Roy Manstan and Frederic Frese 400 pages hardcover
The Remarkable History and Reconstruction of the First Operational Submarine
At the onset of the American Revolution, the British expected to quell
the rebellion quickly with a show of overwhelming force. In an
experiment in asymmetric warfare, David Bushnell created the first
submarine vessel designed specifically "for the destruction of vessels
of war." On a quiet September night in 1776, sergeant Ezra Lee
maneuvered Bushnell's strange little craft out from Manhattan and into
the midst of the greatest naval fleet ever assembled in the Americas.
Lee's goal was to sink the British flagship HMS Eagle by attaching a
powerful explosive to its hull. Although the mission was unsuccessful,
Bushnell's concept of submarine warfare was considered by George
Washington to have been "an effort of genius."
David Bushnell was raised in the town of Saybrook at the mouth of the
Connecticut River. More than two centuries later, another Turtle would
be launched into the same river within sight of Bushnell's first forays
with his vessel during the summer of 1775. Under the direction of
technical arts teacher Frederic J. Frese, students at Old Saybrook High
School created a working replica of Bushnell's submarine, facilitated
through an education partnership with the Naval Undersea Warfare Center
in Newport, Rhode Island, where Roy R. Manstan was a mechanical engineer
and Navy trained diver. With twenty-first century submariners at the
helm, the Turtle replica was subjected to a series of operational tests
at the Mystic Seaport Museum in Mystic, Connecticut.
In Turtle: David Bushnell's Revolutionary Vessel, the authors
provide new insight into Bushnell's "engine of devastation," tracing the
history of undersea warfare before Bushnell and the origin of the many
innovations Bushnell understood would be necessary for conducting a
covert submarine attack. The knowledge gained from testing the Turtle
replica enabled the authors to speculate as to what America's first
submariner Ezra Lee experienced that September night and what may have
caused the attack to fail.