Aircraft and Submarines: The Story of the Invention, Development, and Present-Day Uses of War's Newest Weapons

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Aircraft and Submarines: The Story of the Invention, Development, and Present-Day Uses of War's Newest Weapons by Willis J. Abbot, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Willis J. Abbot ISBN: 9781465504920
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: July 29, 2009
Imprint: Library of Alexandria Language: English
Author: Willis J. Abbot
ISBN: 9781465504920
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: July 29, 2009
Imprint: Library of Alexandria
Language: English

Not since gunpowder was first employed in warfare has so revolutionary a contribution to the science of slaughtering men been made as by the perfection of aircraft and submarines. The former have had their first employment in this world-wide war of the nations. The latter, though in the experimental stage as far back as the American Revolution, have in this bitter contest been for the first time brought to so practical a stage of development as to exert a really appreciable influence on the outcome of the struggle. Comparatively few people appreciate how the thought of navigating the air's dizziest heights and the sea's gloomiest depths has obsessed the minds of inventors. From the earliest days of history men have grappled with the problem, yet it is only within two hundred years for aircraft and one hundred for submarines that any really intelligent start has been made upon its solution. The men who really gave practical effect to the vague theories which others set up—in aircraft the Wrights, Santos-Dumont, and Count Zeppelin; in submarines Lake and Holland—are either still living, or have died so recently that their memory is still fresh in the minds of all. In this book the author has sketched swiftly the slow stages by which in each of these fields of activity success has been attained. He has collated from the immense mass of records of the activities of both submarines and aircraft enough interesting data to show the degree of perfection and practicability to which both have been brought. And he has outlined so far as possible from existing conditions the possibilities of future usefulness in fields other than those of war of these new devices. The most serious difficulty encountered in dealing with the present state and future development of aircraft is the rapidity with which that development proceeds. Before a Congressional Committee last January an official testified that grave delay in the manufacture of airplanes for the army had been caused by the fact that types adopted a scant three months before had become obsolete, because of experience on the European battlefields, and later inventions before the first machines could be completed. There may be exaggeration in the statement but it is largely true. Neither the machines nor the tactics employed at the beginning of the war were in use in its fourth year. The course of this evolution, with its reasons, are described in this volume

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Not since gunpowder was first employed in warfare has so revolutionary a contribution to the science of slaughtering men been made as by the perfection of aircraft and submarines. The former have had their first employment in this world-wide war of the nations. The latter, though in the experimental stage as far back as the American Revolution, have in this bitter contest been for the first time brought to so practical a stage of development as to exert a really appreciable influence on the outcome of the struggle. Comparatively few people appreciate how the thought of navigating the air's dizziest heights and the sea's gloomiest depths has obsessed the minds of inventors. From the earliest days of history men have grappled with the problem, yet it is only within two hundred years for aircraft and one hundred for submarines that any really intelligent start has been made upon its solution. The men who really gave practical effect to the vague theories which others set up—in aircraft the Wrights, Santos-Dumont, and Count Zeppelin; in submarines Lake and Holland—are either still living, or have died so recently that their memory is still fresh in the minds of all. In this book the author has sketched swiftly the slow stages by which in each of these fields of activity success has been attained. He has collated from the immense mass of records of the activities of both submarines and aircraft enough interesting data to show the degree of perfection and practicability to which both have been brought. And he has outlined so far as possible from existing conditions the possibilities of future usefulness in fields other than those of war of these new devices. The most serious difficulty encountered in dealing with the present state and future development of aircraft is the rapidity with which that development proceeds. Before a Congressional Committee last January an official testified that grave delay in the manufacture of airplanes for the army had been caused by the fact that types adopted a scant three months before had become obsolete, because of experience on the European battlefields, and later inventions before the first machines could be completed. There may be exaggeration in the statement but it is largely true. Neither the machines nor the tactics employed at the beginning of the war were in use in its fourth year. The course of this evolution, with its reasons, are described in this volume

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Air Service Boys Over the Rhine Fighting Above the Clouds by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book Bureaucracy by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book Cyril of Jerusalem, Gregory Nazianzen by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book Green Fire: A Romance by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book Gleanings by the Way by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book Ranald Bannerman's Boyhood by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book The Old Man of the Mountain by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book A Survey of Russian Literature with Selections by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves Florida Narratives by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book Henry Ossian Flipper, the Colored Cadet at West Point by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book The Russian Garland: Being Russian Folk Tales by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book Benjamin Franklin: A Picture of the Struggles of Our Infant Nation One Hundred Years Ago by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book The Two Tests: The Supernatural Claims of Christianity Tried by Two of Its Own Rules by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book Silverspur, The Mountain Heroine: A Tale of the Arapaho Country by Willis J. Abbot
Cover of the book A Description of the Coasts of East Africa and Malabar in the Beginning of the Sixteenth Century by Willis J. Abbot
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy