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WW II German shell fragments
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09-24-2011 01:35 PM
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You have the same affliction I have. I always had a hard time crossing live fire ranges because I was always looking down. This was especially bad in the US because you don't touch anything forward of the safety line. Two inches or ten yards, it stays. In Canada
we clear it immediately. Overseas it was downright dangerous, in the middle east in the 70's there was all sorts of stuff dating back to WW2 and forward. Everything from helmets to webbing, weapons parts and frag.
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What you see pictured here is only a drop in the ocean compared to what I pulled out of the earth. It seems that I found everything else but a rifle, pistol, bayonet or machine gun. The only personal items amounted to a German
hobb-nail boot. I did find a US "pineapple" hand grenade after I stepped on it and it rolled under my foot. The area I seached in was a large stretch of woods between Bausendorf and Urzig on the Moselle River.
Research years later told me that elements of the 90th Inf Div came thru in early 1945. Talking with people from Bausendorf, they told me that American tanks advanced down the road thru the woods and 2 were knocked out by artillery fire. The Americans then retreated and shelled the town for a couple days. After the shelling, they advanced and took the town to find some wounded soldiers left behind. The areas where the shelling occured is where I searched. I could not believe the amount of shrapnel and unexploded ordnance in the ground. I found several German S-mines still in the ground at the spot as well. I think that was a standard tactic to have a pre-determined spot to deliver artillery fire and force the enemy to take cover in the woods only to find mines.
One of my buddies did not believe that I was finding all of this stuff and wanted to go along the next time. Needless to say, he was shocked. We uncovered something near the road that could only be described as an IED. It was one mine, place on top of 3 mines place on top of the largest artillery projectile I had un-buried. It was so large, it took both of us to pull it out of the hole.
Aside from everything else I found, one of the neatest finds were that of US .50 caliber machine gun casings. I found 3 of them total over a large area and each one was firmly planted base first in the ground with neck pointing up. That told me that they had been fired by an aircraft. I could only imagine that it was a P-51 or P-47. Only have one left tho : ).
One of the other spots I searched on the other side of Bausendorf was actually a small German ammo dump complete with defensive postitions. One of my German friends told me the GI's blew it up after capturing it. I believed it because there were un-fired 20 mm cannon rounds and mortar rounds EVERYWHERE! They littered the ground for a hundred yards in the woods. Those were easy pickings. I found several live 8 mm rounds in the fox holes and trenches, but still no weapons! Mike
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Lovely marking on the projectile. Looks like the 20mm was live until you wiggled it apart. That would have been nice to have live. The .50 case is Denver if you didn't know.
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Hi Jim,
I didn't wiggle the 2cm round apart. That is the way that I found it. Perhaps someone else? There were bunches more just like it. I kept the one in the best shape. The projectile is one of hundreds that I un-earthed and it was found seperately of the casing. I even found several of the small 2cm fuses seperate of the round just laying around. Mike
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I knew a man, a national German
, that was 16 years old at war's end. One of the stories he told me was of he and his friends going through the fields near his home(I forget where) and the mass of STUFF that was lying about. Everything. These boys took ammo and removed propellant and put it in a 45 gal drum until it was full. They then rolled it down into the stream and lit the upper end hole in the barrel. He said it whistled like a siren for a few seconds and then went off like a bomb. I wonder if that's what happened to the contents of these rounds? Something similar.
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The .50 case is Denver if you didn't know.
Jim,
Is there a difference in markings on .50 and .30 cases ? All my WWII .30 are marked "DEN" for Denver. I was under the impression that DM would have been Dominican.
Thanks,
Emri
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Originally Posted by
Emri
Jim,
Is there a difference in markings on .50 and .30 cases ? All my WWII .30 are marked "DEN" for Denver. I was under the impression that DM would have been Dominican.
Thanks,
Emri
Emri, I believe DM is for Des Moines Ordnance in Des Moines, Iowa. Mike