Limpet mine
A limpet mine is a type of naval mine attached to a target by magnets. It is so named because of its superficial similarity to the limpet, a type of sea snail that clings tightly to rocks or other hard surfaces.
A swimmer or diver may attach the mine, which is usually designed with hollow compartments to give the mine only slight negative buoyancy, making it easier to handle underwater.
Usually limpet mines are set off by a time fuze. They may also have an anti-handling device, making the mine explode if removed from the hull by enemy divers or by explosions. Sometimes the limpet mine was fitted with a small turbine which would detonate the mine after the ship had sailed a certain distance, so that it was likely to sink in navigable channels or deep water out of reach of easy salvage and making it harder to find what caused the sinking.
History
In December 1938, a new unit was created in the British military that soon became known as Military Intelligence (Research) — usually abbreviated as MI(R) or occasionally as MIR. MI(R) absorbed a technical section that was at first known as MI(R)c. In April 1939, Joe Holland, the head of MIR, recruited his old friend Major Millis Rowland Jefferis (1899–1963[2]) as director of the technical section and under his leadership the team would go on to develop a wide range of innovative weapons.[3][4]
One of Jefferis' earliest ideas was for a type of mine that could be towed behind a rowboat, but which would attach itself to the hull of a ship that it passed. Getting a heavy bomb to stick to a ship reliably was a problem; the obvious answer was to use magnets which should be as powerful as possible.
In July 1939, Jefferis read an issue of the popular magazine Armchair Science, which contained a small article on magnets:
The most powerful permanent magnet in the world—for its size—has been developed in the research laboratories of the General Electric Company in New York. Only half the size of the eraser on a lead pencil, it will lift a flat-iron weighing 5 lb. Its magnetic attraction is several times as strong as that of any previous magnet. The strongly magnetic alloy forming the magnet can be used, too, in electrical equipment to replace electro-magnets that require current.[5]
On 17 July 1939, he contacted the editor of the magazine for more information about the magnets; the editor was Stuart Macrae.
During World War I, Macrae had briefly worked on a device for dropping hand grenades from aircraft, and he longed for a return to working on such challenges. When Jefferis' call came, he promptly undertook to perform experiments and to produce prototypes. Macrae contacted Cecil Vandepeer Clarke (1897–1961) then managing director of the Low Loading Trailer Company—Macrae had been editor of a caravan and trailer magazine. He had been impressed by Clarke's work on caravans a couple of years previously and he needed his expertise and the use of his workshops.[6][7] Macrae and Clarke soon agreed to cooperate on the design of a new weapon, but they quickly abandoned any thought of a towed mine as impractical. Instead, they worked on a bomb that could be carried by a diver and attached directly to a ship.[8] The new weapon would become known as a limpet mine.
The first versions were assembled in a few weeks. The innovative design included a ring of small strong magnets for adhesion and the detonator used slowly dissolving aniseed ball sweets to provide the necessary time to get away.[9]
Just before war was declared, Macrae's name was put forward to Holland who arranged to meet him. Holland considered that Macrae would make a good second in command for Jefferis: He saw Macrae as a capable administrator who could keep his geniuses in order. Macrae joined the War Office as a civilian and Holland saw to it that Macrae got a commission in October 1939 (backdated to 1 September).[8]
Clarke joined the top secret Cultivator No. 6 project as a civilian and later joined the army. He served in the Special Operations Executive (SOE) with Colin Gubbins and would later be appointed Commandant of one of the Secret Intelligence Service's schools.[10] He eventually rejoined Macrae when he was transferred to MD1 in 1942.
The "rigid limpets" used by the British during World War II contained only 4 1⁄2 pounds (2.0 kg) of explosive,[11] but placed 2 metres (6.6 ft) below the water line they caused a wide hole in an unarmoured ship.[12] SOE agents could be provided with a 5 feet (1.5 m) long placing rod.[13]
A smaller version named "Clam" was developed from the British limpet for use on land. After it was used on Wehrmacht Heer armored fighting vehicles of Nazi Germany, the German Zimmerit coating was developed to counter it.
Examples of use
One of the most dramatic examples of their use was during Operation Jaywick, a special operation undertaken in World War II. In September 1943, 14 Allied commandos from the Z Special Unit raided Japanese shipping in Singapore Harbour. They paddled into the harbour and placed limpet mines on several Japanese ships before returning to their hiding spot. In the resulting explosions, the limpet mines sank or seriously damaged seven Japanese ships, comprising over 39,000 tons among them.[14]
An example of the use of limpet mines by British special forces was in Operation Frankton which had the objective of disabling and sinking merchant shipping moored at Bordeaux, France in 1942. The operation was the subject of the film The Cockleshell Heroes.[15]
Another case was Raid on Alexandria (1941) by Italian Navy divers, who attacked and disabled two British Royal Navy battleships in the harbour of Alexandria, Egypt, using manned torpedoes.
Limpet mines were also used by the Norwegian Independent Company 1 in 1944 to attack the MS Monte Rosa. On January 16, 1945, 10 limpet mines were placed along the port side of the SS Donau approximately 50 centimetres (20 in) beneath the waterline. These bombs were to detonate once the Donau cleared Oslofjord and reached open sea, however, the departure time was delayed and the explosion occurred before the Donau reached Drøbak.
