QF 6-pounder Hotchkiss
The Ordnance QF Hotchkiss 6 pounder gun Mk I and Mk II or QF 6 pounder 8 cwt were a family of long-lived light naval guns introduced in 1885 to defend against new, small and fast vessels such as torpedo boats and later submarines. There were many variants produced, often under license which ranged in length from 40 to 58 calibers, but 40 caliber was the most common version.
6-pounders were widely used by the navies of a number of nations and often used by both sides in a conflict. Due to advances in torpedo delivery and performance, 6-pounder guns were rapidly made obsolete and were replaced with larger guns aboard most larger warships. This led to their being used ashore during World War I as coastal defense guns, the first tank guns and as anti-aircraft guns, whether on improvised or specialized HA/LA mounts. During World War II 6-pounder guns were put back in service to arm small warships and as coastal defense guns. The last ships to carry 6-pounders was the Aegir-class offshore patrol vessels of the Icelandic Coast Guard which replaced them in 1990 with Bofors 40 mm autocannons.
Operational history
Argentine service
Argentina adopted the 40 caliber Hotchkiss 6-pounder in the 1890s, to arm its four Giuseppe Garibaldi-class armored cruisers, purchased from Italy. The Argentinians were at that time engaged in a naval arms race with Chile. The last ships from this class were retired from service on 2 August 1954.- ARA General Belgrano
- ARA Garibaldi
- ARA Pueyrredón
- ARA San Martin
Brazilian service
- Marshal Deodoro-class coastal defense ships
- Brazilian cruiser Republica
- Brazilian cruiser Almirante Barroso
- Brazilian torpedo gunboat Tiradentes
Chilean service
- Chilean battleship Capitán Prat
- Chilean cruiser Esmeralda
- Chilean cruiser Presidente Errázuriz
- Chilean cruiser Ministro Zenteno
- Chilean cruiser O'Higgins
- Chilean cruiser Presidente Pinto
Chinese service
- Zhiyuen-class cruisers
- Chinese cruiser Jingyuen
French service
Irish service
A 6-pounder gun was fitted to the single Vickers Mk. D tank used by the Irish Army between 1929 and 1940. When the tank was scrapped in 1940 the gun was removed and used as an anti-tank weapon.Italian service
Italy adopted the 40 caliber Hotchkiss 6-pounder in 1886 to arm its armored cruisers, battleships, protected cruisers, torpedo boats and torpedo cruisers. The Italians also adopted the competing 43 caliber Nordenfelt 6 pounder gun and by 1909 the Nordenfelt had replaced the Hotchkiss in service. This was the opposite of the British who replaced their Nordenfelt guns with Hotchkiss guns.- Etna-class cruisers
- Goito-class cruisers
- Regioni-class cruisers
- Vettor Pisani-class cruisers
- Italian battleship Emanuele Filiberto
- Italian cruiser Marco Polo
- Italian cruiser Piemonte
- Italian cruiser Calabria
- Italian cruiser Dogali
- Italian cruiser Giovanni Bausan
- Italian cruiser Marco Polo
Japanese service
- Akatsuki-class destroyers
- Harusame-class destroyers
- Ikazuchi-class destroyers
- Matsushima-class cruisers
- Murakumo-class destroyers
- Naniwa-class cruisers
- Shirakumo-class destroyers
- Suma-class cruisers
- Japanese cruiser Izumi
- Japanese cruiser Unebi
- Japanese cruiser Takao
Russian service
- Bars-class submarines
- Morzh-class submarines
- Narval-class submarines
- Finn-class torpedo cruisers
- Okhotnik-class torpedo cruisers
- Ukrayna-class torpedo cruisers
- Vsadnik-class torpedo cruisers
Spanish service
- Torpedo gunboat Destructor
- Alfonso XII-class cruisers
- Isla de Luzón-class cruisers
- Spanish battleship Pelayo
United Kingdom service
The UK also adopted the competing 42 caliber Ordnance QF 6 pounder Nordenfelt at the same time as the QF 6-pounder Hotchkiss, but the Royal Navy was not satisfied with the special Nordenfelt ammunition and fuzes. Following the explosion in 1900 of an ammunition ship due to defective fuses, Britain replaced Nordenfelt fuzes with the Hotchkiss designs and Nordenfelt guns were phased out in favor of the Hotchkiss guns and were declared obsolete by 1919.
