usually men in the american milittia
King George III
Not really. The current hand grenade had not been invented. There WERE "grenades" of a sort- large metal balls filled with gunpowder, with a burning fuse- but they were rarely used.
The main difference in warfare is the advancement in technology that we have today. In the revolutionary war, soldiers mostly only had little swords and primative firearms. Today, however, the American military has very high-tech weaponary, and defensive systems. Not to mention, the size of the military has vastly increased.
Germany used the Grenade first in WW1 So germany was the first county to use the grenade
ummm. A USED hand grenade wouldn't exist because, it's only a 1 time use as when you pull the pin it explodes, so therefore you wouldn't get a used hand grenade only the little bits a pieces of one.
An explosive powder that is no longer used.
The Mark (MK) I hand grenade was used in WW1 The MK II A1 and MK III A2 were used in WW2
It's a grenade launcher - used by american military.
Information like that is lost in the sands of time.
This is the fuze used with the M69 PRACTICE hand grenade. They are a relatively common item, and would have a value of a dollar or two, if any.
stiealhand grenade, frag grenade, smoke grenade tabun gas grenade, and sticky grenade stieal? (Steel?) hand grenade, frag grenade, smoke grenade, tabun gas grenade, sticky grenade. There are also Anti-Tank HEAT and white phosphorus smoke, or other types of smoke grenades that are thrown and, or projected by rifles and other launchers. Fragmentation grenades and flairs can also be launched from a rifle grenade launcher/adapter. Furthermore, there are also offensive and defensive fragmentation hand grenades. Offensive grenades have either a plastic case with out fragments, or many very small fragments that do not travel far and are thus little danger to the advancing troupes who tossed it some required distance. The Offensive hand grenade has fragments who's size is chosen to trade effective radius against chance to inflict a disabling wound. Larger fragments travel farther, but there are less of them which reduces the chance of success at longer ranges where their spread is farther apart.
It doesn't matter. It is commonly used "the revolutionary war" but either way is fine.
Yes, but check before hand to make sure they can handle the pressure of Propane (they can if they can handle Green Gas or Top Gas)
The "Turtle" in the Revolutionary War.
Revolutionary War 1776.
There was the Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch, which was used to kill the killer rabbit.