Lions Led By Donkeys Podcast - Episode 355 - The Turtle, The World's First Combat Submarine
Episode Date: March 24, 2025Liveshow tickets are now available for April 11th in London: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/lions-led-by-donkeys-podcast-live-in-london-11th-april-2025-tickets-1266997737339?aff=oddtdtcreator Livest...ream tickets are also available for those who can't make it: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/livestream-lions-led-by-donkeys-podcast-live-in-london-11th-april-2025-tickets-1266999251869?aff=oddtdtcreator SUPPORT THE SHOW ON PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/lionsledbydonkeys The Turtle was the world's first combat submarine, built during the American Revolution, and somehow, it didn't turn into an elaborate suicide device. Sources: https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/head-tilting-history/bushnells-turtle-revolutionary-submarine https://www.masshist.org/beehiveblog/2022/06/the-turtle-submarine-warfare-during-the-american-revolution/ https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/1942/february/david-bushnell-and-first-american-submarine https://www.nationalgeographic.com/premium/article/submersible-history-revolutionary-war https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/article/david-bushnells-turtle-the-worlds-first-submarine/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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the link will also be in the show notes. Thanks and we hope to see you in London! Hello and welcome to the Lions at Bydunkies podcast.
We're time traveling soldiers from the 21st century.
We've jumped back in time to the American Revolution.
However, we did not build
the time machine or mean to become time travelers. Rather, for reasons I cannot legally get into,
we were all crowded into a porter potty at the same time. Inside, the mixture of shit, piss,
sweat and cum mixed together at just the right amounts and then they began to resonate with
one another at the perfect frequency.
In a flash of light, we were ripped back in time.
Our porter potty lands in the middle of a continental army camp.
The door flies open, and we pour out onto the grass.
Confused and angry, the soldiers of the revolution walk over to us.
Upon breathing in the mist of shit, piss, sweat, and cum. Several men pass out and begin vomiting.
Which! Yells a soldier. Whores of the devil! Yells another. The men rush us armed with
anything they get their hands on and we're promptly beaten to death. How you boys do
it?
It feels like what you have just described sounds like if a bunch of Joes in the army
had to fucking diss it, like one-upped each other to write a story
about involving portagons and jacking off.
And one of them accidentally invented the plot
of the Soviet science fiction film, Kin Zata.
Like dead serious, like critical mass
of gross shit in the portagons.
And then you have to draw the time travel rune,
a huge cock and balls,
and it causes you to travel through time in the portagons
that is your time travel machine.
I was really gonna try to pivot that into a plug for my book the hooligans of Kandahar
It's been so long since I've seen kins of it. I'm pretty sure it's a phone booth. There's no come involved
It's a Soviet film. They're pretty prudish about that. Yeah, the dictatorship of the proletariat does not come
Fuck out of it because there's no intellectual property rights for a country that doesn't exist anymore
Well, you know you can pirate the fuck out of it because there's no intellectual property rights for a country that doesn't exist anymore Your movie our movie
Do a fan reboot with Joe and a port of John, but it's that 70s sci-fi movie
So would give me a whole bunch of tablets to think I feel like I could do this
Try this fucking port of John time machine is just such a fucking cursed energy
What if the time machine was also just a scab?
was such a fucking cursed energy. What if a time machine was also just a scab
that you had to peel?
I one time saw, and I participated in an argument
between contractors like the, you know,
ACOM fucking welders and soldiers writing back and forth,
like a primitive message board in Sharpie
on a Porta John wall.
And basically arguing about how contractors are pieces
of shit and don't do any fighting.
And basically like, you know, somebody tried to say, we're here because you know, we're
fighting the people who did 9-11.
And then someone wrote, 9-11 was planted fucking Hamburg, Germany, you fat piece of shit.
You guys are just here to make money.
And then someone came and ended the conversation by drawing, you're all F slurs and a cock
and balls from floor to ceiling.
And so to me-
That's incredible.
Yeah. To
me, it's just like, you bring that up and I'm like, yeah, it's such a rich tapestry
and folding in my mind's eye.
I will only make it into history, not from books, not from papers I've worked on, not
from this podcast, but if somewhere in a landfill in Afghanistan or or Kyrgyzstan or any of the place that this trash ended up in,
a panel of wall that I drew a dick and balls on
in a porter potty lives on.
That's the only way some alien archeologists
and like, hmm, this one's balls are furry.
It's like the negative energy version of the Voyager plate
that aliens think we've really fucked up bodies
cause these dudes have no idea how to draw naked chicks.
And everybody's dick is like six feet long
Like the road was at the pre-ippus statues
Good news
Today's episode does have something to do with a whole bunch of gross people packed into a very small space
So we brought it back around
submarines
Okay, we love them at least as a topic on the show.
I once said that you have to be really, really,
really fucking weird to serve in a submarine.
And we have a lot of Submariner listeners
and they have written into the show to me
and have said that is correct.
So we salute our deeply weird Submariner listeners
because today we're diving into,
uh, the earliest form of submarine history, the turtle, the world's first combat submarine.
Have you ever heard of this?
No, but I am super excited to figure out what sort of like human acorn they've created to
fucking go to fight Poseidon.
Close. Acorn they've created to fucking go to fight Poseidon close
Isn't the turtle like something from the infinity times that Japan invaded China in what's now Korea?
Same name, but that's a ship. It was a famous ship that the Koreans used
The turtle the world's first combat submarine was used during the American revolution, which means we get to talk
about some really, really weird engineers and inventions today. I was trying to remember the
name of the, what they call it on a U S Navy submarine, like the, the sort of lower enlisted
or, uh, you know, non-commissioned officers hangout area. I could have sworn it was like the bull ring
or the bullpen or something like that. And I remember when they banned smoking, it was like
this huge event in the fucking Navy. Like dudespen or something like that. And I remember when they banned smoking, it was like this huge event in the fucking Navy.
Like dudes were literally losing their minds. And I'm like, can you imagine smoking on a
submarine? I mean, I guess they got air filters, but just like, imagine like, hell yeah, dude,
oxygen is limited. We're like a thousand meters below the ocean. This thing's about to crush
us to death. We have very, very limited ability to breathe. Let's make it worse.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I remember reading that in, uh, new maybe a newspaper or something. Cause this happened a long time ago.
And those existed back then. I said like smoking banned on sub breeds.
And the only thing that came to my mind was like, it wasn't before I could smoke
it. My fucking day.
I was trying to Google a thing to see if I had the word right.
And I accidentally wrote sus Navy instead of us Navy. So,. So I have no idea what that implies because I feel like-
Oh no, the episode's being dragged into a series about fat lettered again.
Is the navy? Like, well you're on a boat underwater in close space with a bunch of dudes, pretty
sus.
Yeah, exactly.
I know, you know full well like having a cigarette on a submarine is like, you know, Joe and
Nate you've smoked before, like that cigarette you have like, you know, Joe and Nate, you've smoked
before like that cigarette you have, like you haven't eaten all day. You've had way
too much caffeine and it feels like you've just been kicked in the face. Imagine that
times a thousand.
I feel like smoking a cigarette on a submarine must be like the way that it feels to just
be like you, you're so good of an aircraft refueler, you know exactly where you can stand
on the airfield and smoke without exploding it. And you're just like, I was born for this.
I mean that that's what it was like refueling tanks and,
and knowing exactly where it's like smoking fat doings under the sea.
Pop it out of the fucking hatch just crammed in there like a human sardine
can you're like, it's fucking nice. I'm gonna smoke big.
Smoking big dogs under Amish rest in peace, homie.
Rest in peace. Young King Dave, a source Amish. Rest in peace, homie. Oh, rest in peace, young King Dave.
A source of limitless positivity.
And then he died.
I feel really bad.
That's why he was too positive for this world.
They had to smite him.
