I spent a lot of time at APG, first as a ROTC cadet going through a three-week “OJT” training (in a HHC company for a CPT who was never around, it was a three-week vacation), then going through Ordnance OBC as a 2LT for almost 6 months. I went through two Gettysburg Staff rides with DR Atwater. He was a really nice guy but never seemed to know what to do with someone who knew a little bit about the subject, he always talked to folks like they didn’t know which was the end that goes “boom.” He let me hold some extremely rare weapons in the gun vault, though, and never yelled at me for hopping into the commander’s hatch of a German tank for a photo in uniform.
I was there for what I’m sure will be the final time a couple of months ago with my wife, showing her around one of my favorite places to be. I was totally shocked at how little the place had changed, other than the “mile of tanks” being gone.
As for Anzio Annie, I’m dying to see what they with her. “Leopold” was really the name of the gun at APG today. I found some decent photos of Leopold, including photos of the running gear and the proximity to the spur into the post:
http://www.williammaloney.com/Aviation/ ... /index.htm I doubt given the highway bridge and tunnel clearances between Aberdeen and Ft Lee (and yes, I’ve driven directly between the two places when I was in the Army) that Leopold would fit on a tractor trailer, even broken down. I once talked with one of the Ordnance guys from 5th Army who loaded her onto the ship at Naples, but for the life of me I cannot recall how he said they shipped her. I would assume they broke her down into components (along with parts off of the other K5 gun that was used to eventually restore Leopold to firing condition), but I’m pretty sure you could have put RR tracks into a LST (Landing Ship, Tank, designed to carry a small unit of armored vehicles) and wheeled it into one of those ships through the front doors without taking anything apart. A K5 gun is about 100 feet long and about weighs about 400,000 pounds. It could have been lifted disassembled into a Liberty ship as well and would have been a far safer method of transport. I have read that at least another K5 was brought to Aberdeen and that Leopold was actually test fired after the war, but details on that are very sketchy.