the muzzle brake and set off the Pershings's chambered round.
The third round hit the upper right corner of the turret, glancing off and then hitting the tank commander's hatch cover. FIREBALL did not burn and after replacing the 90mm gun barrel and welding up the penetration at the coax machinegun aperture, was ready to return to the fight by 7Mar45. The Tiger 1 that did the shooting was abandoned by it's crew after getting hung up in a pile of rubble as it backed away after it's third shot. Later the loader of this Tiger 1 was captured and he confirmed that it was his tank that knocked out FIREBALL. Regarding the one Pershing lost by the 9AD, it was knocked out on 1Mar45 when hit by large caliber (150mm) German artillery fire during the final drive on the town of Remagen, Germany, on the Rhine River. The Pershing was actually hit twice. The first round started a fire outside the tank and the crew dismounted to put it out when a second artillery round hit killing some of the crew. Amazingly, the damaged Pershing was repaired and returned to service.
The Demise of 3AD Pershing Tank #25 By Dan Fong, Web Staff In early 1945 a mission was formed, code named Zebra, to facilitate the introduction of new equipment in the European Theater of Operations. Among the equipment being introduced was the T-26E3 Pershing 90mm heavy tank. The first shipment of Pershings consisted of 20 vehicles. This group of 20 was given to the First Army and was divided evenly between 3rd Armored Division and 9th Armored Division (10 each).
Out of this group of 20 Pershings, 3 were knocked out by enemy action. 2 of those knocked out belonged to the 3rd Armored. The following is a brief account of what happened to the one of the two assigned to the 3rd Armored. 3rd Armored T-26E3 Pershing, serial number 25, registration number 30119835, was assigned to Company H, 3rd Battalion, 33rd Armored Regiment, Taskforce Lovelady, Combat Command B. Pershing number 25 was knocked out on 6Mar45 from the range of 300 yards by a self-propelled German Nashorn tank destroyer during the fighting in the town of Niehl, Germany north of Cologne. The Nashorn hit Pershing number 25 with its 88mm gun on the lower left front. The armor-piercing round penetrated the armor and took a path between the driver's legs and under the turret where it started a fire. The whole crew was able to bail out before the fire set off the ammo stowed under the turret. Pershing number 25 suffered a completely burned out turret as a result and it was determined that it would take too long to repair. So the tank was cannibalized for parts and became the only total Pershing loss in WWII of the original shipment of 20 tanks.
DUEL AT DESSAU on April 21, 1945 A Spearhead One-on-One Tank Victory by Web Staff Only three days before the 3rd Armored Division's final combat action of WWII, a Super Pershing of the 33rd Armored Regiment met and defeated the most powerful and most heavily armored German tank of the war - the legendary 77-ton King Tiger, also known as the Tiger II or Tiger Royal. It would be the first and only meeting between a King Tiger and the Super Pershing, a modified standard M26 Pershing weighing 7 tons heavier at 53 tons - an almost "secret" tank that, to this day, remains largely an enigma to military historians.
Only two Super Pershings were ever built, and the 3AD had the only one in the European Theater - an experimental version with its remarkably long barrel. Arriving very late in the war (March, 1945), it was field tested and modified inside Germany and subsequently saw about ten days of actual combat action, beginning several days after the Battle of Paderborn and ending with the Battle of Dessau near the Elbe River.
The Super Pershing (aka T26E4-1) was equipped with a new long-barreled T15E1 90mm gun that was designed to out-perform the German high-velocity 88mm on the King Tiger. In testing, this new U.S. gun had successfully penetrated 8.5 inches of armor at 1,000 yards at 30 degrees. Even more remarkable, it had penetrated 13 inches of armor at 100 yards. The special 90mm ammunition had produced a muzzle velocity of 3,850 feet per second, or some 600 feet per second faster than the 88mm of the King Tiger. The new 90mm round also proved to have superior range and accuracy over the previous version.
Army ordnance technicians (in the U.S. and Europe) had been anxious about getting the new tank into combat, hoping to match it against a King Tiger. But by April, 1945, German armor west of Berlin had dramatically thinned out, not to mention an extreme shortage of fuel, and the odds of spotting the monster German tank were slim. But in Dessau on April 21, "luck" would befall the Super Pershing crew commanded by SSgt Joe Maduri, a veteran 3AD tanker in his tenth straight month of combat. The 3AD had begun a four-pronged attack on the city, which was heavily defended. Division armor were finally able to enter the city slowly after numerous concrete tank barriers were destroyed. With 3AD tanks fanning out, and 36th Infantry riflemen following, the Super Pershing reached an intersection and began to round a corner to its right. Unknown to its crew, a King Tiger had apparently been waiting in ambush at a distance of two blocks or roughly 600 yards away, and in the same direction that the Americans were turning into. At this distance, easily within its capability, the Tiger fired at the Super Pershing. But its infamous high-velocity 88mm shell, of the type that had destroyed so many American tanks and vehicles during the war, went high and was not even close. Gunner Cpl John "Jack" Irwin, only 18 years old, responded almost instantly with a round that struck the Tiger's huge angled glasis, or front plate. But the shot, a non-armor-piercing high explosive (HE) shell, had no effect. Ricocheting off the armor, it shot skyward and exploded harmlessly. The Super Pershing had been loaded with an HE only because Irwin had been expecting urban targets, such as buildings, personnel, and light anti-tank guns. "AP!", he shouted to his loader "Pete," which meant an armor-piercing shell would be next.
