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The conspiracy theory sort of thing with the AGF, McNair, Tank Destroyers, and inexperienced combat commanders really isn't helpful and not actually factual, being based on opinions of others opinions. Too much is being read into Zaloga's and the others story telling where they are throwing in too many irrelevant details. It simply took a long time for the Ordnance Department to actually get the T26/M26 ready for production. McNair did deny one request for production - but at that time the T26 was not ready for production. When the T26/M26 was ready in November 1944 and the AGF tried to block it, the Army Chief of Staff Marshal overrode them. I have seen no indication that anything the AGF did caused any delays; McNair did not like the idea but he let Ordnance play around all they wanted. He threatened to prevent production but the M26 was no where near ready when he did so. The ground commanders were asked for their viewpoint on tank needs in 1945 and numerous differing options were returned because they had nothing but some statistics to work with. They and their men had not seen nor driven any proposed tank making it impossible to reach a consensus on what was best.
The Tank Destroyer doctrine did nothing but force the Ordnance Department to build GMCs with better cannon (for antitank work) than the tank's 75s.
The same thing happened with the 76-mm M1. If Jacob Devers had supported production of the first kludged M4s with 76's in April 1943 the Army might have tried them, learned them, recommended fixes. He would not accept the "crude" first fix with an 800 pound storage box on back of the turret to balance. Ordnance had developed the 3-inch GMC M10 for the Tank Destroyers in 1942 and its gun bound the turret like the 76 did and they fixed it with the workable but crude counterbalances. If Ordnance had taken the time to lengthen the turret for the 76, maybe widen it some, I might have pleased Devers enough to accept it then and there. But, no, the quick fix meant it took the Ordnance Department until August 1943 to get a setup the Armored Forces would accept. McNair resisted it; the very man who he had set up to try to better control Armored Command convinced him to allow production; production commenced January 1944. In May 1944 the ground forces were schooled on it; they had not seen the M4 (76) nor had their men driven any. They had nothing but numbers to work from and those indicated they would loose ground fire ability for armor penetrating ability. They had no idea what to do. They were experienced enough to not just accept some pretty new toy because it was said to be wonderful. They needed a chance to see what their men - who were doing the fighting and dieing - thought of it based on their own hands on experiences.
Notice how the M4 (76) was not an entirely new tank like the T26 and how long it took to get it into the soldier's hands.
The M18 armed with the 76 was finished in mid-1943 or so; tried in Italy with user feedback; approved; and in Normandy in June 1944.
If Ordnance had readied the M26 in timefor the Army to put it through trials, and in time for actual mass production and delivery, things would have been different. The T26/M26 was not finalized in the form used in 1945 in time to do more than was done with it. As Zaloga noted in Armored Thunderbolt, after all the fuss and nonsense that he had built up with tank destroyers and AGF and so on - entertaining red herrings - the actual development of the M26 drug on so long that in the end there was no real way for it to get into production any sooner. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.182.175.139 (talk) 20:19, 28 November 2016 (UTC)
It's been nearly nine years since I started extensively revising this article on the M26 Pershing. If you go back in the history of the article, my first entry was:
08:06, 21 November 2009 68.120.230.38 (I didn't start a login ID until several entries later)
The previous version of the article can only be described as very incomplete, and contained a massive bit of fake history:
08:47, 7 November 2009 SmackBot
This was because it contained the slanderous claim by Belton Cooper, made in his book "Death Traps" (and also in a History Channel documentary in 2000 where he featured as an expert tank historian of sorts) that U.S. tanks, especially the M4 Sherman, were "vastly inferior" to German tanks and that Gen. Patton was the one who personally intervened to delay the development of the M26 Pershing.
By that time in 2009, Zaloga's books "Panther vs. Sherman" and "Armored Thunderbolt" had come out, and it was clear to me that Zaloga had written "Armored Thunderbolt" specifically to address all the Fake History that Belton Cooper had been spouting, basically making stuff up that wasn't true about both the M4 and Gen. Patton.
As I started writing and revising and adding to this article, I got more books to fill out my research, eventually finding a bootleg copy of Hunnicutt's Pershing tank book (I thought it was a legit reprint - I bought it on Amazon for a great price. Later, I tracked Hunnicutt down by phone to find out who owned the rights to the photos in his book, since Wiki editors were threatening to delete the photos I had posted unless I could prove they were public domain photos. That was when Hunnicutt told me that that particular copy was a ripoff unauthorized version Made in China for which he was not getting royalties. And as it turns out, the photos in his book had been taken by a U.S. Army officer, in his official capacity as part of the Zebra Mission, so they were all public domain US government photos)
I also came across Zaloga's original "M26/M46 Pershing Tank" book, and was shocked to discover that this older Zaloga book contained that same bit of Fake History about Patton being the one responsible for delaying the development of the M26.
I've since realized that many of Zaloga's earlier works have similar sloppy such history - with tidbits about tanks and weapons thrown in without any accreditation and sometimes of dubious truth.
I decided that "Armored Thunderbolt" was a much better work by Zaloga, probably written specifically to right that wrong about Patton. You can see some serious research into the National Archives records in this book, and it is indeed quite well documented, with many many references and information based on written letters between the generals involved.
My various revisions and additions to this article continued through 2010 and I stopped editing this article in 2011. Since that time there have been hundreds and hundreds of edits made by others. All of the details about Belton Cooper's false claims and why I devoted such a big chunk of the article on McNair's role in delaying the M26 have been deleted. Many of the tinier details about when or why and who did what in the history of the M26 also got deleted. A lot of useless extraneous little tidbits got thrown in by other editors. Still, about 80-90% of the information in this article is stuff I inputted.
