Abortive tracklayer trials by the Army were followed in 1914-15 by the zealous exploits of Admiralty armoured cars, and bizarre experiments which Winston Churchill was forced to conceal from the War Office. The lives of many thousands of Allied and German soldiers hung on the outcome. They were fought out in greatest secrecy by - and sometimes between - the visionaries, constructors, politicians and the Army at home and in France. The heroism of the crews is not forgotten, but behind their terrifying war lay a very different series of often bitter conflicts. The Devil's Chariots is a revelatory account of the pioneer builders and their strange machines, of the men who backed them, and their disbelievers. John Glanfield's intensive research has unearthed much new information on the events and personalities surrounding tank production and development to paint a refreshingly different picture of the tank story. Controversy surrounded the new weapon from its inception until the Armistice and beyond. If the view of the military had prevailed in 1915, no tanks would have rolled out of British factories in World War One to become the first to enter battle. The Devils Chariots: The Origins And Secret Battles Of Tanks In The First World War
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