British Inventions - Military

Military

  • The tank - Developed and first used in combat by the British during World War I as a means to break the deadlock of trench warfare.
  • Fighter aircraft - The Vickers F.B.5 Gunbus of 1914 was the first of its kind.
  • Congreve rocket - William Congreve
  • High explosive squash head - Sir Charles Dennistoun Burney
  • Shrapnel shell - Henry Shrapnel
  • Harrier Jump Jet
  • Bullpup firearm configuration - Thorneycroft carbine
  • Puckle Gun - James Puckle
  • The side by side Boxlock action, AKA The double barreled shotgun - Anson and Deeley
  • Dreadnought Battleship
  • Bailey Bridge - Donald Bailey
  • Chobham armour
  • Livens Projector - William Howard Livens
  • H2S radar (airborne radar to aid the bomb targeting) - Alan Blumlein
  • Bouncing bomb - Barnes Wallis
  • Safety fuse - William Bickford
  • Fairbairn-Sykes Fighting Knife - William Ewart Fairbairn and Eric A. Sykes
  • Armstrong Gun - Sir William Armstrong
  • Depth charge
  • Stun grenades - Invented by the SAS in the 60s.
  • Smokeless propellant to replace gunpowder with the use of Cordite - Frederick Abel
  • Torpedo - Robert Whitehead
  • The Whitworth rifle, considered the first sniper rifle. During the American Civil War the Whitworth rifle had been known to kill at ranges of about 800 yards - Sir Joseph Whitworth
  • The world's first practical underwater active sound detection apparatus, the ASDIC Active Sonar - Developed by Canadian physicist Robert William Boyle and English physicist Albert Beaumont Wood
  • The first self-powered machine gun Maxim gun - Sir Hiram Maxim, Although the Inventor is American, the Maxim gun was financed by Albert Vickers of Vickers Limited company and produced in Hatton Garden London
  • Steam catapult-Commander Colin C. Mitchell RNVR

Read more about this topic:  British Inventions

Famous quotes containing the word military:

    The military mind is indeed a menace. Old-fashioned futurity that sees only men fighting and dying in smoke and fire; hears nothing more civilized than a cannonade; scents nothing but the stink of battle-wounds and blood.
    Sean O’Casey (1884–1964)

    Nothing changes my twenty-six years in the military. I continue to love it and everything it stands for and everything I was able to accomplish in it. To put up a wall against the military because of one regulation would be doing the same thing that the regulation does in terms of negating people.
    Margarethe Cammermeyer (b. 1942)

    The military and the clergy cause us much annoyance; the clergy and the military, they empty our wallets and rob our intelligence.
    Franz Grillparzer (1791–1872)