Now, obviously, we know submarines would not turn into a big thing until around World War
I. But submarines didn't just appear out of nowhere. Already packed full of disgusting, unwashed men, trolling through the ocean
and sinking cargo. There are a lot of fits and starts, like we talked about
whenever we talk about a new invention. There's evolutionary dead ends and
restarts and people pick up technology that once upon a time people thought was
useless and start running with it. And
today we're going to talk about one of those, the world's first Codmat submarine, the turtle.
They're usually like kind of surface submersibles, aren't they? Like in the early days, because
obviously, you know, you can have something that is effectively submerged and thus you
can't see it like there's a profile on the horizon on the sea, but yeah, you can't see
under the water. Yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah exactly
i mean even up until world war one the vast majority of submarines would stay above water
and then normally only dive for a very short amount of time during an attack run because that's all
they could really handle and also most importantly submarines went really fucking slow underwater
back then yeah yeah wouldn't they turn like wasn't some of the early ones like the,
in the civil war like turned by a hand crank?
Ah, but Nate, hold that thought.
You're talking about the glorious CSS Hunley,
the submarine that killed more of its crewman
than anybody else.
We did an episode on that.
The peripatetic coffin.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
They just had to keep unloading the dead bodies
and loading in new crewmen.
The idea of a submarine, or at the very least some kind of vehicle that could travel underwater,
had been around since pretty much ships in general.
Though for obvious reasons, there was always something in the way of human beings getting
under them waves.
Lack of understanding of the science science seals, propulsion, materials.
I mean, I mean like watertight seals, not like the animal. They weren't some kind of,
they weren't some kind of guardian of the waves.
All I could think of when you're like, well, you're basically trying to use, you know,
18th century technology to build a submarine that has to be watertight under pressure.
And my mind's eyes just for some reason, the wood paneling, the shiplap is just, it's a
basketball court. It's like your submarines made out of a basketball court. Hope you don't die.
Honestly, that is not as good of an idea as what they eventually come up with.
I mean, it's one of those things that like this is suicidal, but also brilliant.
But that this is solidly the era of yes, this guy is an engineer, but by engineer I mean he calls himself one and
he's got a lot of books and he knows how to read.
And that doesn't mean people didn't try, and depending on who you believe, some of
them succeeded in creating subreads, specifically as far back as 1562.
Now we don't really know what the fuck this device was, but eyewitnesses say a team
of Greeks used something to travel under the Tagus River and emerge on the other side holding
a lit torch which they then gave to the waiting Holy Roman Emperor. Now there's not a lot
of evidence that this actually took place. It is one of those stories like an oral tradition
that's been passed down the line. We don't have a lot of documentation, and let's say I say it's suspicious.
I don't think they probably had all these things figured out quite yet.
There were a few other steps forward over the next couple decades though,
with most of them most importantly being designs on paper.
People were not building these things left, right, and center.
People just kept daydreaming them.
Hypothetical work. For any of these designs to make the jump from paper to actually being a real thing,
someone was going to have to invent a lot of shit and nobody had done it yet.
Kind of like the Leonardo da Vinci kind of understanding the concept of a helicopter
in his sketchbook, but that so many other things obviously had to be invented before such a thing
was possible. Yeah, pretty much. For example, people trying to figure out how do we make this thing go
underwater? How does man get air when underwater? You know, it's all blueprints. Nothing was
real and nothing had been built that you could pack full of dudes wearing pantaloons and
wigs and shit yet.
Yeah. People still believe in phlogiston. They believe that all things burned because
fire was inside it and you had to just encourage it to come out. So, I mean, not everyone believed
in that, but obviously like that was a, to give an example of a competing belief. So
when, when some of the elemental things aren't decided on or understood yet, then it's very
hard to be like, what makes it sink? And it's like, I don't know, and wishing really hard
inside of you. There are two submarines. Both of them are on fire.
You board this thing at the surface and then you say as many insulting things about King Neptune as you can and you'll sink for some reason. Now, one of these blueprints is drawn up by an English
guy named William Bourne. Bourne was a mathematician born in 1578 and made what might be the first
detailed blueprint and design of a hypothetical submarine.
Boren's idea called for a wooden ship to be built and covered with a waterproof layer
made out of leather.
Afterwards, it would simply sink and then be propelled forward by oars.
Now obviously by-
Didn't they have tar pitch at this point?
They did, yeah.
I think he was trying to come up with an idea of like, how do you make a
reusable underwater vehicle? He didn't have to constantly be slathering with pitch. He
didn't succeed.
He invented the world's first water blivet.
Yeah, he came up with some kind of like idea of treated leather to put over it. I mean,
he didn't actually make this leather seal. He simply drew it. I thought like,
wouldn't it be cool if in the same vein, I recall seeing an illustration that an English engineer
made, and I believe the 1700s, maybe the 1600s of a hypothetical mechanism for a channel tunnel back
when that was still just the realm of fantasy. And it was like, there has to be air tunnels.
It has to be lit with candles. It has to be like basically horse carriages going through it. And
it's drawn in a horizontal elevation. And it looks like a 1700s guy invented Castlevania. It's
one of the funniest things. It's just like the similarity is undeniable.
I hate to have to like go across the channel in my rogue like tunnel.
Exactly. The good news is I can whip these candles and like a morning star will come
out.
Yeah. I was trying to travel to Francis of Dickhead in Cape just kept attacking me with a whip.
You just hate being the guy who's deployed to the primordial channel tunnel who has to just leave
tactical chickens everywhere?
Wouldn't you know what? I was trying to travel home and I found a whole bunch of loot boxes.
Yeah.
Obviously by the nature of the crew still requiring air and the ship being rowed by
hand meant that Bourne's design would not exactly vanish underwater.
It was more of like just below the surface.
Also since he was working on something theoretical, there wasn't a lot of fine detail.
For example, Bourne did not actually have a plan for the submarine to go under the water. He simply
said, well, I don't know, it'll sink. He hadn't quite gotten to the idea of ballasts or counterweights.
For people who don't know, ballasts is like things that are flooded for the purpose of
a submarine going underwater, then filled full of air for a submarine to rise back to
the surface.
Yeah. So enough buoyancy to stay on the surface,
reduce that to sink, but obviously,
mechanism that can then be reversed so you can go back up.
Otherwise, you haven't invented a submarine,
you've invented a very, very complex sea burial.
Yeah, it's the first version of the future of a suicide tube.
And nobody here is really thinking of a ballast yet.
They're like, well, we'll decrease the volume somehow. Cool. Pump out air, pump in water.
But there was no external ballast. Didn't quite get there yet. Enter a Dutchman named
Cornelius Drebbel.
That's a fucking name alert right there.
Was it Dremel or Drebbel?
Drebbel.
Oh, I was going to say Cornelius Dremel, the inventor of the Dremel tool.
Yeah.
Okay, fine.
Drebbel had his hands in so many different inventions.
It's back in the day where to be an inventor meant that you probably invented 300 things,
280 of them are probably useless.
It's kind of pointless to name everything
he was tooling around with, but he did eventually become world renowned by the 1600s. Oh, fun
fact here, DREBEL, ANNABAPTIST. They keep, they keep on coming up. Very rarely do we
talk about a Dutchman on the show that isn't an Anabaptist at this point.
It's kind of their thing, isn't it? But like we really like, we should
bring back the era of like crackpot and vendors just like dudes, just trying stuff. Now everyone's
just like a right wing grifter instead of like, I was going to say everyone's got email
jobs now back in the day at one third of the entire male population was Bell's dad from
beauty and the beast. Just making fucking in the attic. The most traditional way for
a man to die is killed by his own invention in the backyard.
