<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</SPAN><br/> <span class="subhead"><span class="smcap">Surface Boats</span></span></h2>
<p class="drop-cap3"><span class="smcap1">The</span> war on the submarine was fought
mainly from the surface of the sea and
from the air above the sea, and naturally it
resulted in many interesting naval developments.</p>
<p>As described in Chapter XIII, the first offensive
measure against the U-boat was the building
of swarms of speedy motor-boats which
drove the invaders away from harbors and into
the open sea. To follow the U-boats out into
rough water larger submarine-chasers were
built, but even they could not cope with the
enemy far from the harbors.</p>
<h3>MOTOR TORPEDO-BOATS</h3>
<p>The Italians made excellent use of speedy
motor-boats in the protected waters of the Adriatic
Sea. One type of motor-boat was equipped<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">299</SPAN></span>
with two torpedo-tubes in the bow. Small 14-inch
torpedoes were used, but as each torpedo
carried two hundred pounds of high explosive,
the motor-boat was a formidable vessel if it
crept in close enough to discharge one of these
missiles at its foe.</p>
<p>On one occasion, a patrol of these little boats
sighted a couple of Austrian dreadnoughts
headed down the coast, surrounded by a screen
of ten destroyers. Favored by the mist, two of
the motor-boats crept through the screen of destroyers,
and torpedoed the battle-ships. Then
they made good their escape. A destroyer that
pursued one of the boats decided that the game
was not worth while when it was suddenly
shaken up by the explosion of a depth bomb
dropped from the motor-boat.</p>
<h3>THE SEA TANK</h3>
<p>The Italians showed a great deal of naval initiative.
They were forever trying to trap the
Austrian fleet or to invade its harbors. Like
all other naval powers, the Austrians protected
their harbors with nets and mines. It was impossible
for submarines to make an entrance and
the ports were too well fortified to permit an<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">300</SPAN></span>
open attack on the surface. Nevertheless, the
Italians did break through the harbor defenses
on one or two occasions and sank Austrian war-vessels.
Again it was with a small boat that
they did the trick.</p>
<p>The nets which the Austrians stretched across
their harbor entrance were supported on wooden
booms or logs which served as floats. These
booms offered an effective bar to small boats
which might attempt to enter the harbor under
cover of darkness. But the Italians found a
way to overcome this obstruction. They built
a flat-bottomed motor-boat which drew very
little water. Running under the boat were two
endless chains, like the treads of a tank. In
fact, the boat came to be known as a "sea tank."
The chains were motor-driven and had spiked
sprockets, so that when a boom was encountered
they would bite into the wood and pull the boat
up over the log, or maybe they would drag the
log down under the boat. At any rate, with this
arrangement it was not very difficult to pass the
boom and enter the harbor. At the rear the
chains were carried back far enough to prevent
the propeller from striking when the boat had
passed over the log.</p>
<div id="ip_300" class="figcenter" style="width: 570px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_300.jpg" width-obs="570" height-obs="264" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">Courtesy of "Scientific American"</div>
<div class="caption0">An Italian "Sea-tank" climbing over a Harbor Boom</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">301</SPAN></span></p>
<div id="ip_301" class="figcenter" style="width: 529px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_301.jpg" width-obs="529" height-obs="362" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">(C) Underwood & Underwood</div>
<div class="caption0">Deck of a British Aircraft Mothership or "Hush ship"</div>
</div>
<h3>THE AWKWARD "EAGLES"</h3>
<p>A curious boat that we undertook to furnish
during the war was a cross between a destroyer
and a submarine-chaser. After the submarine
had been driven out to sea its greatest foe was
undoubtedly the destroyer, and frantic efforts
were made to turn out as many destroyers as
possible. But it takes time to build destroyers
and so a new type of boat was designed, to be
turned out quickly in large numbers. A hundred
and ten "Eagles" (as these boats are
called) were ordered, but the armistice was
signed before any of them were put into service;
and it is just as well that such was the case, for
in their construction everything was sacrificed
to speed of production. As a consequence they
are very ugly boats, with none of the fine lines
of a destroyer, and they roll badly, even when
the sea is comparatively peaceful. They are
five-hundred-ton boats designed to make eighteen
knots, which would not have been fast
enough to cope with U-boats, because the latter
could make as high a speed as that themselves,
when traveling on the surface, and the two
4-inch guns of the Eagles would have been far<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302">302</SPAN></span>
outranged by the 5.9-inch guns of the larger
U-boats.</p>
<h3>SEAPLANE TOWING-BARGES</h3>
<p>When the war on the U-boat was carried up
into the sky, many new naval problems cropped
up, particularly when German submarines
chose to work far out at sea. Big seaplanes
were used, but they consumed a great deal of
fuel in flying out and back, cutting down by just
so much their flying-radius at the scene of activities.
