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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Member ![]() Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Dublin
Posts: 44
![]() | Honey tanks What was a Honey tank? Where can I find a picture of one? Belville
__________________ "Let those who come after see to it that their names be not forgotten" Irish war memorials |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Coleraine Co. Londonderry NI
Posts: 295
![]() | In "Brazen Chariots" the author describes how the US Stewart M3 tank was given that nickname. It was accredited to the first British driver who stepped out of the tank exclaiming "She's a honey!" Try this site: http://www.trackpads.net/tanks/sosfindlay/usm5s.htm |
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| | #4 (permalink) | |
| Very Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Lancashire, UK
Posts: 1,057
![]() ![]() | look here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M5_Stuart Quote:
I thought the name came from service in the Western Desert and was related to its easy to live with nature (they had auto boxes??) and its superb reliability. Kev | |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Member ![]() Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Dublin
Posts: 44
![]() | Many thanks, These links have given full information and photographs. I am researching a man who was killed while commanding a troop of Honey tanks on reconnaissance in Germany in April, 1945. Belville
__________________ "Let those who come after see to it that their names be not forgotten" Irish war memorials |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 168
![]() | A friend of my father's told me he'd been in one of these knocked out by a Tiger - it shot the engine right out of the tank. He ran the fastest 1/4 mile of his life to get back to safety, with alleged Tiger in pursuit. Amazingly, no crewman was injured. By the time he told me the story it was more than 20 years later, and he was a chubby little lecturer, so it made an incongruous tale - but I had no doubt he was describing a true incident. Regards, MikB |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Very Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Newark, NJ, and Christchurch, NZ
Posts: 2,443
![]() | The M5 version had fewer machine-guns than the M3, but fewer rivets. The rivets had a cute trick in battle of being knocked out by shells and flying around the inside of the tank, smacking crewmembers, with grave results. A speedy machine, but its 37mm gun was inferior to German and Italian weapons. On the other hand, the US Marines won the Battle of the Tenaru-Ilu-Alligator Creek at Guadalcanal when their five M3 Stuart tanks charged the Japanese defenders, who lacked anti-tank weapons, crushing the Japanese attack force...literally. A good reconnaissance machine, speedy, mobile, it was not a main battle tank.
__________________ "My intensity is intense." -- Roger Clemens "We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender." -- Winston Churchill. "I am not a hero. The heroes are all dead. I am a survivor." -- Sgt. William Guarnere, Easy Company, 506th Parachute Regiment, 101st Airborne Division. Check out my little contributions to World War II history at my web pages: World War II Plus 55 or http://davidhlippman.wildbillguarnere.com |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| WW2 Veteran ![]() Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: London, England
Posts: 684
![]() ![]() | Hi all In March 1945 I joined the 4th Queen's Own Hussars, then in the line in Italy. I had spent the previous three months training on Sherman MK IVs and had always been happy to have a bit of armour between me and the outside world. When I was eventually shown my new tank I was horrified to find it was a "Honey" and, as the turret had been taken off, there was no protection whatsoever from enemy fire. If you want to read the rest of the story, have a look at: BBC - WW2 People's War - The Day I Should Have Died: 4th Queen's Own Hussars in Italy Cheers Ron |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Top Moose ![]() Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Under the stairs
Posts: 8,595
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Good story Ron, thanks. It's all well and good us younger ones looking at photos of these tanks and examples in Museums but it's the men like you that had to fight and sometimes die in them. Cheers. |
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