It's the new return to masculinity we should do is like, no, I don't want to die in combat. I don't
want to die in war. I want to be blown up by a doohickey in my back garden that I tried to
invent. Yeah, the unknown device. Everybody who drives completely blind into the concept of deep
frying a turkey outside without reading anything about it is carrying on a proud legacy
Those are the only seats left in heaven for me as
Midwestern dudes who set themselves on fire about trying to deep fry a turkey the guy who killed Shinzo Abe was just part of a long
tradition of masculinity
Exactly a drebbel was eventually invited to work at the court of the English King James I, and was then kind of given over to the Royal Navy to work on something that'd give them a bit
of a leg up over their competition.
Drebbel, having known of Bourne's design from a few decades before, decided to take
an actual crack at building this fucking thing, which was made easier because the English
King was paying for it.
Drebbel's design looked like a submarine.
It was a long wooden enclosure covered in a waterproof leather
that was actually pitch and tar,
and air being fed into the sub via a short snorkel,
powered by a team of rowers.
So it would be just below the surface, a little bit further,
you know, working his way down.
Now, normally when I say something like that, I'm actually describing a very
over the top method of suicide.
But Drebbel submarine actually worked fantastically.
It traveled up and down the Thames River for hours, keeping a depth of 12 feet
without any issue.
It's kind of amazing actually.
Yeah, that's nuts.
There was issues of it leaking, but like nothing enough to kill anybody
I mean the Thames obviously has you know, the sort of titled rise and fall to some extent in the estuary
But it's not like it's not like a huge amount of waves so much as like it's just the salinity changes
So my one question is like what's this thing gonna be like when you got actual ocean conditions?
I imagine have been eaten alive.
I mean, it's unsealed wood for the most part.
And he has to every time he pulls it out of the water,
he has to reapply a fuckload of pitch and tar, replace wood that is failing.
But he did build two more of the submarines.
The third could fit 16 people inside.
And soon this thing became so popular that King James himself rode inside of it, making
him the first head of state and first king ever to travel via submarine.
Also the guy who rode a counter blast to tobacco.
So you know what?
US Navy guys smoking on submarines has always been a sin before God.
All of this in 1620 and looking at this revolutionary piece of technology hand built
by one of the world's best engineers and working for them, the Royal Navy just kind of shrugged
and said, we don't really see the point of this.
And everybody kind of forgot about it.
After this, again, there was more advancement on paper as well as some accounts of submarine
uses, but these are more akin to what is better known as the diving bell.
It wasn't pilotable.
It was a chamber which you could go under water.
One of them was famously used by Cossacks.
Which tells me Cossacks were the first people
to do antisemitism at the floor of the sea.
They're like, hey, we heard you can desecrate a synagogue. It's at the bottom of the ocean. They really
wanted to find Atlantis because they heard it was filled with Jews. Yeah. Cause diving
bells. I mean like this is earlier than, than, but like for when you think about stuff in
London and elsewhere in places where you have coastal or like river, I mean, and that to
era European cities almost uniformly were on rivers is it like, it would allow you to basically build
foundations and pillars and stuff at the river bed. So like, yeah, but, but obviously it's,
it's a fixed thing more or less. It's not like a, you don't go into the diving bell
and then become the boy in the ball and just roll up the river somewhere.
That would be cool. Seeing your way across the ocean. Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Riverine, Katamari, Damacy.
And then there was a guy named
Giovanni Borelli who sketched
out the really the first idea of a
reusable ballast made out of goat
skin. He never used it, but
he did draw it.
Said something.
And with that, we jump to the
seventeen hundreds, the American
Revolution and a man named David
Bushnell born in 1742 in the middle of nowhere
in Connecticut, Bushnell was hardly born into the upper crust of American life. His family
were farmers and not the kind of rich farmer that is kind of known in this era of taking a lead in
the American Revolution. They were fucking poor. He didn't get anything other than a basic level of education
Necessary for contributing to the family tradition of working the land
Which we can assume a basic level of reading and math and just to underline how poor they were this is early America
We're talking about his family could not afford slaves. So they made their multiple children work the fields instead
That's how you could tell someone was poor in early America.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, depending on the era to whether or not they had indentured
servants.
No, they didn't have anything. They couldn't afford shit.
So they put their kids to work.
A lot of people who were indentured servants,
that's wound up being like their existence afterwards.
They were able to get like a foothold in terms of having some kind of land,
you know, pioneer claimed land, but yeah, of course no resources.
But in his spare time, he would go into the local town of Saybrook, which is a little
more than a village. It's still quite small today. Yeah. And exchange favors for books.
I could not find what these favors were. Make of that what you will. And then he would take them home and read.
These were books and papers that covered engineering,
math, Latin, things of that nature.
And he did not have a teacher.
So he simply taught himself these things.
It's like 1700s Connecticut, an old coward,
basically making him dress up in cosplay and sing a song
going, there goes the baker with his tray like always. Just doing the city opening
scene from Beauty and the Beast but then getting his books and he can go home and
read about Pythagoras or whatever. Some really drunk guy in a powdered wig do
the song again. Noel Coward, Pride of Indiana that nobody acknowledges because
they're like wait we can't we can't acknowledge a gay man came from our state.
It's impossible. Then within only a few years, most of his family died from one thing or
another, mostly from simply being alive in the 1700s. Yeah. Especially being a manual
laborer in the 1700s. Death comes quick and often.
Yeah. Yeah. Basically every piece of metal has tetanus. Every animal has rabies.
You basically live in that this is not a place of honor spike field.
A cow coughs on you once you shit up blood and drop dead.
This left the family's entire plot of land and everything they owned to him and his brother.
He was 31, unmarried, and without kids.
And that's another way you can tell that he was pretty poor, that nobody would
marry off their daughter to him.
Despite being a landowner, they're like, Nope, not the Bushnells.
Fuck them. They couldn't post a money spread.
So I was like, no, no, no way for you.
Deciding this gave him an opportunity to, you know, try to go get an education
despite living his entire life as a poor farmer, he sold his
half of the family's possessions and then paid his way into Yale. Remember, he's 31,
which nowadays is like being 60.
But that also like, in that era, am I wrong in assuming that you had the same kind of
weird spread that you had? We talked about West Point that you could go to Yale and be
like, here's 40 year old Yeoman studying next to like 10 year old, who's just like,
yep, you go to Yale instead of fourth grade.
It kind of depends. I'm not to take away anything from Bushnell here, but emission standards
in Yale in the 1700s were, let's say, sporadic and low. Connections always made things easier,
but generally you had to be literate in English and Latin and
have money. And depending on what your literacy was in both English and Latin and even the
money, you could get in anyway if enrollment numbers happened to be down that year.
I was going to say the Latin part is not true anymore.
No, of course not.
Other than that though, it's like, you's like, oh, you gotta have money and you have to know
people to get you.
He's like, yeah, I guess a lot's changed since back then.
It's like the past is a foreign country, right?
And you know, Bushnell's fluency in Latin is kind of unknown, but it was enough at the
time to get in whatever their standards happen to be on that particular day.
Good for him.
Whatever.
He graduated Yale in 1775, just as the revolution was really kicking off,
and he graduated a diehard patriot for the cause, like most people of the day that came out of
these universities. So Bushnell offered his services as an engineer and an inventor because
he was kind of old for soldiering at that point. Also, he was smart. He figured that revolutionaries
could probably never win a war against the British Empire in a fair fight.
They would need to think outside of the box
to counter the overwhelming might of the Royal Navy and Army.
But specifically Bushnell was worried about the Royal Navy.
Classicist is like,
does Canada have any elephants we can bring over?
I'm going to go find my buddy, Canadian Hannibal.
Well, in a sense, like if he drew direct inspiration from Hannibal you imagine at least at one point
He thought what if we captured blue whales and weaponized them?
I'll lash a couple whales together
Make a sea chariot. Yeah. Yeah, I can't invent a submarine this water type
But I think nature's got a submarine and I'm gonna make it hate the British
What if I just hollow out this whale and teach it to hate beans on toast?
