
- 216 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
PERHAPS no man in the past century has had as much to do with the shape of history as Simon Lake. That statement is intended as a query rather than as a statement of fact. It may be debatable, but it is also defendable.He is responsible for the modern submarine.The World War pivoted on him. Not on the Kaiser or Lloyd George or Hindenburg or Wilson or Ludendorff. He had nothing to do with the provocations or the settlements. He was an engineer almost unknown except on the coast of New Jersey and in a few capitals of Europe. His sympathies were not warmly engaged for either of the parties to the conflict. Not until the United States entered the war was he greatly stirred.Yet the pitch-pine boat he stitched and screwed and nailed together as a boy rattled a mighty empire. Great Britain's crown as Queen of the Seas almost slipped off her imperial head. If she had gone down, France must have gone with her. The consequences of such a collapse are now incalculable. Today's world may have been no worse than it is, but it must have been almost insanely different.
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Information
Table of contents
- Title page
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Foreword
- Illustrations
- CHAPTER I-A Small Red-Headed Boy
- CHAPTER II-Invention Runs in the Lake Blood
- CHAPTER III-Befriending the Oyster Pirates
- CHAPTER IV-First Contact with Big Business
- CHAPTER V-Repulsed by the Navy
- CHAPTER VI-A Submarine Built of Pitch Pine
- CHAPTER VII-World’s First Successful Submarine
- CHAPTER VIII-Case-Hardening an Inventor
- CHAPTER IX-The Devil in the River
- CHAPTER X-Cold Feet Cost Lake Three Million Dollars
- CHAPTER XI-The Argonaut Makes Good
- CHAPTER XII-Ice-Water Cure for Pneumonia
- CHAPTER XIII-Success in Salvaging Sunken Cargoes
- CHAPTER XIV-Invention of the Periscope
- CHAPTER XV-Big Trouble Really Begins for the Lake Company
- CHAPTER XVI-Russia Buys the Lake Submarines
- CHAPTER XVII-Smuggling the Lake Boat Across the Sea
- CHAPTER XVIII-Gospodin Simon Delivers the Goods
- CHAPTER XIX-Course of Naval History Almost Changed
- CHAPTER XX-Inventor Is Gypped by the Germans
- CHAPTER XXI-Hunting for the Lutine’s Treasure
- CHAPTER XXII-How Business Men Make War
- CHAPTER XXIII-United States Still Owes the Money
- CHAPTER XXIV-The First Cargo-Carrying Submarine
- CHAPTER XXV-British Sentimentality Pays Dividends
- CHAPTER XXVI-Society for the Protection of Inventors
- CHAPTER XXVII-Freight- and Passenger-Carrying Submarines in the Future
- CHAPTER XXVIII-A Confession of Failure