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The notion of shields, helping to protect the foot soldier against fire, is an
ancient one. And like other protective measures, like the helmet and
body armour, it was an old concept made new again with the advent of
ever more accurate and deadly ranged fire weapons during the late
19th century. During the Russo-Japanese War the Japanese used small
infantry shields extensively and with success during the siege
operations of that conflict. And all armies used small portable
one-man shields, with loop-holes, during WW1.
From the portable infantry shield,
there is not such a big conceptual leap in order to reach the next
step: the mobile infantry shield on wheels. A number of armies used
such, for instance the Russian and the Turkish, and it seems like
most other at least tried the concept. But fewer used them in
actuality. The main reason being that wheeled steel shields often
were very unpractical, their big weight making them difficult to
move, often prohibitively so, especially over any kind of broken
terrain. (And there was a lot of broken terrain around in WW1.) One
Army that actually used mobile Infantry Shields in great numbers was
the French.
The French used
one-man mobile shields, at least in 1918, mainly to protect
individual men sent out on wirecutting duties (using either
wire-cutters or explosives) in no-man's-land. (They evidently also
tried for small-scale unit assault actions, but it is doubtful if
they were ever used this way.) For this they employed a
mass-produced design, a box mounted on an axle with two big metal
wheels, with steel sides that protected the man on four sides,
including the top, but left the legs free – as was necessary for the
“propulsion” of the whole thing. Hence the nickname: creep tank. It
had a small platform inside on which the user could lie with only
his legs exposed. It had a V-shaped front, in order to better
deflect incoming bullets and shrapnel. It was also saw some use by
British forces. The mobile shield below can be found in the Army
Museum in Brussels and in
the excellent
Wehrtechnische Studiensammlung of the Bundeswehr, in Koblenz,
without doubt one of Germanys best military museums.

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A larger type mobile
shield was also employed by the French, at least earlier in the war.
It was much larger, very much higher and could protect some 2-3 men,
that could use loop-holes to engage targets. This could with all
probability be used only in very special circumstances, when the
ground was level and undisturbed, for instance during
street-fighting, or in close proximity to forts. The big loophole
also suggests that its main use was to protect Machine Guns, and
that the actual mobility was a secondary aspect. The big mobile
shield below can be found in the Army Museum in Paris.
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Modelling the Creep Tank
Fine Scale Factory make a simple yet fine white metal kit of the
small one-man French Creep-Tank. The other one type should be very
easy to scratch-build |