So, if anybody thinks that the blame on McNair is not adequately documented in this article, all I can say is that well, blame the @#$%& Wiki editors who took out all of those details. This information was there originally in the versions of this article that I wrote, and they ARE in Zaloga's book "Armored Thunderbolt". The slightly different versions of this history in the books by Hunnicutt and George Forty are also documented in their books. And so there is plenty of documentation that AGF/McNair were to blame for the delay in development of the M26 and that Belton Cooper was totally off-base in his claims about Patton.
As to the delay merely being part of the "normal" development timeline for any tank, I would strongly disagree. The T23 with the 76mm gun had been developed by Jan. 1943 and 250 had been produced by the end of the year, and this was not even a full production tank. Devers had all along been advocating for a heavier tank with a 90mm gun and the "smoking gun" letter written by McNair slamming down his push for a tank with a 90mm was written in the FALL OF 1943. Despite this, Devers was able to get the T26E1 prototype produced and it was ready by February 1944. As such, similar numbers as the T23 could have been produced and sent to Europe by the time of the Battle of the Bulge, had MacNair not been in opposition and had full production been heavily pushed by somebody in charge. And, as it turned out, the #1 advocate for the M26, Devers, got transferred to command of the 6th Army in Europe, and thus wasn't around anymore to push for this to happen faster.
Another detail that was in my original article was why the 17 pounder Sherman Firefly was not adopted by the US Army. Zaloga's book makes clear this was a case of the US Army favoring its own 90mm gun over buying the British 17 pounder, and Devers may have been guilty of squashing and thus delaying earlier efforts to adopt a US Army version of the Firefly.
So there, go read the original books, or read the earlier versions of this article I wrote
DarthRad (talk) 23:43, 20 February 2018 (UTC)DarthRad (talk)
It would help if wiki writers would read books other than the few popular ones. Some actually show the development process from a different perspective:
"Development of the forty T25s and ten T26s ordered in May 1943 never faltered during 1943 even though both AGF and ASF questioned the approval of Gen. Devers's request for mass production. Gen. Eisenhower's concurrence with Devers's request in January 1944 ended ASF's opposition. But technology could not be rushed. By 10 December 1943, drafting work was still only 95 percent complete on the T25 and an even slower 85 percent on the T26. [1] A pilot model of the T25 was completed in January 1945, and the T26 followed in February. (Production of the original order of forty T25s and ten T26s had been completed in May 1944). [2]
"Development of the T25 and T26 was not opposed by AGF or the Armored Force in 1944 despite post-war claims of the Ordnance Department's spokesmen to the contrary. . . . AGF cooperated with development in March by sending members of the Armored Board to Aberdeen to "shorten the time of tests." [5] (The Board did not usually participate in any tests until tanks arrived at Fort Knox.) "
[Faint Praise American Tanks and Tank Destroyers During World War II page 119]
"Encouraged, Campbell finally made a direct proposal for large scale production. Writing to Brehon Somervell, Commander of ASF, on 31 March [1944], Campbell recommended that orders be placed for at least 2,000 or preferably 4,000 tanks in order to get them into production on a quantity basis during 1945. Campbell assured Somervell that it was not important to decide the proportion of T25 or T26 tanks immediately, since "from a tooling standpoint both tanks were very similar." Campbell assured him that detailed changes in the design made necessary by service tests, could easily be made in the six or eight months before production started. [13] Gen. Somervell's representative, Lucius Clay, quickly passed the buck to AGF, commenting on 2 April that it did nor seem advisable to begin retooling facilities unless a demand was established. But he left the decision to the officials of AGF if they were "prepared now to state that the model will be required in large numbers." [14]
"AGF acted quickly to assure the success of Campbell's proposal. Apparently, AGF had queried the Armored Board about the desirability of mass production. [Faint Praise American Tanks and Tank Destroyers During World War II page 121]
"Despite AGF criticism of the armament of the T25, its request was a major victory for the Ordnance Department. Gen. McNair had finally agreed to large scale production for the T20 series. Gen. Campbell had requested only 2,000 to 4,000 of either the T25 or T26; the response from AGF for 7,600 of the tanks must have exceeded his wildest expectations. Since the AGF request had noted that production of M4s should cease as soon as production of T25s could meet operational requirements, McNair had finally found a tank good enough to replace the Sherman." [Faint Praise American Tanks and Tank Destroyers During World War II page 124]
Production did not begin until November 1944, after test reports in May 1944 onward revealed many items to be fixed, production was set up and authorized by the bean counters. The T25 itself was dropped in the process: as for the T26/M26, 10 were produced in November, 30 in December, 70 in January 1945, 132 in February 1945 and so on.
2600:8804:9F03:200:E5BB:B13F:D7F0:B1B6 (talk) 17:13, 25 December 2020 (UTC)
And why I don't see the calibre of the gun in the former colony's owners units? Why is it «90mm», not «90/2.54"»46.242.2.80 (talk) 12:45, 10 October 2021 (UTC)
The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for deletion:
Participate in the deletion discussion at the nomination page. —Community Tech bot (talk) 01:22, 14 January 2022 (UTC)
The M26 Pershing was NOT the largest American tank of WW2 68.229.253.247 (talk) 22:54, 17 May 2023 (UTC)