Hi Quality image: Right hand click on the above picture and click 'save target as' (220KB)
The Vickers Medium was the main British tank during the inter-war period, its chief period of service being between 1923 until 1935.
In 1923 Vickers Ltd. of Sheffield and Newcastle, started to manufacture tanks for the British Army. They were the first representatives of a new generation of tanks, designed to fight on the move and restore mobility to the battlefield. The Medium Mark I was the first British tank in service with a sprung suspension and rotating turret. The Medium Mark II, which appeared in 1925, was an improved version of the Mark I. It was powered by an air-cooled Armstrong-Siddeley V8 engine.
The Vickers Medium, Mark II* tank has a 3 pounder gun in the turret; a Vickers machine-gun in each side of the hull and a third Vickers machine-gun mounted alongside the main gun. Using these tanks the Royal Tank Corps established standards of gunnery which, in their day, were never equalled.
Vickers Medium tanks formed the backbone of the Experimental Mechanised Force of 1928, a revolutionary combat formation that carried out manoeuvres on Salisbury Plain. Some of these tanks served with the RTC in Egypt and a few were buried, as part of the fixed defences of Mersah Matruh, during the early part of the desert war. Others, supplied to the Soviet Union, fought briefly in the Russo-Finnish Winter War of 1940/41.
This tank was one of 13 ordered on the 5th of January 1926, and following its official period of service she was employed as a training tank at Bovington in the early years of the Second World War.
Our vehicle is the best preserved and one of only a handful still in existence, being almost certainly the only running example remaining. |