Yeah, exactly.
I'm gonna befriend this whale
and slowly introduce it to the concept
of a fucking no British drinking song
that somehow became our national anthem
and make them hate every single one of them.
Well, after all, the British were completely dependent
on the Royal Navy for transportation, logistics,
manpower, and maintaining a blockade and colonial ports.
There was a certain amount of loyalists in the colonies and a certain amount of food
and water of course to draw from, but the 13 colonies were hardly an outpost of British
strength at the time, which is one of the reasons why the revolution was allowed to
get up and start moving.
The Royal Navy would be a major workhorse in putting down any rebellion that happened
there, and it was pretty obvious that the revolutionary naval power of the colonies was not going to
check the Royal Navy. It did exist, it was known as the Continental Navy, and it was
little more than an afterthought for much of the same reason. There was privateers,
you know, fancy word for pirate, which we talked about a couple episodes ago in
some ways. There was mostly smugglers and just ships that people
happened to own that we put cannons on. There wasn't really going to be a square off between
the two naval powers. You know what I mean? Yeah. Congress and military commanders thought
that dumping really any amount of money into the continental Navy was a waste of time,
even if they had money to do it. But they didn't. Because no matter how much they spent on it,
their shitty converted ships or whatever they had
would get absolutely dusted by the Royal Navy.
Yeah, we might be able to beat them on this terrain,
which we know better than they do.
We might be able to beat them by adapting tactics
in a way that they aren't gonna adapt quickly enough.
But our Navy will only ever be
some permutation of Jimmy Buffett.
And there is zero way we're gonna beat them in the open seas.
You're also a veteran of the Battle of Margaritaville.
Dead parrots on the deck of the ship's farce you can see.
PTSD Jimmy Buffett.
Just picturing the parrot from Aladdin squawking as it dies because it's gut shot
Thousand yards dare Jimmy Buffett singing about he's got a drinking problem
He drinks to make the ghosts disappear. There I go lost again on my way to margaritaville
swither reinforcements never showed up on time
I'm sorry. My parents listened to Jimmy Buffett when I was a kid.
And now PTSD, Jimmy Buffett is going to be echoing in my brain.
I mean, he's basically just Audie Murphy when he was a country singer, but
shorter. Audie Murphy is much shorter and much more violent.
During the land war at the British, the revolutionary leaders rightfully thought
the Navy was a lost cause. Bushnell went to those same leaders and said, fair
enough, but what if
we found a way to fight the British at sea anyway? And that's when Bushnell pitched
the idea of what amounted to be a sea mine. An underwater bomb with a flintlock fuse.
Obviously, everyone laughed at him because, well, you can't light a fuse nor explode
gunpowder underwater. However, it turned out on top of studying the usual
shit people studied at Yale, Bushnell's main field of study was actually figuring out how
to set off a flintlock powered bomb underwater because Yale was way cooler back then.
But also surely people understood the concept that a thing as long as it's watertight, things
float. That wasn't advanced science. It's like, did this man have to go before the deciding body here and be like,
let me drop some knowledge on you? There's this thing called bubbles. Have you ever heard of one?
I've invented a bubble. He sticks his ass under a local body. Behold.
His main revolutionary thing was the mechanism to set off a bomb underwater, powered effectively by repurposed flintlock firing mechanisms of a musket.
And people were really impressed by this because they never thought it was possible.
I should point out here that according to the Connecticut Historical Society,
he scared the ever-living dogshit out of Yale while trying to do this, and nearly killed himself multiple times, but he did prove it could work.
Well, yeah, because I mean you think about like this mad undergraduate who's way older than the normal student age running around doing undersea bombs.
It's basically like a beautiful mind in the early like the opening act of John Nash got recruited by ISIS.
HAHAHAHAHAHA
HAHAHAHAHAHA
HAHAHAHAHAHA
Fuck me.
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is one of the few people he trusts he knows they're real.
Somehow that only makes him slightly less of a bad person than the real guy.
People were of course incredibly happy with the idea that Bushnell could build the West's
first version of a sea mine.
I say the West because of course China had deployed quite a few of what would be considered a sea mine hundreds of years before against
the Japanese.
But the revolutionary leadership did ask an important question.
Okay, let's say you do build this bomb.
How the fuck are we going to deploy it against the British?
This is the interesting part of the history of the turtle.
It did not start with a submarine and work its way into a bomb.
It started with a bomb and work its way into a bomb, it started with a
bomb and worked its way into a submarine. Because he started to think, I don't know, submarine?
But he already had the bomb. Remember, most sea mines we think of are contact detonated.
That's not something that could be done yet. Bushnell was working with a timed fuse,
meaning you couldn't exactly just light it and kick the bitch into the ocean and hope for the best.
It needed to be directly deployed.
It was a sabotage weapon.
And so Bushnell kind of worked his way backwards to a submarine as the delivery method.
It wasn't like you could put a big ass bomb on a paddleboat and just roll over to the
Royal Navy.
They would just be shot.
So it would have to go underwater.
And we don't actually know where he gets the idea
to land on the submarine. He never wrote down why he thought of it. Other than maybe
practicality, there's a good chance he read about Drebbel's tests and designs in the Thames while
he was attending Yale and figured, sure, the weird Dutch boat might work. We legitimately have no
idea why he ended up here, but we do know
he had the bomb first.
What's interesting too is that, I mean, the timing part kind of makes sense that if you
just measure it, you know, like how long the fuse has to be for various distances, as long
as like your distance estimation is pretty decent, you would be able to be effective.
What is really curious to me is, okay, so presumably this isn't a suicide boat.
He's not inventing the USS Cole.
So is this, the propulsion part is what's interesting.
Cause this is before combustion engines.
I mean, I think conceptually they may have been at that point, but certainly not like
deployment.
No real engines to think of, to be fair.
All I could think of is like finding up a gear, like letting it on, you know, like a
windup toy. Like fucking peddling a bike or some shit to turn a propeller.
Like actually I would say that the bike peddling would be a better design the
way he comes up with, but hold that thought.
So with this idea of a submarine in mind,
he retreats to his brother's farm and then listen into helping him build the
world's first combat submarine.
You might be wondering
why his brother, what kind of education did he have that would make him good at
this kind of thing? None. He was just a guy at the farm that never sold his part
of the farm so he'd go to school. But he was very strong and had a wood shop for
him to work in. Therefore he's hired. Every scientist needs a large, oafish assistance.
Yeah. Soon Bushnell had a design that looked vaguely like a wooden barrel that would fit
one man inside of it. That man would be able to sink the barrel and propel it forward with
a system of gears attached to a screw propeller that the man inside would need to crank with
his hands. So he is just frantically cranking, he is jorking a submarine forward.
It's this weird horizontal crank and you like, you would think like a hand powered bicycle
would be a good way of doing it, but maybe those didn't exist yet. I have no idea. And
instead he has like a forward facing handle. You have to crank like forward. So it's the
most unergonomically designed fucking thing on earth.
And you only operate it with one hand at a time.
So it really is just straight jorking it.
In a combat sense.
It's the first vehicle ever propelled via jorking it.
But what gets me is that, yeah,
it's funny to imagine a situation like this where because your collaborators is,
is just a gigantic guy that you've effectively created a device
that seems like it makes sense to you, but can only in truth be operated by somebody
with Neanderthal DNA. And so like when you put it with other people, you're like, Oh
wait, it's not as easy for you. It's like, yeah, because your brother's apparently Connecticut
Samson.
Listen here, young Jedidiah, I've invented a new vehicle. I call it CrossFit. You just jam yourself down inside and start cranking until your arms fall off.
Don't worry about the damage to your elbows.
The latent heat of all the orthopedic injuries will propel it forward.
