In Wallace Kirkland's Recollections of a Life Photographer ((Riverside Press, 1937, 1953) he recounts a story he did about a farmer in Geneseo Illinois who bought a war surplus tank in the hopes of using it to plow some difficult ground. The tanks cost the U.S. taxpayers $26,000 new, but they were sold surplus for $100 each. The farmer had to clean out the "hass tank" which required the rear armor plating be removed:
"To do this we had to unscrew some two hundred bolts, all with flat streamlined screw heads on the outside and hidden rusted nuts on the inside, and all of them case-hardened. A few of the nuts could be reached to turn but most of them were out of reach and we had to turn the bolts with a punch and hammer from the outside."
2 comments:
Except it isn't! The bar across the wheel bogies is the giveaway - it's an M22 Locust light tank.
Thanks for this! Contributions to the knowledge base are always welcome!
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