First War Use Submarine
Submersible Torpedo Boat
Bushnell's
Submersible Torpedo Boat, 1776. Cutaway by Lt. Col. F.M. Barber, 1885, based on
Bushnell's description. (detail)
Submarines
were first used as offensive weapons in naval warfare during the American War
of Independence (1775-1783). Invented by Yale student David Bushnell, the
one-man boat "Turtle" was made of an upright walnut-shaped piece of
wood (see photo). Underwater, the boat was powered by a driver turning a
propeller. The plan was for the Turtle to approach a British warship
underwater, load the hull with gunpowder using a screw device operated from
inside the ship, and then leave the ship before a timer would detonate the
charge. In a real attack, however, Turtle was unable to drive the screws
through the copper cladding of the hull.
Robert
Fulton, a famous American inventor and artist, had been experimenting with
submarines for several years before the steamship Clermont sailed up the Hudson
River. In 1800, Fulton built the Nautilus submarine in France with a grant from
Napoleon Bonaparte. Completed in May 1801, the vessel was made of copper plates
on an iron frame. A collapsible mast and sails provided for surface propulsion,
and a hand-turned propeller powered the boat underwater. A precursor to the
conning tower, with glass-covered portholes, allowed observation from inside
the ship. The Nautilus dived by taking up water in ballast tanks, and a
horizontal "rudder", a precursor to a submarine, helped to keep the
boat at the desired depth. The submarine contained enough air to survive for
four men and to keep two candles burning underwater for three hours. Tanks of
compressed air were later added.
The
Nautilus, like the Turtle, was intended to plant explosives in the hulls of
enemy ships. Fulton experimentally sank an old schooner anchored at Brest, but
was unable to outrun any ships he saw as he tried to destroy British warships.
French interest in Fulton's submarine waned, and he traveled to England to
offer his invention to his former enemy. In 1805, the Nautilus sank the brig
Dorothy during trials, but the Royal Navy did not support his efforts.

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