List of armoured trains
This is a list of armoured trains of different countries.
Croatia
- Croatian Armored Train
Cuba
[Battle of Santa Clara] (1958)
- Tren Blindado - - The train belonged to General Fulgencio Batista and was captured by Che Guevara.
Estonia
[Estonian War of Independence] (1918-1920)
- Broad-gauge armoured train nr. 1 "Kapten Irw”
- Broad-gauge armoured train nr. 2
- Broad-gauge armoured train nr. 3
- Broad-gauge armoured train nr. 4
- Broad-gauge armoured train nr. 5
- Broad-gauge armoured train nr. 6
- Narrow-gauge armoured train nr. 1
- Narrow-gauge armoured train nr. 2
- Narrow-gauge armoured train nr. 3
- Narrow-gauge armoured train nr. 4
Finland
1918
A handful of armored trains were in use by both parties during Finnish Civil War, including trains supplied to the Reds by the Russian Bolshevik government.1939-1940, 1941-1944
Finnish Army employed two armored trains in limited use even during the Winter War and Continuation War, at the later stages mainly for AA support. One train composed of surviving cars of Civil War and WWII vintage is now an exhibit at Parola Tank Museum.France
[First Indochina War] (1946-1954)
- La Rafale, two trains blindés were used by the 2e Etranger from 1948 to 1954 in French Indochina.
[Hungary]
1939-1945
101. sz. páncélvonat - high train:- machine-gun wagon
- MÁV 377 locomotive
- casemate-wagon
- machinegun wagon
- MÁV 377 locomotive
- artillery wagon
- machine-gun wagon
- MÁV 377 locomotive
- casemate-wagon
"Éva" - improvised armoured train, later renamed to "Botond" List of armoured trains#cite note-1|
Iraq
- Iraqi Armored Train
[Japan] (for use in [Manchukuo])
Armoured vehicles and auxiliary support vehicles
- Type K2 Steam Locomotive No.134
- Type C56 Steam Locomotive No.31
- Type 91 Broad-gauge Railroad Tractor
- Type 95 Armoured Railroad Car
- Type 98 Railroad Tractor
- Type 100 Railroad Tractor
- Type 2598 Railroad Car
- Railroad Construction Vehicle
Railway Heavy Cannon
- Type 90 240 mm Railway Cannon
- Generator Waggon for Type 90 240 mm Railway Cannon
Armoured trains
Special Armoured Train
An armoured train built in 1933 was designated "Rinji Soko Ressha". It had 12 cars and armament consisting of one Type 14 10cm AA gun, one Type 4 15cm howitzer and two Type 11 AA guns. It was deployed in Manchuria with the 2nd Armored Train Unit.Others types of Japanese Armoured trains
In the 1920s, the Japanese built some improvised armoured trains converted from regular passenger trains. They were used to guard the railways in Manchuria.[Poland]
Before regaining independence in 1918
- Dywizja Syberyjska had 3 armoured trains: Warszawa, Kraków and Poznań, and captured a fourth: Poznań II
- 10 February-10 May1918 improvised armoured train of Związek Broni.
[Battle of Lwów (1918)]
- Kozak
- Piłsudczyk
- PP 3
- Gromobój
- Pionier
[Polish-Soviet War]
- nr 1 Piłsudczyk
- nr 2 Śmiały
- nr 3 Lis-Kula
- nr 4 Hallerczyk
- nr 5 Stefan Batory
- nr 6 Generał Iwaszkiewicz
- nr 7 Chrobry
- nr 8 Wilk
- nr 9 Danuta
- nr 10 Pionier
- nr 11 Poznańczyk
- nr 12 Kaniów
- nr 13 Zawisza Czarny
- nr 14 Zagończyk
- nr 15 Paderewski
- nr 16 Mściciel
- nr 17 Reduta Ordona
- nr 18 Huragan
- nr 19 Podhalanin
- nr 20 Bartosz Głowacki
- nr 21 Pierwszy Marszałek
- nr 22 Groźny
- nr 23 Śmierć
- nr 24 Śmigły
- nr 25 Stefan Czarniecki
- nr 26 Generał Sosnkowski
- Gromobój
- Rozwadowczyk
- Saper
- Smok
- Śmiały-szeroki – disbanded on 2 April 1920
- Boruciątko
- Boruta – 25 July at Kuźnica
- Dąbrowski – 5 July at Równe
- Generał Dowbór – 6 June at Wczerajsze
- Generał Konarzewski – 9 July at Bobrujsk
- Generał Listowski – 2 August at Terespol
- Generał Sikorski – 26 June Słowieczne
- Piłsudczyk szeroki – 19 July at Baranowicze
- Pionier-szeroki – 17 June
- nr 1 Piłsudczyk
- nr 2 Śmigły
- nr 3 Pierwszy Marszałek
- nr 4 Groźny
- nr 5 Danuta
- nr 6 Zagończyk
- nr 7 Paderewski
- nr 8 Śmierć
- nr 9 Poznańczyk
- nr 10 Bartosz Głowacki
- nr 11 Stefan Czarniecki
- nr 12 Generał Sosnkowski
- Danuta
- Generał Sosnkowski
[Third Silesian Uprising] (1921)
June 1921:1 dywizjon
- nr 1 Korfanty
- nr 2 Nowina-Doliwa
3 dywizjon
- nr 5 Powstaniec
- nr 6 Ślązak
5 dywizjon
6 dywizjon
Other:
- Kabicz – narrow track
- Ułan
September 1939
- nr 11 Danuta
- nr 12 Poznańczyk
- nr 13 Generał Sosnkowski
- nr 14 Paderewski
- nr 15 Śmierć
- nr 51 Pierwszy Marszałek
- nr 52 Piłsudczyk
- nr 53 Śmiały
- nr 54 Groźny
- nr 55 Bartosz Głowacki
- Training armoured trains:
- * Zagończyk
- * Stefan Czarniecki
- Improvised armoured trains:
- * Two of Coast Defence Command :
- ** ?
