We love eBooks
    Download Unheard, Unseen: Submarine E14 and the Dardanelles pdf, epub, ebook

    This site is safe

    You are at a security, SSL-enabled, site. All our eBooks sources are constantly verified.

    Unheard, Unseen: Submarine E14 and the Dardanelles

    By David Boyle

    What do you think about this eBook?

    About

    In the new year of 1915, with the world locked in a terrible conflict, Winston Churchill conceived of a bold plan. Constantinople would be seized and Turkey knocked out of the war.

    The key was the Dardanelles.

    The British submarine E14 approached the portal of the Ottoman Empire, viewing the ominous darkness from its small conning tower, eight feet above the waves.

    If a submarine could manage to reach down the Dardanelles and into the Sea of Mamora it would block the Turks from using the route, potentially doing more to finish the war than any other single act.

    But it meant undertaking possibly the longest dive ever contemplated in a submarine.

    It also meant passing the wreckage of the submarines that had tried to pass that way in the days and weeks before: their dead buried on the beach, their survivors in captivity.

    The submarine’s captain, Lieutenant Commander Courtney Boyle, had a plan. It was to get as far as possible to conserve their battery before diving, to dive as deep as possible under the obstructions, but to rise to periscope depth as often as possible in the most difficult sections of the journey, where the current was most unpredictable, to make sure the submarine did not drift.

    He was acutely aware that his own skill and experience was now the determining factor, above all others, in his survival, the survival of the other 29 men on board, and of course of the success or otherwise of the mission.

    The crew had said their goodbyes. They had written their farewell letters and given them into safekeeping, knowing that the chances were now against their survival…

    E14 was many things. A grave, a symbol of the heroism of the crew, and a memory of those pioneering submariners of a century ago who first learned how to sail and fight underwater. It also remains the only submarine in the world which provided both its two commanding officers with the highest national decoration for bravery.

    “Before the war, what submarines could do was one mystery,” wrote Winston Churchill in his book The World Crisis. “What they would be ordered to do was another.”

    'Unheard, Unseen: Submarine E14 and the Dardanelles' is the thrilling story of that mission. It is essential reading for anyone interested in WW1.

    David Boyle is a British author and journalist who writes mainly about history and new ideas in economics, money, business and culture. He lives in Crystal Palace, London. His latest book is 'Broke: Who Killed The Middle Classes'.

    Endeavour Press is the UK's leading independent publisher of digital books.
    Download eBook Link updated in 2017
    Maybe you will be redirected to source's website
    Thank you and welcome to our newsletter list! Ops, you're already in our list.

    eBooks by David Boyle

    Author's page

    Related to this eBook

    Browse collections

    Keep connected to us

    Follow us on Social Media or subscribe to our newsletter to keep updated about eBooks world.

    Explore eBooks

    Browse all eBook collections

    Collections is the easy way to explore our eBook directory.