The original 1885 Hotchkiss Mk I was a built-up gun with a barrel, jacket and a locking hoop screwed to the front of the jacket. The Mk I lacked a recoil system, but the Mk II of 1890 introduced a hydraulic recoil mechanism with a pair of hydro-spring cylinders. During World War I the navy required many more guns and an autofretted, mono-block barrel version was developed to simplify manufacture and identified as "6 pdr Single Tube". Initially these guns were only allowed to be fired with a special lower charge, but in 1917 they were relined with A tubes as Mk I+++ which enabled them to use the standard 6-pounder ammunition.
After World War I the gun was considered obsolete for combat use, but continued in use as a saluting gun and as sub-calibre training guns. Of the 3,984 produced it was estimated that 1,640 still existed in 1939. With the onset of World War II the remaining guns were rushed back into service for anti-submarine defense, E-boat defense and for coastal defense. New non-recoil Mk VI, Mk VI* and Mk VI** mountings were built with elevations between -10° to +70°. These mountings were used on early models of the Fairmile D Motor Gunboats, Motor Launches and Flower-class corvettes. Some of which were not re-armed with the modern auto-loading 6 pdr Mk IIA until late 1944.
- A-class destroyers
- Admiral-class ironclads
- Adventure-class cruisers
- Apollo-class cruisers
- B-class destroyers
- Banff-class sloops
- British H-class submarines
- C and D-class destroyers
- C-class cruisers
- C-class destroyers
- Castle-class trawlers
- CD-class naval drifters
- Centurion-class battleships
- Conqueror-class monitors
- D-class destroyers
- Daring-class destroyers
- Devastation-class ironclads
- Dryad-class torpedo gunboats
- E and F-class destroyers
- Fly-class gunboats
- G and H-class destroyers
- Gay-class patrol boats
- Indefatigable-class battlecruisers
- Lion-class battlecruisers
- M15-class monitors
- M29-class monitors
- Marathon-class cruisers
- Orlando-class cruisers
- River-class destroyers
- Royal Sovereign-class battleships
- Stour-class destroyers
- Trafalgar-class ironclads
- Surprise-class cruisers
- Victoria-class battleships
- Warrior-class cruisers
Tank service
The gun turned out to be too long for practical use as the end of the barrel could come into contact with the ground or other obstacles as the tank traveled over uneven ground. The British chose to shorten the gun rather than change its location and replaced it in 1917 in the Mark IV tank onwards by the shorter QF 6 pounder 6 cwt.
Anti-aircraft service
Britain lacked any dedicated air-defence artillery early in World War I and up to 72 6-pounders were adapted to high-angle pedestal mountings at key establishments in Britain for close air defence by 1916. They are not listed as still being in service in this role at the end of the war, presumably because German bombing attacks were conducted from relatively high altitudes which would have been beyond the gun's range.United States service
Manufacturer | Manufacturers Designation | US Designation | Caliber |
Hotchkiss | Mk I | Mk I | 40 |
Hotchkiss | Mk I | Mk II | 40 |
Hotchkiss | Mk I long | Mk III | 45 |
Driggs-Schroeder | Nos. 2, 4 and 5 rapid-fire field gun | Mk IV | 50 |
? | Lynch field gun | Mk V | 35 |
Driggs-Schroeder | Mk I rapid-fire | Mk VI | 45 |
Hotchkiss | Mk II long | Mk VII | 45 |
Driggs-Schroeder | Mk II | Mk VIII | 50 |
Vickers-Maxim | Mk II semi-automatic | Mk IX | 42 |
Nordenfelt | Mk II rapid-fire | Mk X | 42 |
Driggs-Seaburry | Mk II semi-automatic | Mk XI | 50 |
Bethlehem Steel | Mk I | 50 |
The history of the Hotchkiss 6-pounder in United States Navy and Army service is a complex story. It was used in conjunction with another maker's design, its primary rival being the Driggs-Schroeder 6-pounder. Oddly, one shipbuilding and naval supply company, Cramp & Sons, had a license to build both the Hotchkiss and Driggs-Schroeder and sold both to the Navy in parallel. It appears that Hotchkiss type guns had an edge in production in the first half of the 1890s, but by 1895 Driggs-Schroeders were being produced in quantity to equip a considerable number of newly commissioned ships. The initial purchases by the Navy were in small lots each year and there was no mass-production of these guns like one would see in smaller weapons. The Navy made certain that the ammunition for both the Hotchkiss and Driggs-Schroeder guns were identical.
