When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. General Dynamics Electric Boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Dynamics_Electric_Boat

    Electric Boat built the first nuclear submarine, USS Nautilus, which was launched in January 1954, and the first ballistic missile submarine, USS George Washington, in 1959. Submarines of the Ohio, Los Angeles, Seawolf, and Virginia classes were also constructed by Electric Boat.

  3. History of submarines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_submarines

    The first electrically powered submarines were built by the Polish engineer Stefan Drzewiecki in 1881, he designed and constructed the world's first submarine in Russia, and later other engineers used his design in their constructions, they were James Franklin Waddington and the team of James Ash and Andrew Campbell in England, Dupuy de Lôme ...

  4. Holland Torpedo Boat Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holland_Torpedo_Boat_Company

    The US Navy gave that title to Naval Submarine Base New London as the first submarine base. Naval Submarine Base New London was commissioned by the US Navy in 1916 as a dedicated submarine base. [27] The Electric Boat Company built HMS Holland 1 the first Royal Navy submarine. HMS Holland 1 was launched on October 2, 1901.

  5. Stefan Drzewiecki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefan_Drzewiecki

    It was the first submarine in the world with electric battery-powered propulsion. [8] He developed the theory of gliding flight, developed a method for the manufacture of ship and plane propellers (1892), and presented a general theory for screw-propeller thrust (1920). He is known for developing several models of early submarines for the ...

  6. USS Holland (SS-1) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Holland_(SS-1)

    USS Holland (SS-1) was the United States Navy's first submarine, although not its first underwater watercraft, which was the 1775 submersible Turtle.The boat was originally laid down as Holland VI at the Crescent Shipyard of Elizabeth, New Jersey for John Philip Holland's Holland Torpedo Boat Company, and launched on 17 May 1897.

  7. French submarine Gymnote (Q1) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_submarine_Gymnote_(Q1)

    The submarine was built with a steel single hull, a detachable lead keel, and three hydroplanes on each side. She made over 2,000 dives, using 204 cell batteries. She was armed with two 355 mm (14 in) torpedoes. Gymnote was partly inspired by the earlier development of the submarine Plongeur, the world's first mechanically powered submarine.

  8. Electro-Dynamic Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electro-Dynamic_Company

    The company was founded by electrical inventor William Woodnut Griscom in 1880. An important early customer for electric boat motors was the Electric Launch Company, also known as Elco. Following an 1892 bankruptcy, financier Isaac Rice bailed out Electro-Dynamic and became a co-owner. Griscom died in a hunting accident in 1897.

  9. Holland Torpedo Boat Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holland_Torpedo_Boat_Station

    This marks the site of the first submarine base in this country where "U.S.S. Holland", first submarine commissioned by the U.S. Navy was based for trials. In the period between 1899 and 1905 six other submarines of the Holland Torpedo Boat Co. were based at this site which was known as the Holland Torpedo Boat Station.