Exactly. And because it would have to be sneaky,
it couldn't have a snorkel or anything.
Everything would have to be self contained.
This is where Bushnell ran into some problems. Namely, at no point did he have the means, material, or money
to build anything he was planning. He was unemployed, remember? He just graduated Yale
and used all of his money to go to Yale. Also, while he had a mind for science, he had no
understanding of finely tuned precision mechanics that existed at the time, because you couldn't
go to a place and simply buy them.
Everything would need to be designed and purposefully built for his very advanced hypothetical waterborne
coffin.
And he didn't have any connections either.
But he did go to Yale, so he reached out to a guy who also went to Yale, a very, very,
very, very famous and wealthy
engineer named Isaac Doolittle. He was prominent in pre-intra and post-revolutionary America.
Most importantly, he was the best brass and gear engineer in America at the time,
and just about had infinity dollars for the colonies. That meant outside of building the
bomb itself that they would arm the submarine with, which had required gunpowder created in one of
Doolittle's gunpowder factories, most of the entire submarine would actually be
built entirely by Doolittle because the man who designed it had no idea how.
Building the propeller, the drive system, pretty much any of the parts that were
gonna go into the submarine, none of that shit had ever existed before.
Then he had to invent an underwater depth gauge when it quickly became clear that, hey
it turns out there's no good way for a human being to know how deep underwater they are
naturally because these are things that people just never thought about before.
So that is how the world's first combat submarine was built in a guy's backyard. In short,
Bushnell sketched out ideas and do little quickly change them into something that might actually
work. This is an interesting fusion here in the sense that, but it sounds like what you're
describing is even if you get good enough with this, you are inventing a lot of the concepts here,
whole cloth. There just isn't a lot of... I mean, even if the machinery, the components, the parts, if that's the kind
of thing that's been used in other kinds of employments, it's never been done to propel
something underwater. It's never been done in this environment before. So it is kind
of just like, well, I mean, not even trying to be flippant, you're effectively inventing.
It might as well be a Mecca, given that it's just like, it's a war machine no one's ever seen before, it doesn't think people think
is impossible.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All in a farmhouse with your own money.
And you effectively need it to be as good as the tamed blue whales who've been taught
to hate the British.
Yeah, exactly.
They probably don't have a problem figuring out depth.
They evolved for that.
That is one advantage the blue whale has.
Eventually a testing model was built and transported to a they evolved for that. That is one advantage the Blue Whale has. Eventually a testing model was built
and transported to a nearby harbor for testing.
And this is where Bushnell ran a problems, the hand crank.
He originally planned to pilot this thing himself,
but when he tried with his hand crank,
he realized he does not have the strength
nor cardio ability to pilot it.
So he turned to his large, Oh fish brother, Ezra.
Yeah. Get the, get America's best cranker. Who's Jork and other.
I was going to say, I mean, I feel like, I feel like you know, a guy, it's probably easier
than using, you know, the printing press to put out announcements for like, you know,
classified ad for continentalinental Gooning Champion. Catching a letter from the local like
horse postman like are you a gooner? Would you like to make a living off your
gooning? Come to the strange farmhouse in Connecticut. They didn't have 18th
century discord. It would have been a lot harder. This is from the article David
Bushnell's turtle quote the operator entered through an airtight hatch on the
top of the sub sat on a traverse beam, note, not a seat, mounted inside the vessel and
drove the submersible with a hand cranked propeller, a large one in front and a smaller
one on top. He steered by means of rudders that he would use at the rear of the vessel
like a boat. The operator determined where he was going while on the surface by looking through a set of glass ports surrounding the
hatch. Submerged, he made use of a compass lit by phosphorus. The turtle could float
on the surface and pump in fresh air through a leak-proof intake valve, but
once underwater, the operator could only keep the vessel below until the air
trapped inside ran out. The ship dove and surfaced by means of brass pumps that took in or expelled seawater as
ballast, as well as a 700 pound lead weight at the bottom, increments of which would be
played out on a 50 foot line and retracted as needed.
So and remember how it said it looked like a barrel?
Well it was built like one too. It was just panels of wood held together with a metal ring
and then slathered with tar to make it airtight and watertight.
I mean, it's basically an X-ray of the barrel.
Looks like the shirt we did for Trash Future about what if your robot was just a guy?
Yeah, that's exactly what it looks like.
And they're just cranking.
That's exactly what it looks like.
You got some diagram art and stuff like that.
However, there are some very serious limitations,
both because it's, you know, the 1700s,
and also because in order to be sneaky,
Bushnell and Doolittle decided the submarine
would have to be as small as possible,
coming in at seven feet tall and six feet wide.
That meant there would not be a lot of room
for anything like, say, external ballasts
that could be flooded with water to submerge the turtle.
Not that anyone had made a working external ballast yet, but I mean, hell,
if anybody could do is probably them.
The ballast itself would need to be the inside of the
turtle. Oh no.
It would simply flood the chamber where the dude was sitting to submerge.
What the hell?
Ezra decided through a complex series of trial and
error that in order to be all the way underwater the water inside the turtle
would have to be about up to his waist. How tall is like the vertical space
inside this because I'm trying to like in my head picture how tall of a guy you
can fit inside it.
It's seven feet tall. So you could fit in, you know, a decent size NBA player if the
NBA existed back then and their weird shoes. I don't know.
Just thinking about like all of these movies I've seen about like maritime disasters and
submarines and shit where something goes wrong and like they're managed to, you know, cut
off the flooding just before it like drowns the dudes in the engine room or whatever.
And they're like keeping their heads above water. And it's like,
yeah, just normal day at the office for these guys. It's designed to do that.
And remember, Ezra is in there alone. And the only air that would be in there was the air
trapped inside after he submerged is between where he flooded and the roof of the submarine.
Assuming Ezra didn't suddenly come down with the world's most understandable
panic attack in human history, it would be about enough for 30 minutes.
Just like invent some kind of concept of Zen Buddhist meditation. You know, like did living
in continental America, like the colonial era pre-revolution suck so bad that you'd
be like, yeah, it's all right.
As he's sitting in the death barrel, water flooding up around him, as he's in like
some lake or whatever testing, he's like, you know what?
Still better than being a farmer.
Yeah. Yeah.
To a guy like that, this is basically an onsen.
But like, he must have been a master of like fucking like mindfulness, like breathing
techniques, because like, how do you not like freak out the waters up to your waist and you're like, I am in a wooden like egg
and I'm about to fucking die.
And you have no understanding of any of the science at work because again, you're an
uneducated farmer who your brother drafted to be the world's first Submariner because
you built dummy thick and could crank the bitch forward He grew up on a farm in Connecticut in the 1700s before the Revolutionary War
So effectively like your entire life was sort of like yeah life sucks
You starve weather's bad grounds hard naked axe people come out of the woods every time
So it's like maybe this isn't so bad. Maybe this isn't so stressful for him
You got to adopt the Ezra mindset, which is fucking I'm dead already.
Now this thing moves really fucking slow underwater.
It moves at like the speed of a slow,
creeping fart.
It could only move as fast as he could crank it,
which is obviously not great.
When it came time to resurface,
Ezra would have to hand pump out all of the water inside,
which would then just kind of shoot out the top like
Like a whale like this like a whale's fluke
The idea was it would travel above water with just the top of it sticking out
So he could continue to bring in air for Ezra and then he would quickly flood it halfway
Into the final attack run.
Then came the design of the bomb they intended to fit on the turtle.
Bushnell teamed up with a guy named Phineas Pratt, because this is the era where Americans
were still named Phineas, as well as Doolittle again, and together they modified the flintlock
firing device from a musket onto clockwork gears that would in turn ignite a massive black powder bomb and a 12 hour delay.
The bomb itself would be attached to the side of the targeted Royal Navy ship via a long hand operated screw from inside of the turtle.
