Robert Fulton and the Nautilus Submarine
Then came another American, Robert Fulton, who in 1801 successfully built and operated a submarine in
Robert Fulton - Nautilus Submarine 1801
Robert Fulton's cigar-shaped Nautilus submarine was driven by a hand-cranked propeller when submerged, and had a kite-like sail for surface power. The Nautilus submarine was the first submersible to have separate propulsion systems for surfaced and submerged operations. It also carried flasks of compressed air that permitted the two-man crew to remain submerged for five hours.
William Bauer - 1850
William Bauer, a German, built a submarine in
As his craft was sinking, he opened the flood valves to equalize the pressure inside the submarine so the escape hatch could be opened. Bauer had to convince two terrified seamen that this was the only means of escape. When the water was at chin level, the men were shot to the surface with a bubble of air that blew the hatch open. Bauer's simple technique was rediscovered years later and employed in modern submarines' escape compartments that operate on the same principle.
Horace Lawson Hunley
During the American Civil War, Confederate inventor Horace Lawson Hunley converted a steam boiler into a submarine.
This Confederate submarine called the could be propelled at four knots by a hand-driven screw. Unfortunately, the submarine sank twice during trials in
The Hunley
Subsequently, the submarine was raised and renamed the Hunley </od/weirdmuseums/ig/Submarine-Photo-Gallery/Horace-Lawson-Hunley.htm>. In 1864, armed with a 90-pound charge of powder on a long pole, the Hunley attacked and sank a new Federal steam sloop, USS Housatonic, at the entrance to
After her successful attack on
In 1995 the wreck of the Hunley was located four miles off Sullivans Island, South Carolina. Even though she sank, the Hunley proved that the submarine could be a valuable weapon in time of war.
Biography - Horace Lawson Hunley 1823-1863
Horace Lawson Hunley was born in Sumner County, Tennessee, on
In 1861, after the start of the American Civil War, Horace Lawson Hunley joined James R. McClintock and Baxter Watson in building the submarine Pioneer, which was scuttled in 1862 to prevent its capture. The three men later constructed two submarines at
During a test dive on
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