Maduri and crew then felt a concussion or thud on the turret. It was never known if this shot came from the Tiger, or from some other anti-tank weapon. In any case, no serious damage was done - probably a lucky glancing impact. In the next instant, Irwin aimed and fired a second time, just as the royal monster was moving forward and raising up over a pile of rubble. The 90mm AP round penetrated the Tiger's underbelly, apparently striking the ammo well and resulting in a tremendous explosion that blew its turret loose. With near certainty, the entire crew was killed. But there was no time to examine their "trophy." A battle was raging, and the Super Pershing continued down the street, passing the lifeless and burning King Tiger. Tough fighting still lay ahead, as German bazooka, Panzerfaust, and machine-gun fire came from windows and doorways.
The encounter with the King Tiger had been "short and sweet," lasting less than twenty seconds. It may not have been the titanic "slug fest" that could have occurred on an open field, but it was an overwhelming victory for the quick-reacting Super Pershing crew. The battle for Dessau would end completely on the following day, but not without the Super Pershing destroying another German heavy tank (believed to be a 50-ton Panther Mark V) with two shots. The first disabling its drive sprocket, and the second round completely penetrating the tank's side armor. That apparently set off an internal blast, again probably from stored ammo. And, still in Dessau, that was followed by Maduri and crew forcing the commander of a German medium tank to surrender without firing a shot. For the German crew, out of ammo for their main gun, the intimidating "look" of that long-barrel 90mm gun that must have destroyed any remaining will to fight or flee. [Note: Sources include the book Spearhead in the West (1946 edition); the book Death Traps by Belton Cooper; and the book Another River, Another Town and personal writings by John P. Irwin.]
More background on the "Super Pershing" (T26E4-1)
In mid-March, 1945, fresh from gunnery trials in the United States, a single Pershing T26E4-1 arrived at the Maintenance Battalion of the 3rd Armored Division inside Germany. In his book Death Traps (see feature story in ths same website section) Belton Cooper writes, "Having already lost several of the new [Pershing] M26's [aka T26] to high-velocity German anti-tank guns, we knew that its armor was still inferior to that of the Mark VI Tiger."
Cooper writes, "Anyone standing behind an M4 Sherman could see the projectile go out and curve down slightly as it sped toward the target. This new high-velocity gun was entirely different. When we fired the first round, we could barely see the projectile. It appeared to rise slightly as it struck the target. This was an optical illusion, but the effect was awesome. When it hit the target (a knocked out German tank-destroyer/assault gun), sparks shot about sixty feet into the air, as though a giant grinding wheel had hit a piece of metal."
Cooper described how, despite the 3AD maintenance crew painstakingly and very creatively adding seven tons of weight in additional armor to the Super Pershing, its highest speed had only been dropped by about five miles an hour. Its 550-horsepower engine had proven itself. Cooper felt that the tank's maneuverability and firepower had it marked for great success in combat. "We realized that we had a weapon," Cooper writes, "that could blast the hell out of even the most powerful German Mark VI Tiger."
But, finally, on April 4, 1945, between the Weser River and Northheim, the Super Pershing was to fire its gun in anger. Cooper writes, "Some of the German units that had fallen back from the bridgehead set up a few isolated strong points along our route. One such position on a wooded hill ... opened fire as the column passed. The Super M26, in the forward part of the column, immediately swung its turret to the right and fired an armor-piercing shot toward an object on the forward slope of a wooded hill about fifteen hundred yards away [over three-quarters of a mile]. A blinding flash of sparks accompanied a tremendous explosion as debris shot fifty feet into the air ... The unknown object was a tank or self-propelled gun; had it been a half-track or other vehicle, the flash would not have been as large ... The rest of the column let go with a deluge of tank and automatic weapons fire, and the Germans soon broke off the action ... we didn't know what the Super M26 hit ... no one was anxious to go over and check it out." Some days after the above event, the Super M26 was transferred to a new crew with the 33rd Armored Regiment, where more of it's great potential would be realized, if only weeks before WWII would end.
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