Wallace Battery

Wallace Battery was an artillery battery located on the northern side of the entrance to the Hunter River at Stockton, New South Wales, Australia. The battery was part of Fortress Newcastle. Two 6 inch Mk VII guns were installed at Fort Wallace in 1913. In 1940 the 6 inch guns were replaced by two 9.2-inch Mk X guns in emplacements.

The two 6 inch Mk. VII naval guns from Wallace Battery, were installed at Praed Point Battery, Rabaul.[1]

Notes

  1. Gamble, p. 46.
gollark: This is gollarious GPT-2 with 117 million params.
gollark: Or, well, that generation pass did.
gollark: It really likes microcontrollers.
gollark: and/or absorbing impacts/optical/magnet/etc/contrahumor/magnet/etc/contrahumor/magnet/magnet/<|endoftext|>That would make it hard to make it do anything but offload it to a USB.<|endoftext|>Unless you have a USB-C.<|endoftext|>No, that's a USB-C port.<|endoftext|>Citation:* microcontrollers* microcontrollers<|endoftext|>Anyway, the code is an embedded part of the microcontrollers in a microcontrollers in the M_LEM, and can be engineered for more performant, and allows you to move items into multiple locations.<|endoftext|>No.<|endoftext|>I mean, *some* cables, but not transpters.<|endoftext|>And some WiFi cables have to be transpters for some bizarre reason.<|endoftext|>You can use a USB-C port or something.<|endoftext|>The ethernet shield thing can't replicate the ethernet shield, so it's fiddly, because it's
gollark: Aha, it generated gollarious data!

References

  • Gamble, Bruce (2006). Darkest Hour: The True Story of Lark Force at Rabaul. St. Paul, Minnesota: Zenith Imprint. ISBN 0-7603-2349-6.
  • Horner, David (1995). The Gunners. A History of Australian Artillery. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86373-917-3.


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