Submarine Sound Signalling: Difference between revisions

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'''Submarine Sound Signalling''' was an experimental means of communication at sea trialled around 1911.
'''Submarine Sound Signalling''' was an experimental means of communication at sea trialled around 1911.


An Admiralty letter dated 11 October 1911 names some 30-50 ships to be fitted with apparatus from the American company, Gardner's or {{LieutRN}} Hervey's design.<ref>''Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1911'', p. 108.</ref>
An Admiralty letter dated 11 October 1911 names some 30-50 ships to be fitted with apparatus from the American company, Gardner's or {{LieutRN}} Hervey's design.{{ARTS1911|p. 108}}


==Coincidence==
==Coincidence==
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==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
*{{BibUKARTS1911}}
*{{ARTS1911}}
*{{BibTheTorpedomen}}
*{{BibTheTorpedomen}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}

Revision as of 16:48, 24 July 2012

Submarine Sound Signalling was an experimental means of communication at sea trialled around 1911.

An Admiralty letter dated 11 October 1911 names some 30-50 ships to be fitted with apparatus from the American company, Gardner's or Lieutenant Hervey's design.[1]

Coincidence

The building bearing the name "American Submarine Sound Signaling" sits prominently in Boston between North Station and the USS Constitution, where the editor had long wondered what it was referring to before discovering it was in his sphere of interest.

See Also

Footnotes

  1. Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1911. p. 108.

Bibliography