Its Your History

..centuries of history on cd-rom

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home History articles General History Articles A Look Back At Submarines

A Look Back At Submarines

E-mail Print PDF
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

It was centuries ago when men first delved into exploring water. Historical accounts show that men would submerse themselves underwater and breathe through hollow papyrus reeds as they hunted their unsuspecting prey. And although it is chalked up to a mere legend, it has been told that Alexander the Great descended in a device that kept its occupants dry and admitted light, possibly a glass tube of sorts.

It wasn't until 1578 that a design for an underwater vessel was recorded. This first design would have been fabricated of wood and waterproofed leather. It would have had the capability to row underwater. It would have, had it made it past the design process.

While the first design never sprouted wings, or fins if you will, in the 1600s the idea of Cornelius Van Drebbel, a Dutch doctor living in England, in 1620 took to the water. This submarine was powered by rowers pulling on oars that protruded through flexible leather seals in the hull. Above the water, floats held Snorkel air tubes up for passengers to breathe from. This allowed submergence to last several hours. Van Drebbel's submarine successfully maneuvered at depths of 12 to 15 feet below the surface of the Thames River.

The first American submarine, dubbed the Turtle, came about thanks to David Bushnell, a Yale graduate. Built in 1776, this one-man vessel submerged by admitting water into the hull and surfaced by pumping it out with a hand pump. This pedal-operated vessel was, in the hopes of the American people, a secret weapon that would soon take out British warships in New York Harbor.

Over the decades that passed, the submarine evolved from an egg shaped vessel to a cigar shaped. Inventors around the world worked to make an airtight contraption that would act as an underwater weapon against their enemies. Most failed upon testing, but each provided further information that would be used in future attempts. For instance, the submarines escape device was created back in 1850 when a crew was shot to the surface with an air bubble that blew the hatch open.

The first successful American submarine was a converted steam boiler invented by Horace Lawson Hunley, although to a tragic start. During testing, the lives of two crews were lost when the submarine sank. The second accident cost the life of the crew as well as the inventor, but that didn't stop the testing from going on. In 1864, renamed the Hunley, this vessel attacked and sank a new Federal steam sloop, USS Housatonic, at the entrance to Charleston Harbor, armed with a 90-pound charge of powder on a long pole. After the attack, the Hunley disappeared, to be rediscovered in the waters off Sullivans Island, South Carolina in 1995.

From the early moments in time, man has been on a quest to conquer all the earth. With a little imagination, an incredible mechanical device was worked into something magnificent and powerful. Today, submarines are used for purposes within war, and revered all over the world.

Victor Epand is an expert consultant about model boats, boat parts, and model submarines. You will find the best shopping at these sites for model boats, used boat parts, and historic model submarines.

Article Source : http://www.articleonlinedirectory.com/Art/90526/170/a-look-back-at-submarines.html

 
nosteam.jpg
Friday, 18 September 2009 09:00
This circular from the Admiralty to all Captains, dated August 26th, 1856 is from the Navy List of December 1860. It would appear that steam power was being used unnecessarily, and coal was being More...
pg1822.jpg
Thursday, 17 September 2009 09:00
On March 10th, 1777 John Aitkin, since known as Jack the Painter was hung on a gallows sixty four and a half feet high, being formed of the mizen-mast of the Arethusa at Portsmouth Dockyard. His body More...
warrior1860.jpg
Wednesday, 16 September 2009 09:00
HMS Warrior, the first iron-hulled, armour-plated warship, was built for the Royal Navy in response to the French ironclad warship La Gloirefirst, which was launched a year earlier. She was built in More...
emden.jpg
Tuesday, 15 September 2009 09:00
On September 10th, 1914 the elusive German light-cruiser Emden, not been seen for several weeks, suddenly appeared in the Bay of Bengal. Between September the 10th and the 16th she captured seven More...
Sunday, 22 May 2011 22:10
The city of Dakar is situated on the Atlantic coast of the country of Senegal. The peninsula Cap-Vert is quite well known in Senegal and here is where the capital city of Senegal is located at. More...
Sunday, 22 May 2011 22:08
What is Perfume? Individuals have employed perfumes for just about all of recorded history. While hygiene standards have varied over hundreds of years (Queen Isabella of Spain, the 1400s, boasts More...
Sunday, 22 May 2011 22:05
Awarded each year to the winners of the Super Bowl, the Lombardi Trophy is the most coveted award in American football. The Super Bowl was known as the AFL-NFL World Championship Game in the early More...
Sunday, 22 May 2011 21:59
Anyone that has a fascination with historical events knows that you always look at the important events, groups, and ideas from the past to help shape the world's future. History is so broad of a More...

SEARCH

RSS FEEDS

The Archive General History Articles Naval History Today in history

Products

Battlefield Tour Operation Varsity
Battlefield Tour Operation Varsity
£9.95
£4.48
You Save: 55.00%

Standing Orders of the Second Battalion of the 62nd or Wiltshire
Standing Orders of the Second Battalion of the 62nd or Wiltshire
£9.95
£4.48
You Save: 55.00%

1911-1912 Kellys Portsmouth Directory
1911-1912 Kellys Portsmouth Directory
£11.95
£5.38
You Save: 55.00%

History of The Royal Marines 1755-1792
History of The Royal Marines 1755-1792
£9.95
£4.48
You Save: 55.00%

The Football Annual 1895, (Football Association and Rugby Union)
The Football Annual 1895, (Football Association and Rugby Union)
£9.95
£4.48
You Save: 55.00%