in France on 21 March 1918
St. Quentin Canal The A7V was first used in combat on 21 March 1918. Five tanks of
Abteilung I (Detachment I) under the command of
Hauptmann Greiff were deployed north of the
St. Quentin Canal. Three of the A7Vs suffered mechanical failures before they entered combat; the remaining pair helped stop a minor British breakthrough in the area, but otherwise saw little combat that day.
Villers-Bretonneux Three detachments (
Abteilungen) of tanks were assigned to an attack in April 1918 at
Villers-Bretonneux at the head of the four German divisions spread over a front. Two tanks broke down en route, but the 13 that saw action achieved some success, and the British recorded that their lines were broken by the tanks. The first and second tank-against-tank combat in history took place on 24 April 1918 when three A7Vs (including chassis number 561, known as
Nixe) taking part in an attack with infantry incidentally met three British
Mark IVs (two female machine gun-armed tanks and one male with two
6-pounder guns) near Villers-Bretonneux. During the battle, tanks on both sides were damaged. According to the British lead tank commander,
Second Lieutenant Frank Mitchell, the female Mk IVs fell back after being damaged by armour-piercing bullets. They were unable to damage the A7Vs with their own machine guns. Mitchell then attacked the lead German tank, commanded by
Second Lieutenant Wilhelm Biltz, with the 6-pounders of his own tank and knocked it out. He hit it three times, and killed five of the crew when they bailed out. He stated that he then went on to rout some infantry with
case shot. The two remaining A7Vs in turn withdrew. after recovery from the battlefield. As Mitchell's tank withdrew from action, seven British
Whippet tanks also engaged the German infantry. Three of these were knocked out in the battle, and it is unclear if any of them engaged the retreating German tanks but they did carry out an attack on two German battalions in the open to the rear causing them to break and flee. Mitchell's tank lost a track towards the end of the battle due to damage from an exploding
mortar shell and was abandoned. The damaged A7V limped back to the German lines, but eventually broke down. It was later destroyed by a German demolition squad, to prevent its capture and reuse by the Allies. During the same day however, another tank-against-tank fight took place where an A7V engaged a group of Whippet tanks and destroyed one of them. A counterattack later re-established the Allied line, by which time three A7Vs were out of action in No Man's Land or behind German lines. Nixe was badly damaged, and a German team destroyed it with explosive charges during the night of the 24th. Elfriede had overturned; it was righted and recovered from No Man's Land three weeks later by French troops and British tanks, and handed over to the French for examination. Mephisto lay stuck in a crater behind German lines for almost three months. After the area was taken by Australian troops, in July, the tank was towed to the rear by British tanks and, eventually, transported to Australia.
Other actions In May, A7Vs were used with limited success in an attack on the French near
Soissons, during the
Third Battle of the Aisne. On 15 July, at
Reims (during the
Second Battle of the Marne), the Germans put eight A7Vs and 20 captured Mk IVs against the French lines. Although 10 of the Mk IVs were lost in this action, no A7Vs were lost. The final use in World War I of A7Vs was in a small but successful action on 11 October 1918, near
Iwuy.
Assessment '' Germany did not consider the A7V a success and planned other designs. However, the end of the war meant none of the other tanks in development or planned ones – such as the
Sturmpanzerwagen Oberschlesien and the 120-ton
K-Wagen – would be finished. With only 20 produced, the A7V made only a very minor contribution to the German war effort in World War I, and the approximately 50 captured British Mark IV tanks (renamed
Beutepanzer in German operation) the Germans fielded in action during the war outnumbered the A7V. In contrast, the French produced over 3,600 of their light
Renault FT, the most numerous tank of World War I, and the British over 2,500 of their
Mark I, II, III, IV, V, and V* heavy tanks. ==After the war==