There is no question that the Driggs-Schroeders were predominant in the new protected and armored cruisers that were being commissioned by 1895. However, USS Texas, a second class battleship commissioned in 1895, carried a mixed 6-pounder complement of ten Driggs-Schroeders and two Hotchkiss guns. USS Maine, an armored cruiser, exclusively carried Driggs-Schroeder 6-pounders although it had a mixed one pounder battery of both Driggs-Schroeder and Hotchkiss. Ships known to have carried exclusively Driggs-Schroeder 6-pounders are USS Olympia, Brooklyn, New York, and Columbia. Although from photographs of particular guns on the vessels in question, it appears that the battleships,, and carried exclusively Hotchkiss 6-pounders with carrying Driggs-Schroeders. Unlike her 8-inch guns, the preserved retains her Driggs-Schroeder 6-pounders. She is at the Independence Seaport Museum in Philadelphia.
Beginning in 1910 6-pounder guns were replaced by 3"/50 caliber guns aboard US Navy ships. However smaller ships such as US Coast Guard cutters, gunboats and minesweepers continued to use 6-pounders in the years between World War I and World War II.
- Amphitrite-class monitors
- Arkansas-class monitors
- Bainbridge-class destroyers
- Cincinnati-class cruisers
- Columbia-class cruisers
- Denver-class cruisers
- Dubuque-class gunboats
- Florida-class battleships
- Hawk-class minesweepers
- Illinois-class battleships
- Indiana-class battleships
- Kearsarge-class battleships
- Montgomery-class cruisers
- New Orleans-class cruisers
- Tampa-class cutters
- Treasury-class cutters
- Truxtun-class destroyers
- Yorktown-class gunboats
- USS Atlanta
- USS Boston
- USS Chicago
- USS Paragua
US Army service
It appears that the US Army and US Navy, while both using the "Mark" system, assigned their designations to different ordnance. References indicate that Driggs-Schroeder guns, manufactured by the American Ordnance Company and designated Mark II and Mark III, were adopted along with Driggs-Seabury weapons designated M1898 and M1900. In 1898–1901 a total of 97 weapons were acquired: 20 M1898, 40 M1900, 10 Mark II, and 27 Mark III guns. However, 17 M1898 and all ten Mark II guns were transferred for use on Army troop transports in the Spanish–American War of 1898, leaving 70 weapons for land use. The mountings for the Army six pounders were called M1898 and M1898 "rampart mounts" or "parapet mounts", wheeled carriages with fittings that allowed them to be secured to pintle mounts. Another reference has somewhat different figures. There were generally two of these guns issued per major fort, and eventually many of them became saluting guns at the post's flagpole. A dozen were deployed at Fort Ruger in Hawaii as part of the Land Defense Project of 1915–1919, while others were deployed in the Philippines under this project.
Ammunition
The 6-pounder fired Fixed QF 57x307R ammunition. A complete round weighed and its projectile weighed. The most common types of ammunition available for 6-pounder guns were shrapnel, steel and common shells. In World War II higher-yield high explosive rounds were produced.Photo gallery
Licensed production
- Elswick Ordnance Company
- Obukhov State Plant
- William Cramp & Sons
Wars
- First Sino-Japanese War
- Spanish–American War
- Russo-Japanese War
- Italo-Turkish War
- First Balkan War
- Second Balkan War
- World War I
- Russian Civil War
- Second Sino-Japanese War
- Winter War
- World War II
- Cod Wars
Users
Surviving examples
- Twin 6 pounder QF Guns Mk I on Pedestal Mount Mk I, Belmont Battery, Fort Rodd Hill, Victoria, British Columbia
- One 6 pounder QF Gun Mk I on Garrison Carriage Mk I**, Fort Rodd Hill, Victoria, British Columbia
- One 6 pounder QF Gun Mk I, Fort Rodd Hill, Victoria, British Columbia
- One 6 pounder QF Gun Mk I on Pedestal Mount Mk I, Bay Street Armoury, Victoria, British Columbia
- One 6 pounder QF Gun Mk III on wheeled carriage, private tank museum, Mattituck, New York
- One 6 pounder QF Gun Mk III on wheeled carriage, Virginia War Museum, Newport News, Virginia
- One 6 pounder QF Gun on wheeled carriage, Veterans' Memorial Park, Plymouth, Michigan
- One 6 pounder QF Gun M1900 on wheeled carriage, Maquoketa, Iowa
- Several 6 pounder RF Guns on, Independence Seaport Museum, Philadelphia
- Three 6 pounder QF Gun 1892 on recoil mounts, Yacht Club Argentino, Buenos Aires