Killen-Strait

Killen-Strait was the name of an American engineering company.

Killen-Strait Tractor, experimental armoured tracked vehicle

History

The company made tractors. The company came from Killen-Walsh Manufacturing Company, which changed its name to Killen-Strait in 1914, to build the Strait's Tractor.

Structure

It was based in Appleton, Wisconsin in the USA.

Products

The Killen-Strait Tractor was powered by a choice of 25-40HP Waukesha Engines, with Remy ignition systems. Two models of tractor were built - a 30-50 model and a 15-30 model.[1]

Tanks in World War One

Killen-Strait produced one of their vehicles with a tracked system for demonstration on 30 June 1915 at Wembley Park, in front of Winston Churchill and David Lloyd George. On the same day, the War Office had passed its specification for a machine gun destroyer to the Admiralty's Landship Committee (based at 83 Pall Mall). From the demonstration of the tractor cutting barbed wire, responsibility of the Landship Committee was passed from the Admiralty to the new Ministry of Munitions. The tracked Killen-Strait Tractor significantly inspired the design of what would later that year become the tank. The tracked Killen-Strait Tractor had one track at the front and two at the back.[2]

See also

References

  1. The Devil's Chariots: The origins and secret battles of tanks in the First World War
  2. Rise of the Tank: Armoured Vehicles and their use in the First World War, p32
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