You are here
قراءة كتاب Submarine Warfare of To-day How the Submarine Menace Was Met and Vanquished, with Descriptions of the Inventions and Devices Used, Fast Boats, Mystery Ships, Nets, Aircraft, &c. &c., Also Describing the Selection and Training of the Enormous Personnel Us
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

Submarine Warfare of To-day How the Submarine Menace Was Met and Vanquished, with Descriptions of the Inventions and Devices Used, Fast Boats, Mystery Ships, Nets, Aircraft, &c. &c., Also Describing the Selection and Training of the Enormous Personnel Us
frontier in the years 1914-1918.
Although jealous of any encroachment on the space available for the description of guerrilla war at sea, there are many things which must first be said regarding the organisation and training of what may appropriately be termed the "New Navy," which took the sea to combat the submarine and the mine; also of the novel weapons devised amid the whirl of war for their use, protection and offensive power. Into this brief recital of the events leading to the real thing an endeavour will be made to infuse the life and local colour, which, however, would be more appropriate in a personal narrative than in a general description of anti-submarine warfare of to-day, but without which much that is essential could not be written without dire risk of tiring the reader before the first few chapters had been passed.
The names of places and ships have necessarily been changed to avoid anything of a personal character, and all references to existing or dead officers and men have been rigidly excluded as objectionable and unnecessary in a book dealing entirely with events.
Many of the incidents described—written while the events stood out in clear, mental perspective—could no doubt be duplicated and easily surpassed by many whose fortunes took them into zones of sea war during the historic years just past. If such is found to be the case, then the object of this book has been accomplished, for it sets out to tell, not of great epoch-making events, but of the organisation, men, ships, weapons and ordinary incidents of life in what, for lack of a better term, has been called the "New Navy"—a production of the World War.
It may be that an apology is due for placing yet another war book before a war-weary public, but an effort has been made to make of the following chapters a record of British maritime achievement, more than a narrative of sea fighting, although to do this without introducing the human element, the arduous nature of the work, the monotony, the danger and, finally, the compensating moments of excitement would have been to falsify the account and belittle the achievement.
There are many books available, full of exciting stories of sea and land war, but no other, so far as the Author knows, which describes in detail and in plain phraseology those important "little things"—liable to be overlooked amid the whirl of war—which go to make an anti-submarine personnel, fleet and base, together with an account of "how it was done."
CONTENTS
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| I. | The Task of the Allied Navies | 17 |
| II. | The New Navy—Training an Anti-Submarine Force | 36 |
| III. | A Naval University in Time of War | 47 |
| IV. | The New Fleets in Being | 50 |
| V. | The Hydrophone and the Depth Charge | 70 |
| VI. | Some Curious Weapons of Anti-Submarine Warfare | 85 |
| VII. | Mystery Ships | 96 |
| VIII. | A Typical War Base | 102 |
| IX. | The Convoy System | 116 |
| X. | The Mysteries of Submarine Hunting Explained | 126 |
| XI. | The Mysteries of German Mine-Laying Explained | 143 |
| XII. | The Mysteries of Minesweeping Explained | 157 |
| XIII. | The Mine Barrage | 179 |
| XIV. | Off to the Zones of War | 187 |
| XV. | A Memorable Christmas | 192 |
| XVI. | The Derelict | 202 |
| XVII. | Mined-in | 209 |
| XVIII. | The Casualty | |

