Sir Murray
Fraser Sueter (1872 – 1960) was one of the most colourful personalities of the
Royal Navy prior to and through the First World War. He is best remembered today as a pioneer of
aviation – of airships as well as fixed-wing craft – and he was essentially the
creator of the RNAS, the Royal Navy Air Service. One of his most notable
achievements was development of the torpedo-carrying aircraft, and his was also
involved with innovative employment of armoured cars. A forceful personality,
he ran foul of senior levels in the Admiralty late in the war, and he retired –
or was perhaps induced to do so – at the age of only 48 as a Rear Admiral,
entering politics thereafter.
Prior however
to his association with aviation, Sueter had been involved with introduction of
submarines into the Royal Navy, a role that his specialism in torpedoes during
his early career fitted him for. In 1907 he published a massive volume entitled
“The Evolution of the Submarine Boat,
Mine and Torpedo”, with a subtitle of “From
the sixteenth century to the present time.” This massive tome, well-illustrated
by old prints and later by photographs, is a goldmine of information for
anybody interested in naval warfare. I
have been lucky to have access to a copy and the following account, of an early
experiment I had never previously heard of, draws upon it.
John Day (? – 1774) was a ship’s carpenter. When living in
Norfolk in the 1770s he became fascinated with the idea of submarines. He does
not seem to have paid attention to propulsion underwater and concentrated on
the ability to submerge a human safely. He experimented initially with models and
later modified a small boat in which he conducted test dives to 30-feet near Yarmouth,
ascending safely afterwards. Following
this success, he gained support of a gambler called Christopher Blake, and
others, who put 340 Pounds Sterling at Day’s disposal to build a "diving
chamber". A 50-ton sloop was purchased for conversion and was fitted out
for more ambitious tests.
Day had bet
with Blake that he could remain safely underwater for 12 hours. The time passed
and there was no sign of the craft itself, nor of the coloured floats which Day
had intended to release for signalling. Given the depth and the water pressure –
some 57 pounds per square inch – it is probable that the slab-sided wooden compartment
had collapsed. Lord Sandwich, First Lord of the Admiralty (professional head of
the navy) was in Plymouth at the time and he ordered the Frigate HMS Orpheus to undertake a rescue attempt.
These proved fruitless and hope was abandoned.
There was a macabre postscript. A London physician – a
Doctor Falcke – heard of the incident and rushed to Plymouth. He was convinced
that if Day was still in the air-filled chamber the cold of the water might
have kept “his blood in a good condition” and that animation might be
suspended. If the body could be recovered before decomposition set in then Falcke
believed that he could reanimate the body. With this in mind he privately
initiated sweeping operations. These located the wreckage some 300 yards from
shore but attempts to lift it failed when weather deteriorated. It seems that
Day’s body was never recovered.
Day’s death was to be the first in a submarine. It was not
to be the last and fatal accidents were to mark to development of these craft
long before they ever saw service in war.
And to read about another early submarine ...
... you may be interested in Britannia's Shark, in which a real-life submarine prototype developed by John Phillip Holland ("Father of the Submarine") plays a significant role/ Click on the image below for more details.
... you may be interested in Britannia's Shark, in which a real-life submarine prototype developed by John Phillip Holland ("Father of the Submarine") plays a significant role/ Click on the image below for more details.
To thank subscribers to the Dawlish Chronicles mailing list, a free, downloadable, copy of a new short story, Britannia's Eventide has been sent to them as an e-mail attachment.
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