Hi from a new guy

Posted by: Johno

Hi from a new guy - 01/05/03 05:34 PM

Hi everyone just signed up today and i'd like to say hello. if anyone would like my input on anything British Military feel free to drop me a line.
Posted by: Comanche7

Re: Hi from a new guy - 01/05/03 05:45 PM

Welcome aboard!

I suspect that over time, your offer will be taken up as there are members from all around the world with many different interests.

Hmmm...first question for you...what is a "sapper"? <img src="images/graemlins/confused.gif" alt="" />
Posted by: Johno

The Sapper - 01/05/03 05:57 PM

A sapper is a military engineer, The "follow the sapper" bit comes from days of old, when it came around to breaching fortifications the sappers designed the fieldworks to enable the breach. The assaulting troops then had to Follow the Sapper through these fieldworks to get to the breach site. Basically means everyone else has to follow the engineer to get thier job done.

there you go first little bit of british military history for you

Johno
Posted by: AyersTG

Re: The Sapper - 01/05/03 07:31 PM

Yep... but not just British military history, LoL... we breached a few of our "cousins" fieldworks and fortifications in NE USA a while back... <grin> I enjoyed my career first as an Infantryman and then as a Combat Engineer; both by choice. Sappers have been the vanguard of all advancing armies since well before before Napoleonic times - sometimes even ahead of the scouts - and is the proper historical term for the in-the-enemy's-face combat engineers - that's what we call them in the US Army as well - borrowed term from our "cousins".

We have advanced some from axes... although anyone who's had to resond to an "incident" at the Enlisted Club can vouch that macho grunts and cavalrymen risk serious peril mixing it up with fellows that wield 12 pound sledge hammers all night long <smirk>...

Mobility, Countermobility, Survivability, Demolition, Construction, Reconnaisance, fighting as Infantry - we do it all! No mechanized commander can or will move without his supporting sappers... the unmounted grunts usually have to run into trouble before the truth hits them ( I used to be one, blithley jumping out of airplanes and running around afoot).

Glad to see another sapper on the list!

Sappers First!

Tom
USA, Retired
Posted by: Johno

Re: The Sapper - 01/05/03 08:35 PM

Tom, apologies for my inadvertant mistake, a bit of unintended national blinkering on my part. glad to make your aquaintance.
The more sappers the better no matter what nationality.
Posted by: Comanche7

Re: The Sapper - 01/06/03 01:48 AM

Thanks for filling a void in my military knowledge. <img src="images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: Hi from a new guy - 01/06/03 01:52 AM

Welcome to the forums! <img src="images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
Posted by: Polak187

Re: Hi from a new guy - 01/06/03 12:15 PM

Similar to what John said. Sapper in Polish military is also a combat engineer but somehow they are used mostly for cleaning mine fields. There was this old saying that sapper can only make two mistakes: first one when he joins the sapper corp and second one... well you know.

Matt
Posted by: Comanche7

Re: Hi from a new guy - 01/07/03 01:02 AM

<img src="images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: Hi from a new guy - 01/07/03 03:21 AM

Welcome!!!!!!!!
Posted by: Ade

Re: Hi from a new guy - 01/08/03 03:00 AM

Johno,


Welcome!

I too, am a combat engineer. First on 5 years active duty with the Seabees, and now as a combat engineer with the Kentucky National Guard. You'll make a fine addition to the crew.

BTW and FYI, "Sapper" is now an official army designation. It signifies someone who has completed the Army's Sapper course. The Sapper course has been described to me as being to the engineers, what Ranger school is to the infantry if that made any sense.

Take care,

Andy
Posted by: gulliamo

Re: The Sapper - 01/11/03 04:34 AM

Make it two.
Former 12B, Ft. Lost-in-the-Woods

Posted by: Anonymous

Re: The Sapper - 01/11/03 07:02 AM

New to the Forum and also a former Combat Engineer (16th Eng., Furth, Germany 89-91).

Great information here! I am sure to learn a lot.