Posted on Nov 23, 2021
SSgt Dan Montague
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I am hoping someone would be able to assist with a question pertaining to American artillery in WW1. I came across some images of Camp Fremont in California. This was a training camp in WW1 and as far as I can tell, primarily an artillery base. The image showed where the different artillery was staged by size and type. There was light, heavy and regular artillery. I have asked my fellow vets and tried to find reference to "regular" artillery. Might someone have some insight as to what exactly regular artillery was?
I was thinking medium, but if that is it, why call it regular?
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Responses: 4
SSG John Jensen
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Found a lecture on the actions of the heroic young Capt of Artillery , Harry S Truman. With references to double-teaming the horse drawn artillery in the rain.

my Great-Uncle Forrest was truck mechanic during that war, and trucks were only invented 10 years before- we’re talking serious high- tech here! Those computer jerks don’t know what they’re talking about.
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SGT Chris Padgett
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Was Camp Fremont near a coast?
I ask because I've seen this referenced before with types of Coastal Artillery. Regular artillery meaning mobile guns, not fixed pieces.
If I saw the picture, that might help as well.
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SSgt Dan Montague
SSgt Dan Montague
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The unit was in Menlo Park, Ca. At the time not too far from the bay.
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MAJ Operations Officer
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WW1 was a Revolution of Military Affairs (RMA) where the evolution of artillery changed the shape of warfare. Prior to WW1, moat artillery was inaccurate and unobserved (due to the inability to communicate accurately over distance to shift fire and ID targets one couldn’t see directly). The change in optics and communication shapes the way artillery was used in battle and almost every development since has been in response to the new implementation of artillery.
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