Sign 18 - 8-Inch Finishing Building

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Sign 18

The final steps of the loading process were completed in the finishing building.  Precise scales weighted each filled shell to determine its range.  The crucial information was then stenciled on the outside so the gunner would know how far it would travel. The booster, which detonates the charge, ws placed in a special cavity at the top of the shell, and the shell was then packed in a box with others for shipment. AS it left the plant, the shell was complete except for the placing of the fuse, an operation performed at the battlefont.

There are no clear historic photographs of the 8-inch finishing building, but it had an upside-down L-shape, the longest part measuring 30 feet by 60 feet.

Of the three plants, the 8-inch plant was the furthest from completion by war's end in November 1918, with a total of 8,231 shells loaded. Production was planned for 4,000 shells per day.

Women Workers in WWI

Although employee records for the loading plant have not survived, it is estimated that 50 percent of munitions workers were women filling jobs typically performed by men in peacetime.  Over one million women worked for wages in industries directly related to the war effort. Some munitions work, such as the inspection and packaging of shells, required no special training.  Other tasks, like fitting fine screws and tiny springs into shell components, were perfectly suited to a women's smaller hand.  The federal government established the Women's Branch of the US Army's Ordnance Department as a watchdog agency for women in munitions plants.