The idea was that once Ezra gets up close to a Royal Navy ship, he would deploy the sub-breeds
proboscis nose screw thing, drill a hole into the side, and then that is where he could
attach the bomb before scooting away very slowly.
We've basically, we have built a Rube Goldberg device, bring you next to a Royal Navy vessel
that you can then dry hump for a couple of minutes, maybe an hour in order to attach a bomb.
Exactly.
And expect them to not notice this.
Yep.
I mean, I figured they probably had lots of rats and stuff scurrying around.
There were noises, et cetera, you know, creaky wood, et cetera.
But I still think you'd probably hear this.
Yeah.
I mean, nothing is making engine noises at least.
At first Bushnell invited a guy named Dr. Benjamin Gale to watch the first test of the
turtle, and Gale was so impressed he then invited Benjamin Franklin to see the thing
work.
Franklin then got in contact with George Washington, who was so impressed by the design, or simply
fucking desperate for anything to hit the Royal Navy with, that he immediately wanted
to enlist Bushnell and his turtle for the war effort, with a promise to pay any future repairs or development using the weapon.
Washington also arranged for the transportation of the turtle to the war zone, which at this
point was New York in the summer of 1776.
And just to give you a picture here, New York Harbor in the summer of 1776, it must have
just looked like the revolution was already over.
There were so many warships, transport ships, merchant ships, whatever, that people often
said that London was at sea in the harbor because so many British resources had been
deployed to crush the revolution.
Tens of thousands of British soldiers were preparing to land in New York.
There's a crushing blockade.
A failure to control New York would be failure to control the Hudson River
Valley, and that would mean cutting the colonies in two, which was the
British battle plan in the first place.
Yeah.
For Washington, the other is the only way to even try to have a little
glimmer of hope to save New York lane, breaking the British naval blockade.
And for that Washington turned to Bushnell and his turtle deciding effectively,
well, fuck it, nothing else has worked Why not Washington never really believed in the turtle too much, but he figured if it failed what only killed one guy
One NBA sized oath is a is a acceptable loss
exactly
Maybe the America's first Olympic basketball team would really suffer from the loss of
Ezra but, you know, they have other guys have good fundamentals.
But the slow deployment of the turtle actually worked in its favor.
It was a horribly complicated thing to use and according to Washington's personal notes,
it broke every time they tested it.
But that is to be expected.
Again, it's a summary.
It's 1776. This
thing's going to be a piece of shit. The fact it hadn't killed Ezra yet is a minor miracle
unto itself. Though Ezra did nearly die multiple times due to flooding going wrong, running
out of air, expelling the water going wrong. Every little gear on this thing breaks every
time they try to use it. But these are, again,
you can consider them growing pains. I say this worked in the turtle's favor because
by the time Washington called the turtle up for service, Ezra had been training inside
the turtle for over a year, meaning he knew the thing inside and out, how to fix the various
problems as they popped up while he was using it. And more importantly,
how to not die while he cranked and paddled like a man. Man.
Imagine how big his forearms were. What the fuck? Straight up Popeye shit, man.
Like you're basically it's like how to conceive of this.
It's basically Apollo 13 in a barrel with Paul Bunyan.
Every day is forearm day of the turtle. So with the turtle armed and transported to
the Hudson Bay to attack the Royal Navy, while laying anchor, Ezra prepared for his first
combat submarine mission, not only his, but in all of human history. And then he came
down with a really bad fever and diarrhea the night before. Oh no, it's gonna stink in there.
I'm not saying Ezra was faking it, but as a soldier who faked out of getting sick to
get out a lot of really shitty duties, nothing but respect to him.
But getting a fever in the 1700s was a life-threatening situation, so Ezra Bushnell was immediately
sidelined. The turtle
and David were forced to retreat out of the bay and go back home, while they looked for
a replacement submariner, excepting only volunteers.
Of course, whenever I say anything on the show only accepts volunteers and whatever
they're doing is a suicide mission, you know Bushnell was absolutely flooded with more
volunteers than he knew what to do with. Imagine what it must be like to be a
Continental Army soldier in 1776 and someone describes to you what a submarine
is and asks if you'd like to pilot that shit. It would be like if someone came to
me in circa 2007 at Fort Knox and told me, hey we have a no shit gundam parked
down the street, would you like to try it out? I could be completely certain I was going to die, but also even more certain
I would want to be the guy die that died trying to fix it or use it or trip over my own feet
and die of some brain injury as the Gundam falls over and crushes my barracks building.
I mean, inside every soldier, there's two soldiers and neither of them have a self-preservation drive
in August
1776 they sailed on picking a sergeant named Ezra Lee to be their new Ezra in the turtle
I don't know how many dudes back then were named Ezra
But I feel like the odds of finding a new one were weirdly high Lee did not get a year of training though
He got like three weeks. He's doing like the V shred get abs at home and three weeks fucking routine.
Getting increasingly frustrated because it doesn't work.
It's just interesting because this was setting up like a Rocky movie and you have the big
long training montage for, for Oph Ezra. And then like right before the cataclysmic event,
he's like, Oh, my tummy hurts. And they have to get a different Ezra and he gets like the
Xceler he gets the team you.com version of the training montage.
So you could look as or two, we don't really have a lot of time for you to hit the crank
machine. So we're just going to dope you full of horse steroids.
The decision was made. You're not going to, you're not going to do better than Ezra one.
So you know what? Just get another Ezra.
Yeah. And as Ezra to started his training, shit got worse and worse for the revolution.
Washington was retreating from New York City, the Continental Army was getting more and
more desperate.
Namely, a guy named General Israel Putnam began to beg Bushnell to deploy the turtle
to do something to the Royal Navy before it was too late.
So he did.
On September 6th, 1776, around midnight, Ezra II climbed into the turtle and began
to crank and paddle his ass into New York Harbor, armed with hundreds of pounds of explosives.
They decided to aim for the HMS Eagle, the fleet's massive 64 gun flagship that was
anchored right off of Governor's Island. And the mission began to go immediately wrong
for completely foreseeable reasons.
You don't fucking say, you don't say.
Putting a man in a wooden barrel in 1776 and saying, fucking crank that shit towards that ship,
light this bomb under the water, that's gonna fucking work?
Ye olde soldier boy, crank that and die.
For starters, it was only after Ezra 2 was sealed inside and kicked into the
harbor that he discovered how rough the water was. He had also never trained in
any rough water when it came to piloting or navigating the turtle. It made the
already damn near Herculean task of making this thing move in the right
direction a hundred times harder.
Then for some reason, nobody thought about how to navigate at night, leaving Lee to just
kind of wing it.
Now the inside of the turtle, we talked about this during that quote, was lit.
All the gauges, the windows, everything was lit with phosphorus paint, which gave it a
very dull glow, but he could see Bushnell decided
that yeah, with combine that shit with the moon and the stars, that's probably enough.
That's fine. No, not even close. I love the idea. They're like, they just find something
huge and big and it'll probably be the right target. And this man becomes the first person
to like conduct a bombing attack on the, like the New Jersey Palisades. Some a second turtle has hit the building.
They ran into a small issue that honestly, we can't really blame them too much for
not understanding the inside of the turtle was illuminated by phosphorus paint,
which caused a glare on the viewing ports that Ezra to was forced to look out of.
These viewing ports were covered in glass and they were constantly being splashed with
seawater meaning that even if the moon was as bright as humanly possible, Ezra 2 would
not be able to see shit at night no matter what.
Despite it being dark and Ezra 2 not really being able to tell where he was going most
of the time, and the turtle barely moving through the waves and the chop, and despite
the fact that Ezra had been inside the thing for five hours now, and the carbon monoxide
buildup inside was probably strangling off his brain, and despite the fact he could probably
not really feel his arms anymore from cranking that shit, he was creeping up on the HMS Eagle
very slowly.