A special towing-barge was used. These
barges had trimming-tanks aft, which could be
flooded so that the stern of the barge would submerge.
A cradle was mounted to run on a pair
of rails on the barge. The body of the seaplane
was lashed to this cradle and then drawn up on
the barge by means of a windlass. This done,
the water was blown out of the trimming-tanks
by means of compressed air and the barge was
brought up to an even keel. The barge with
its load was now ready to be towed by a destroyer
or other fast boat to the scene of operations.
There water was again let into the
trimming-tanks and the seaplane was let back<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303">303</SPAN></span>
into the water. From the water the seaplane
arose into the air in the usual way.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, when the sea is at all rough
it is exceedingly difficult for a seaplane to take
wing, particularly a large seaplane. A better
starting-platform than the sea had to be furnished.
At first some seaplanes were furnished
with wheels, so that they could be launched from
platforms on large ships; and then, to increase
the flying-radius, seaplanes were discarded in
favor of airplanes. Once these machines were
launched, there was no way for them to get
back to the ship. They had to get back to land
before their fuel was exhausted.</p>
<p>On the large war-vessels a starting-platform
was built on a pair of long guns. Then the
war-ship would head into the wind and the combined
travel of the ship and of the airplane
along the platform gave speed enough to raise
the plane off the platform before it had run the
full length of the guns. But as long as aviators
had no haven until they got back to land, there
were many casualties. Eager to continue their
patrol as long as possible, they would sometimes
linger too long before heading for home<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304">304</SPAN></span>
and then they would not have enough fuel left
to reach land. Many an aviator was lost in this
way, and finally mother-ships for airplanes had
to be built.</p>
<div id="ip_304" class="figcenter" style="width: 555px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_304.jpg" width-obs="555" height-obs="325" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">Courtesy of "Scientific American"</div>
<div class="caption0">Electrically Propelled Boat or Surface Torpedo, Attacking a Warship, under
Guidance of an Airplane Scout</div>
</div>
<h3>THE "HUSH SHIPS"</h3>
<p>The British Navy had constructed a number of
very fast cruisers to deal with any raiders the
Germans might send out. These cruisers were
light vessels capable of such high speeds that
they could even overtake a destroyer. They
were 840 feet long and their turbines developed
90,000 horse-power. The construction of these
vessels was for a long time kept a profound
secret and it was not until the German fleet
surrendered that photographs of them were allowed
to be published. Because of this secrecy
the boats were popularly known as "hush ships."
They were not armored; it was not
necessary to load them down with armor plate,
because their protection lay in speed and they
were designed to fight at very long range. In
fact, they were to carry guns that would outrange
those of the most powerful dreadnoughts.
Our largest naval guns are of 16-inch caliber,
but the "hush ships" were each to carry two<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305">305</SPAN></span>
<i>18-inch guns</i>. The guns were monsters weighing
150 tons each and they fired a shell 18 inches
in diameter and 7 feet long to a distance of 30
miles when elevated to an angle of 45 degrees.
