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The
need for armoured cross-country troop and supply carriers was recognized when
the first tanks were built. In practice this was carried out by standard or
slightly modified heavy tanks - satisfactorily in the case of the supply
carriers which were converted Tanks Marks I-IV or Gun Carriers, but very
unsuccessfully for carrying men unaccustomed to travelling in the confined,
poorly ventilated and rocking interior of a tank. It was decided in
1917, therefore, to produce a tank
specially as a supply or infantry carrier. The design was entrusted to
Lieutenant G. J. Rackham: work was commenced in September and the prototype of
Tank, Mark IX completed by Sir. W. G. Armstrong, Whitworth & Co. in the
following year. Full-scale production (which was undertaken by Marshall Sons &
Co. of Gainsborough, Lincolnshire) started too late for Mark IXs to be used in
action, although thirty-five were completed by the end of
1918.
The
Tank, Mark IX could carry up to fifty infantrymen or ten tons of supplies. The
hull was an elongated version of the lozenge profile of the Mark V, etc. but
without the sponsons, which were replaced by two large oval doors on each side.
The fixed armament consisted only of two Hotchkiss machine-guns, but a row of
loopholes was provided on each side of the hull to allow infantry being carried
to use their own light weapons. Mechanically, the Mark IX was based on the Mark
V. In order to give a large clear space in the middle of the tank, the Ricardo
150-h.p. engine was placed immediately behind the driver's/commander's
compartment although the gearbox and, of course, final drive was at the rear of
the tank. This left the centre compartment (13 ft
6 in. long and
5 ft 3 in. wide) clear except for the
cardan shaft running through the centre.
The Mark IX had a
loaded weight of 37 tons and the same
engine as the Mark V so, not surprisingly, the top speed was low (only
4 m.p.h.) compared with contemporary
British heavy tanks. However, it would have played a useful part had the war
continued longer and development of this type of machine - which was then
neglected for the next twenty years - would have been followed.

An experimental
amphibious version of the Mark IX, fitted with long cylindrical air drums each
side, was first tried out on the Welsh Harp at Hendon, near London, on Armistice
Day, 1918.
The
nicely preserved Mk IX in the fine photos here can be seen in the splendid Tank
Museum in Bovington, in the UK. The photos have been taken by Knut Erik
Hagen, an old friend to this site.


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