Just like absolute death rattle, like last bit of energy before you pass out, just saying,
soldier boy up in this.
So watch me watch and watch me, watch me crank that soldier.
Just got to keep, keep that motivation like a Zen Cohen.
Exactly.
Repeating soldier boy crank that like a mantra.
Yeah, exactly.
The dude on night watch on the boat is like, did you just hear someone say, you?
What a horrible way to die.
Once Ezra to got close enough, he submerged
the turtle and began the world's slowest attack run.
He settled up next to the HMS Eagle and deployed the screw that was supposed to
be used to bore a hole into the side of the ship that would in turn allow him to attach the bomb.
However Ezra 2 was discovering a new problem.
No matter how hard he screwed the side of that ship, he was not making a hole.
That's because unbeknownst to Ezra 2, to Bushnell, to Washington, Franklin, fucking
anyone involved in the operation, the bottoms of British ships were coppered that meaning covered in metal
Copper to protect them from barnacles and rot that meant the little hand-powered wood screw that Lee had been armed with
Never had a fucking chance. They just knew they didn't have 18th century Bosch hammer technology
You know what I mean could have gotten that metal carbide bit, but yeah
I mean also who's to say that Ezra 2 would even be able to punch a hole in a wooden ship
by the time he got there?
He had been screwing that stupid little fucking hand crank for like seven hours at this point.
What?
Yeah.
He's not going to have a whole lot of juice left, you know?
So I got to ask the question.
I mean, like, does this mean mean that he just SV bids it
Does he just does he just just just boat bomb it?
I mean that would have maybe worked but no unfortunately we did not in fact get the first American suicide bomber
I know that he has a time fuse or whatever doesn't have a big red kill yourself bomb
But like that would be funny, but they couldn't produce plastic or the color red that brightly. Benjamin Franklin sitting back at a cell phone like I knew the coward would pull the button,
hits the call button himself. Now I should point out here that not every ship in the Royal Navy was
coppered. It was a newer process and it had not started that long ago. This was mostly in direct
response to the revolution, but it was a standard evolution in naval technology.
But if there was one ship in the harbor
that was going to be coppered,
the Eagle would have been it, but nobody knew about it.
Ezra too had been busting his ass,
trying to screw a hole into the side of this thing
for so long, he noticed that the sun was coming up.
And also he had been underwater trying to screw
for about 30 minutes, which if you remember,
is about how long it takes for his air to run out. Lee, having failed completely,
decided to break off his attack and try to run back to shore. But now that it was getting light
out, it did not take long for the British, standing on the rails of their warships, to be like,
yo what the fuck is that thing in the water? That's a fucking big ass acorn in the water screwing a barrel to the side of ship
The fuck is going on? Do you hear that song it sucks?
It's just whale songs, what are you talking about a
Little known fact about blue whales is they're singing Cranked Up by Soulja Boy. Just at a really, really stretched out time frame so it sounds like ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo the sub reads to this day watching the ping going yell crank that Mr. Whale. Yeah. Little known fact. So in our fucks, whales have really bad,
makes them go nuts and crash. They lose their ability to navigate.
Yeah. If it fucks them up so bad, now they're singing Drake.
Yes.
Soon the British deployed gun boats and they began chasing the turtle. Again,
I mean, you know, these are paddle boats, so they're not moving very fast either. But Ezra too,
Lee, cranking his way across the harbor at about one mile per hour, knew that he
was about to be caught and surely executed as a saboteur. But he still had
one trick up his sleeve. The bomb. Now Lee could not arm the bomb while inside the turtle,
it's impossible. It had been armed when the mission started before he got inside on that
12 hour timer. He had been underwater for about 8 hours now. So he cut that bitch loose,
hoping it would blow up at some point. Or scare the Royal Navy of like, hey, that weird
barrel just shit out another barrel
we need to get the fuck away from here and that's kind of what happened the
dudes chasing him in the row boats had no idea what it might be so they decided
to err on the side of caution and get away from the bomb allowing Ezra 2 and
the turtle to get away and get back to shore the sea mine then got carried off
by the current for about another hour before blowing up in the middle of the East River, harming
absolutely nobody. But the bomb did work and apparently it was huge. The explosion was so
fucking large that people thought when they saw the explosion from the shore that it must be the
HMS Eagle detonating like a fucking bomb.
There was cheering and high-fiving until someone pointed out to like,
actually the Eagle is right over there. We don't know what he blew up.
We just created steam, a little bit of water vapor, but not much else, unfortunately.
And imagine how crazy that must have seemed to just... Because this is hours
after this all ended
You're the in the Royal Navy on one of these fucking miserable ships in the middle of the harbor and then something just explodes
Bigger than you've ever seen before it's hundreds of pounds of gunpowder
Sends up like a fucking gout of water taller than your ship
Yeah, and with a metal bore bit and a single lag bolt you could have made it so much cooler but they hadn't invented those yet.
Fucking Ezra 2 hadn't been armed with like the M3 double sided stick tape.
Command stripping it to the fucking copper side of the ship.
Cause like it'll hold for at least 5 hours.
I have to stop here and point out that there are some people who believe that the attack
by the turtle never actually took place at all.
Crisis actor submarines if you will.
This is mostly thanks to one guy, a British naval historian named Richard Compton-Hull.
He claims that due to the strength of the current and the bad design of the turtle,
all these mitigating factors, that this attack, even a failed one, would have been impossible and instead Ezra too simply used a covered rowboat
to use his attempt his attack on the eagle and the turtle itself is simply revolutionary
propaganda I don't buy it this is despite the turtles design and testing being well
documented by Benjamin Franklin and George Washington who continued to talk about the
turtle in his personal letters and diary years
after the war was over. So also the attack itself had multiple eye witnesses.
I love the idea of someone turning into a turtle truther though.
I love the idea of Benjamin Franklin continuing to write about this in his
diary over years after the fact. Like what was he like, man,
that was so fucking cool. Like just, imagine if it worked, bro.
God damn, yeah.
If only we could have found a way,
if only the Brits hadn't put metal in a boat.
And there's another reason why I think
that the eternal attack was absolutely exactly what,
I mean, the failure we just described it as,
and that is George Washington really, really, really
getting close with Sergeant Ezra Lee afterwards.
But we'll talk about that in a second. Now the attack on the HMS Eagle had failed, but it wouldn't be the last time Washington, really really getting close with Sergeant Ezra Lee afterwards.
The attack on the HMS Eagle had failed, but it wouldn't be the last time the turtle
would be deployed into combat.
On October 5th, Lee and the turtle floated out into the harbor once again, targeting
a British frigate off the coast of Manhattan.
However, all of the problems that were there last time were still there, with the added
kink that the British had picked up on the fact that
someone tried to sabotage our harbor while at anchor so now they doubled their night watches on all of their ships which meant as soon as Lee peddled his little ass onto the attack run someone
was like, oh hey mate what the fuck is that? You got a license for that submarine? He was immediately
spotted and Ezra too inside the turtle knew he had been
spotted because he could hear the British people on duty yelling at him.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like a Metal Gear solid big red exclamation point, but it's just,
oh, every time you say Ezra too, and the turtle, nay, it just sounds like a
fucking like lesser modest mouse album.
I was going to say this sounds like it's the absolute worst vampire weekend spin-off project. The turtle weekend. Turtle weekday
even. So after hearing the British yell at him, Lee turns around and runs
without completing the attack. This would be the final mission of the turtle. After
this attack Bushnell had the turtle loaded up on a tender which is like a
transport ship and then for reasons nobody's entirely sure of the turtle loaded up on a tender, which is like a transport ship. And then for reasons nobody's entirely sure of, the turtle fell off the back of
the ship and sank to the bottom of the sea.
No, so someone didn't secure it a place with ratchet straps or whatever.