The weight of the shell was 3600 pounds and it
carried 500 pounds of high explosive or more
than is carried in the largest torpedoes.</p>
<p>At the 32-mile range the shell would pass
through 12 inches of face-hardened armor and
at half that range it would pass through armor
18 inches thick, and there is no armor afloat any
heavier than this.</p>
<div id="ip_305" class="figcenter" style="width: 554px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_305.jpg" width-obs="554" height-obs="238" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">Courtesy of "Scientific American"</div>
<div class="caption0">Hauling a Seaplane up on a Barge so that it may be Towed at High Speed by a Destroyer</div>
</div>
<h3>MOTHER-BOATS FOR AIRPLANES</h3>
<p>Armed with such powerful guns as these, the
"hush ships" would have been very formidable
indeed; but when the guns were mounted on one
of the cruisers, the <i>Furious</i>, they were found
too powerful for the vessel. It was evident that
the monsters would very seriously rack their
own ship. So the guns were taken off the
cruiser and it was turned into a mother-ship
for airplanes. A broad, unobstructed deck was
built on the ship which provided a runway from
which airplanes could be launched, and this runway
was actually broad enough to permit airplanes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306">306</SPAN></span>
to land upon it. Under the runway were
the hangars in which the airplanes were housed.
Other "hush ships" were also converted into
airplane mother-boats and there were special
boats built for this very purpose, although they
were not able to make the speed of the "hush
ships." One of these special boats had funnels
that turned horizontally to carry off the furnace
smoke over the stern and leave a perfectly clear
flying-deck, 330 feet long.</p>
<h3>TORPEDO-PROOF MONSTERS</h3>
<p>As for the 18-inch guns, they were put to another
use. Early in the war the British had
need for powerful shallow-draft vessels which
could operate off the Flanders coast and attack
the coast fortifications that were being built by
the Germans. The ships that were built to
meet this demand were known as monitors, because
like the famous "monitor" of our Civil
War they carried a single turret. These monitors
were very broad for their length and were
very slow. At best they could make only seven
knots and in heavy weather they could not make
more than two or three knots.</p>
<p>To be made proof against torpedoes these<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307">307</SPAN></span>
boats were formed with "blisters" or hollow
rounded swells in the hull at each side which
extended out to a distance of twelve to fifteen
feet. The blisters were subdivided into compartments,
so that if a torpedo struck the ship
it would explode against a blister at a considerable
distance from the real hull of the ship and
the force of the explosion would be expended
in the compartments. The blisters were the
salvation of the monitors. Often were the boats
struck by torpedoes without being sunk.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, this form of protection could
not be applied to ordinary vessels, because it
would have interfered seriously with navigation.
The blisters made the monitors very difficult
to steer and hampered the progress of a ship,
particularly in a seaway.</p>
<p>With ships such as these the British bombarded
Zeebrugge from a distance of twenty to
twenty-five miles. Of course, the range had to
be plotted out mathematically, as the target was
far beyond the horizon of the ship, and the
firing had to be directed by spotters in airplanes.</p>
<p>At first guns from antiquated battle-ships
were used in the monitors; then larger guns<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308">308</SPAN></span>
were used, until finally two of the monitors inherited
the 18-inch guns of the <i>Furious</i>. A
single gun was mounted on the after deck of each
vessel and the gun was arranged to fire only
on the starboard side. No heavily armored
turret was provided, but merely a light housing
to shelter the gun.</p>
<h3>AN ELECTRICALLY STEERED MOTOR-BOAT</h3>
<p>The British war-vessels that operated in the
shallow waters off the coast of Flanders were a
constant source of annoyance to the Germans.
Because of the shallow water it was seldom possible
for a submarine to creep up on them. A
U-boat required at least thirty-five feet of water
for complete submergence and it did not dare
to attack in the open. This led the Germans to
launch a motor-boat loaded with high explosive,
which was steered from shore. The motor-boat
carried a reel of wire which connected it
with an operator on shore. There was no pilot
in the boat, but the helm was controlled electrically
by the man at the shore station. As it
was difficult for the helmsman to see just what
his boat was doing, or just how to steer it when
it was several miles off, an airplane flew high<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309">309</SPAN></span>
above it and directed the helmsman, by radiotelegraphy,
how to steer his boat. Of course,
radiotelegraphy might have been used to
operate the steering-mechanism of the boat,
but there was the danger that the radio operators
of the British might send out disturbing
waves that would upset the control of the motor-boat,
and so direct wire transmission was used
instead. Fortunately, when the Germans tried
this form of attack, an alert British lookout discovered
the tiny motor-boat. The alarm was
given and a lucky shot blew up the boat with
its charge before it came near the British vessel.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310">310</SPAN></span></p>
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