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"Confederate Saboteurs: Building the Hunley and ..." Topic


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Tango0128 Oct 2015 9:57 p.m. PST

…Other Secret Weapons of the Civil War.
by Mark K. Ragan

"Facing an insurmountable deficit in resources compared to the Union navy, the Confederacy resorted to unorthodox forms of warfare to combat enemy forces.

Perhaps the most energetic and effective torpedo corps and secret service company organized during the American Civil War, the Singer Secret Service Corps, led by Texan inventor and entrepreneur Edgar Collins Singer, developed and deployed submarines, underwater weaponry, and explosive devices.

The group's main government-financed activity, which eventually led to other destructive inventions such as the Hunley submarine and behind-enemy-line railroad sabotage, was the manufacture and deployment of an underwater contact mine. During the two years the Singer group operated, several Union gunboats, troop transports, supply trains, and even the famous ironclad monitor Tecumseh fell prey to its inventions.

In Confederate Saboteurs: Building the Hunley and Other Secret Weapons of the Civil War, submarine expert and nautical historian Mark K. Ragan presents the untold story of the Singer corps. Poring through previously unpublished archival documents, Ragan also examines the complex personalities and relationships behind the Confederacy's use of torpedoes and submarines"

picture

See here
link

Amicalement
Armand

Tango0128 Oct 2015 10:14 p.m. PST

Ups… (smile)

TMP link

Sorry…

Amicalement
Armand

John the Greater29 Oct 2015 2:00 p.m. PST

Infernal machines!

Interestingly, the contact mines of the type used by the Confederacy were invented by a group working for the Russians before the Crimean War. Including Immanuel Nobel, who was the father of Alfred Nobel.

Tango0129 Oct 2015 10:32 p.m. PST

Quite interesting my friend.

Amicalement
Armand

kahunna31 Oct 2015 4:32 p.m. PST

The problem with the Russian mines was they were too small and didn't pack enough of a punch to damage, let alone sink a ship.

John the Greater02 Nov 2015 8:01 a.m. PST

True. Some of the Confederate, and later Paraguayan, mines were loaded with more that 500 lbs (225 kilos) of powder. Those could, and did, sink ironclads.

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