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TIME MACHINE
225 YEARS AGO
THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR SUBMARINE
BY FREDERIC D. SCHWARZ
One night in early September, in New York Harbor, a small vessel called the Turtle made the world’s first submarine attack on a warship. The pilot, Ezra Lee, was a sergeant in the Continental Army. He began by riding the tide at surface level to the vicinity of a British ship, possibly the 64-gun HMS Eagle, flagship of Adm. Richard Howe’s fleet. He then submerged and maneuvered his craft beneath the ship, using a paddle-driven propeller.
Lee tried to screw a time-fused mine into the ship’s hull, but his drill would not penetrate, perhaps because it struck an iron bracket supporting the rudder. (The failure is sometimes blamed on copper sheathing, but the drill would have penetrated that.) Running short on air—he could stay submerged for 15 to 30 minutes at most—Lee abandoned the attempt, surfaced, and paddled away. To distract the British sailors pursuing him, he released the mine, which exploded shortly after dawn to the great wonder of everyone in the vicinity. Two more unsuccessful attacks followed later in the month, and, not long afterward, the Turtle and its mother ship were sunk by the British, ending the Continentals’ submarine experiments.
The Turtle had been designed by a recent Yale graduate named David Bushnell. It was egg-shaped and about seven feet tall and rode upright in the water, weighted down with lead ballast. Water could be admitted into a chamber in the bottom to submerge and expelled with a hand pump to surface. Maneuvering, which must have been crude, was accomplished with the propeller and a rudder. A piece of funguscovered rotting wood, which gave off a soft glow known as foxfire, provided the only light inside.
After the Turtle’s destruction, Bushnell deployed floating and tethered mines against the Royal Navy, with some success, before joining an engineering corps in 1779. Following the Revolution, he moved to Georgia, where he died in 1826. Bushnell had nothing further to do with submarines, but research on the technology continued. Although the man-powered Confederate vessel H. L. Hunley, in 1864, became the first submarine to sink a ship, it took the development of electric and internal-combustion engines in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to make submarines into practical weapons of war.
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25 YEARS AGO
September 1, 1976 Rep. Wayne Hays, chairman of the House Ways and Means committee, resigns after his affair with a staff member is revealed.
September 16, 1976 The U.S. Episcopal Church votes to allow the ordination of women.
September 20, 1976 Playboy releases an interview in which Jimmy Carter, the Democratic candidate for President, admits having “committed adultery in my heart many times.”
50 YEARS AGO
September 8, 1951 In San Francisco, 49 nations sign a treaty restoring full sovereignty to Japan.
75 YEARS AGO
September 18, 1926 A devastating hurricane hits Florida, killing 372 people, destroying 5,000 homes, and putting a serious dent in the Florida land boom.
September 23, 1926 In Philadelphia, Jack Dempsey loses his heavyweight boxing title to Gene Tunney.
100 YEARS AGO
September 2, 1901 In a speech at the Minnesota state fair, Vice President Theodore Roosevelt quotes what he says is an African proverb: “Speak softly and carry a big stick.”
September 7, 1901 China agrees to pay $333 million to indemnify the United States and five other nations for damage inflicted in the anticolonial Boxer Rebellion.
September 14, 1901 President William McKinley dies after having been shot in Buffalo, New York, a week earlier. Theodore Roosevelt succeeds him as President.
225 YEARS AGO
September 16, 1776 Continental troops led by George Washington hold off the British at the Battle of Harlem Heights in New York City.
September 22, 1776 Nathan Hale, a spy for the rebellious colonists, is hanged after saying, “I regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.”
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