In 1980 a limpet mine was used to sink the Sierra, a whaling vessel which docked in Portugal after a confrontation with the Sea Shepherd.[16] Later that year, about half the legal Spanish whaling fleet was sunk in a similar fashion.[17]
Another use was the sinking of Greenpeace's Rainbow Warrior by French DGSE agents in Auckland harbour, New Zealand, on July 10, 1985.[18][19]
Egyptian limpets were modified by the CIA for use by the Mujahideen in the Soviet Afghan war, and could be attached to Soviet trucks.[20] In liberation war of Bangladesh(1971) limpets were used by liberation fighters in Operation Jackpot, in Mogla seaport.
References
Notes
- ↑ T 166/40.
- ↑ Unattributed. Sir Millis Jefferis – New Weapons Of War (Obituary). The Times, 7 September 1963 p. 10 column E.
- ↑ National Archive. T 166 – Hearing 16 November 1953 – Macrae. Document 320
- ↑ Warwicker 2002, p. pxxiv.
- ↑ "World's Most Powerful Magnet". Armchair Science (July 1939) p.70
- ↑ John Vandepeer Clarke. "Wartime memories of my childhood in Bedford Part 1". WW2 People's War (BBC). Retrieved 2012-04-10.
- ↑ National Archive. T 166 — Hearing 16 November 1953 — Macrae. Document 328.
- 1 2 National Archive. T 166-21 Awards to Inventors — Macrae and others.
- ↑ Unattributed. "Limpet Bomb Claim By Inventors — Use Of Aniseed Balls." The Times 17 November 1953 p. 4 column F.
- ↑ National Archive. HS 9/321/8 – SOE Personnel File: Cecil Vandepeer Clarke.
- ↑ HS 7/28; Seaman 2001, p. 43
- ↑ Lovell 1963, p. 179.
- ↑ HS 7/28; Seaman 2001, p. 44
- ↑ "Operation Jaywick". Australian Government Department of Veterans' Affairs. Retrieved 2012-04-10.
- ↑ "Limpet". The Canvas Kayak Website. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
- ↑ "Paul Watson: Sea Shepherd eco-warrior fighting to stop whaling and seal hunts". Telegraph.co.uk. 2009-04-17. Retrieved 2012-04-10.
- ↑ "The Sea Shepherd". The Sierra Campaign. Retrieved 2012-04-10.
- ↑ Bremner, Charles (July 11, 2005). "Mitterrand ordered bombing of Rainbow Warrior, spy chief says". Times Online (Times Newspapers). Archived from the original on 2007-02-22. Retrieved 2012-04-10.
- ↑ "Rainbow Warrior sinks after explosion". On This Day (British Broadcasting Corporation). July 10, 1985. Retrieved 2012-04-10.
- ↑ Crile, George. Charlie Wilson's War Grove/Atlantic, 2003. chapter 22: "Mohammed's Arms Bazar" p.318 (paperback)
Bibliography
- Bunker, Stephen (2007). Joanne Moore, ed. Spy Capital of Britain: Bedfordshire's Secret War 1939–1945. Bedford Chronicles Press. ISBN 978-0-906020-03-6.
- Ismay, General Lord (1960). The Memoirs of Lord Ismay. Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-8371-6280-5.
- Lovell, Stanley P (July 1963). "Deadly Gadgets of the OSS". Popular Science (Bonnier Corporation) 183 (1): 56–59, 178–180. Retrieved 14 April 2012.
- MacKenzie, S. P. (1995). The Home Guard — A Military and Political History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-820577-5.
- O'Connor, Bernard (2010). 'Nobby' Clarke: Churchill's Backroom Boy. Lulu. ISBN 978-1-4478-3101-3.
- Seaman, Mark (2001). Secret Agent's Handbook. First Lyons Press. ISBN 1-58574-286-4. – The bulk of this book is a reprint of National Archives documents HS 7/28 and HS 7/28.
- Macrae, Stuart (1971). Winston Churchill's Toyshop. Roundwood Press. ISBN 978-0-900093-22-7.
- Thomson, George; Farren, William (1958). Fredrick Alexander Lindemann, Viscount Cherwell. Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 4. Heinemann. ISBN 978-3-8423-3944-6. Cite uses deprecated parameter
|coauthor=
(help) - Warwicker, John (2002). With Britain in Mortal Danger: Britain's Most Secret Army of WWII. Cerberus. ISBN 978-1-84145-112-1.
- "HS 7/28: Descriptive catalogue of special devices and supplies". The Catalogue. The National Archives.
- "HS 7/30: Information on weapons, portable transmitting and receiving equipment; With diagrams and booklet.". The Catalogue. The National Archives.
- "T 166/40: Awards to Inventors, CV Clarke, supplementary evidence". The Catalogue. The National Archives.
External links
- "Mk 1 Limpet Mine" (jpg). Retrieved 2012-04-10.
- 2 frogmen carrying limpet mines on their backs