- ** Smok Kaszubski
- * Two of Warsaw Defence Command :
- ** nr 1
- ** nr 2
Polish armoured trains in United Kingdom (1940-1943)
- I dywizjon – trains: C, G, E
- II dywizjon – trains: A, D, F
- III dywizjon – trains: B, M, H
- IV dywizjon – trains: Nr 10, 11, 12 renamed in 1941 to K, L, J
Armoured trains of Railway Defence Service ([Służba Ochrony Kolei], SOK) after 1945
- nr 1 Szczecin
- nr 2 Grom
- nr 3 Huragan
- nr 4 Błyskawica
[Train artillery]
- On the basis of German armoured train in 1947 a train artillery division DAKOL was formed.
Surviving units
- armoured wagon in Poznań
- heavy armoured handcar PT16 in Muzeum Kolejnictwa w Warszawie.
Republika Srpska Krajina
- Krajina express
Russia
- Zaamurets
- Khunkhuz
- General Annenkov
Slovakia
- Štefánik
- Hurban
- Masaryk
United Kingdom
[World War II]
13 armoured trains were formed in June 1940 for coastal defence. They were typically formed by a small locomotive between two armoured wagons, usually small steel coal wagons with extra armour, and other wagons carrying ammunition. Each armoured wagon carried a mounted QF 6 pounder Hotchkiss gun and a Vickers machine gun or Lewis Gun. The infantry section on each wagon was also armed with a variety of small arms including Bren light machine guns, Thompson submachine guns and Lee–Enfield rifles. With the threat of invasion over, armoured trains were disbanded in November 1944.The trains were initially operated by Royal Engineers crews and armoured wagons were manned by Royal Armoured Corps troops. From late 1940 until 1942 they were operated by railway company crews and armoured wagons were manned by troops of the Polish Armed Forces in the West. From 1942 they were operated by Home Guard units, composed of employees of the railway companies, until they were disbanded in November 1944.
The narrow gauge Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway also had a miniature armoured train. Due to its small size it could not carry Hotchkiss guns and instead carried two Boys anti-tank rifles and four Lewis guns. It was manned by the 6th Battalion, Somerset Light Infantry and credited with shooting down a Messerschmitt Bf 109, a Heinkel He 111 and a Dornier Do 17.
Royal Train">British Royal Train">Royal Train
Armoured saloons were constructed by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway for King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1941.[Battle of Malaya]
In Malaya in 1942, an armoured train was part of Operation Krohcol, the British advance into Siam to resist the Japanese attack.United States
At least one armored diesel locomotive was built by Alco as #10001 for World War I usage, however with the Armistice just 14 days away, it never left the country.Between 1957 and 1987 the United States Department of Energy operated the armored "White Train" carrying nuclear warheads between the Pantex Plant near Amarillo, Texas and various nuclear weapons storage facilities and US Navy submarine bases in the United States. The train consisted of flat cars with armored covers built by Thrall Car Manufacturing Company in 1957 and 1960, armored guard escort cars rebuilt from US Army hospital train kitchen cars that had been built by the St. Louis Car Company in 1953, plus power, support and buffer cars. Locomotives were supplied by the carrying railroad, commonly the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe or Burlington Northern. The armored escort cars had elevated observation cupolas with gun ports and carried armed security couriers from the Office of Secure Transportation. Each train was assigned two or three armored escort cars. The train's cars were initially painted white, but individual cars were subsequently repainted into different colors to make them less conspicuous and frustrate anti-war demonstrators, who began tracking the train in order to blockade its progress, however it continued to be known as the White Train. The train was withdrawn from service in 1987, replaced by highway vehicles and newer rail cars that could be marshalled into any freight train. Some of the White Train cars are now preserved at the Amarillo Railroad Museum, while a few others are preserved at the Pantex Plant.
Canada
- The No. 1 Armoured Train