There's another telling of the story where the tender carrying the turtle was
sank by the Royal Navy, but either way, the turtle goes to the bottom of the sea.
Bushnell later claims that he staged a mission to pull the turtle goes to the bottom of the sea. Bushnell later claims that he
staged a mission to pull the turtle up from the bottom of the sea floor, which he almost
certainly doesn't, because nobody ever sees the fucking turtle again. It's never used in combat
again. And he completely abandoned any more work on submarines, instead goes back to his first love,
blowing shit up underwater, and he's way more successful at that. He builds a
semi known as the death barrel that would explode on contact. This was used by the continental army
to effectively carpet bomb the Royal Navy. They build a bunch of death barrels and then just kick
them down the river all at once. That is going in the direction they know that the Royal Navy is
anchored and it works really really well. He's eventually that is going in the direction they know that the Royal Navy is anchored.
And it works really, really well.
He's eventually made an officer in the Army Corps of Engineers by George Washington personally,
and then at the end of the American Revolution, he fucking vanishes.
Everyone just thought he moved to France, which had become something of a common landing
spot for educated American Revolution veterans.
But the thing is, he never went to France at all. Instead, without telling anyone, he changed his name to David Bush
and then simply moved to Atlanta. He abandoned the life of an engineer and
instead began working as a doctor despite having no medical education
whatsoever, but didn't really need any back then. And this wasn't even
discovered until after he died in 1824.
The only hint as to why he abandoned his own life and ran away to become a southern doctor comes from a friend of his, a guy named George Hargraves,
who claimed that quote, he got duped and cheated by a rascal and found it prudent to absent himself from a dishonest creditor.
So yeah, he ran from his debts.
Fun fact, those debts probably came from building the turtle.
Because remember how I said that the Continental Congress would pay him back?
They did. They never did.
They never did.
Instead, he just got saddled with all the debt
and then just ran out of this fucking ditch town.
Yeah, you're just like some guy in Atlanta and is like, oh, my doctor keeps like explaining all my
ailments and illnesses is like there's a series of small barrels inside your body.
You have too much barrel exposure.
Yeah, we need, we need to like trip on you to get the extra barrels out.
We're calling it barrel carcinoma.
As for Ezra Lee, America's first submarine combat veteran, he was commissioned an officer
due to his service in the Turtle.
George Washington seemingly liked him so much, admired his nigh-on suicidal courage to serve
in the Turtle, that he became his personal secret agent going on special secret
missions for George Washington. The details of which Washington never told anyone nor
did he write down. Meaning that to this day, we have no idea what kind of shit he got up
to.
This is fascinating. Honestly, like I guess so much of this stuff,
you feel like it's just been so like,
you know, documented to the point of being hagiography,
but this feels like stuff we absolutely did not learn
learning about the Revolutionary War at all.
Nothing close to this.
This is way cooler.
He died in 1821 and was given one of the coolest obituaries
that I've ever read. Quote, this soldier is the only man to have fought the enemy on the land, the
water, and under the water. He died without an enemy. That's pretty badass.
Yeah. Yeah. Fuck cool. I hope they buried him in a barrel. Buried him in a barrel,
chucked it out into the Hudson River Bay so he could just float around, do what he
did best, cranking that.
In closing, if you want to see a turtle in its full scale, there's a working replica
at the Connecticut River Society. They even used it to conduct a mock attack in 1977 to
prove that bushnell design worked and the turtle itself worked. I know we talked about
how crazy you have to be to do this in the 1700s, but imagine
how crazy you have to do this in the 1970s.
Also, here's our premium God-tier museum attraction. Let's take it out in the ocean and see if
we can fucking use it. It's 225 years old or 200 years old at that point. You know what
I mean?
It's a replica. It's not the real thing, but I wouldn't want to get inside of it. Imagine going to a museum and the curator's like, hey kids, you want to see a guy die?
Yeah. Even if it's a thing that's a modern replica though, can you imagine how much work
and money goes into that? And they're like, hey, this is this thing that brings people to our
museum. We're putting it in the goddamn ocean. We're going to make this British dude shut up
once and for all. We, we'll show you motherfucker.
But that is a podcast, but we do a thing on the show
called Questions from the Legion.
If you'd like to ask us a question,
you can donate to the show on Patreon,
and you can ask us in the Patreon DMs.
You can ask us in the Discord you also have access to,
or you can stuff it into a barrel with a guy named Ezra
and kick it towards New York,
where I assume at some point someone will answer it and get it back to us because none of us live
in New York. Today's question is what have you done recently to make yourself feel better?
Next question, who wants to go first? I have changed my gym programming to
not make myself super fucking fatigued all the time. So I'm not like almost
paralyzed for two days a week. I counter that with skill issue. Destroy your CNS. Don't be a
pussy. That's right. Yesterday. It was really warm and sunny relatively speaking. Probably the
warmest day we've had so far this year. And, had enough work-related annoyances. And there was a
small task I needed to do and I could have waited or done, mailed it to return this defective item,
but I could also drop it off at the store branch here in town. So I got on my bike and rode down
and did it. And I'm so glad I did it because just the annoyances didn't stop. But getting
20-odd minutes on my bike in beautiful weather is just such a huge mood lift.
Also, it's weird here. It's so dense. The cycling stuff is actually pretty well developed. Not
as good as the Netherlands, but it's pretty good. But I guess it keeps you on your toes
because you just feel like you're in a labyrinth because it's a geographically small city,
but it's very, very dense. So I don't know. It's a nice break. Lately, I've just been
so busy that it's really hard to do anything besides the bare minimum. And yeah, that was nice.
I mean, I know I talked about on the show before, but I quit vaping a few months ago.
I'm still going strong. I feel so much better. I've also pretty much quit drinking. Not that
I ever really intended on like, I never was like, I have had too much. I need to go dry
or whatever. But like, I just have lost the taste for it. And I also like, I feel a million times better now that I'm not drinking
and vaping. I don't know why I ever did that to myself.
Yeah, I don't know, man. I'm starting to wonder because like I still wake up every morning
feeling like I'm hung over and it's like some of its age and some of its being a parent,
some of its fatigue, but I also vape and maybe it's that because I don't really drink. I
mean,
what I used to wake up after vaping, which was every day when you're vaping,
I felt really, really bad.
I feel like a fucking moron because I'm like telling you guys about,
I've unlocked some superhuman ability. It's just called sobriety,
which I should, I should put out here is nothing.
No other Kasabian has ever achieved
You've just like gone not ersatz vegan straight edge on accident Yeah, like I really don't eat meat anymore because I just lost the taste for it
I wouldn't say I'm vegetarian, but I'm largely vegetarian. But yeah, I've stopped
Drinking almost entirely. I have like maybe a glass of wine a week changed up
my whole game stopped listening to music that was polluting my brain I only
listen to Earth crisis now earth crisis Hare Krishna chance boy I only listen to
crank that as played on a hand crank in a submarine I'm sampling blue whale
songs and trying to find the right pitch to turn it up so I can hear Soulja Boy.
Exactly.
But fellas, that's a podcast, but you host other podcasts.
Plug those other podcasts.
What a Hell of a Way to Dad, Trashfuture, Kill James Bond, No Gods No Mayors, all good
shows, all have Patreon content and free content.
Check them out please.
Beneath the Skin and a new show, Disguise Sucked, a show about guys in history who sucked.
This is the only show that I host.
Thanks for listening to it.
Consider supporting us on Patreon.
Just five dollars a month gets you absolutely everything.
Years and years of bonus content, ebooks, audiobooks, first dibs on live show
tickets and merch gets you a barrel with a guy named Ezra in it, who might be very,
very sweaty from all that cranking.
One of two potential Ezras. You don't know which one you're getting. We have options. And until next time crank that and die.
You might not go blind.