Allen, have a little faith. But just like fine wine or beer, the ingredients have to be ripe, or in our case made, painted and assembled before they can be called complete. Everything will be completed by July 25th, after all we must allow some time to test it. Without a good thorough test, we could not possibly bring it to Montana and come Hell or Highwater it WILL be on the gunline in Cutbank.
Subdjoe, In all of the cases I have read about, except for this one, you would be right. The tremendous expenditure in material, time and personnel, never could be justified. The Belgians and their French allies, 70,000 strong, basically lucked out with Col. Paixhans big mortar. The very first shell fired against the Dutch forces in the Citadel of Antwerp landed within a few yards of the main powder magazine of that fortress. When they saw volcanic eruption of many cubic meters of soil and the gaping hole and crater where the entryway to the powder magazine had been, they were afraid, very very afraid. This, along with a very persistent fire from close-by breaching batteries, and resolute French infantry massed near the growing breaches, caused the Dutch Army to give up the Citadel after just a few days. In France, this military adventure was called the Ten Days Campaign and it fits that rare nitch in the history of armed conflicts that Col. of Volunteers, Theodore Roosevelt, called, "A Splendid Little War".
Regards,
Tracy and Mike