Hunley's hatch unlatched at sinking

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  • tmsmalley
    SubCommittee Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 2376

    #1

    Hunley's hatch unlatched at sinking

    sub's secrets
    Discovery of lock brings workers close to truth of sinking

    BY BRIAN HICKS
    The Post and Courier

    When the H.L. Hunley slipped underwater for the last time, the sub's
    forward hatch was most likely unlocked.

    But that clue doesn't solve a mystery, it merely reveals another,
    because it appears the crew was not trying to escape.

    Archaeologists have found what may be the latch for the Civil War
    submarine's forward conning tower, and it seems to have been stored -
    not dropped in a moment of panic.

    Along with a locked aft hatch, this seems to rule out any chance
    that the crew was scrambling to escape in their final moments.

    "The idea of some frantic effort to get out doesn't appear to be
    part of the story anymore," Hunley Commission Chairman Glenn
    McConnell said Friday. "By telling us what didn't happen, we are
    starting to close in on the real story."

    The Hunley disappeared shortly after sinking the USS Housatonic
    about four miles off Sullivan's Island on Feb. 17, 1864. The
    Confederate privateer was spotted leaving the scene of the battle
    and then, about 45 minutes later, signalling troops on shore. And
    then, nothing for 131 years.

    Since scientists recovered the sub in 2000, they have been trying to
    unlock the secrets of its final moments. Perhaps it is fitting that
    a lock has put them one step closer.

    Mike Scafuri, a Hunley archaeologist, says the clue to the forward
    hatch's latch is a rectangular piece of metal that is like half a
    lawn mower blade with a hole in the middle.

    It was found on the floor, below the hatch, stored behind the
    ballast tank and rudder pipes. If it had fallen from the hatch years
    after the sub sank, Scafuri said, it most likely would have been
    found on the other side of the sub.

    This metal bar is nearly identical to part of the aft hatch's
    locking mechanism. There, a bar hangs down from the inside of the
    hatch and is threaded through a hole in a similar flat piece of
    metal, and then cinched down.

    For years, archaeologists figured the forward hatch used a different
    sort of latch because such a lock makes it impossible for the
    captain to stick his head in the tower to navigate. Now it appears
    they are similar sorts of locks.

    Historical accounts suggest the sub's crew did not always lock the
    hatches while on the surface - they opened both regularly to let in
    air. But with the sub found on the ocean floor with one hatch locked
    and the other unlocked, the possible number of endings for the crew
    shrink.

    The Hunley's hatches were almost certainly secured when it rammed a
    spar torpedo into the side of the Housatonic. But later, when
    Captain George Dixon signalled Confederate troops on Sullivan's to
    light a fire to guide them home, he had to open the forward hatch.

    That's where the questions begin. Some witnesses say as Dixon
    signalled the shore, the Hunley found itself in the path of a Union
    warship coming to the Housatonic's aid. The sub could have had to
    submerge quickly to get out of the way. Or, the crew could have
    merely forgotten to lock the hatch before diving to wait on a flood
    tide that would carry them to shore. It's unclear if the unlocked
    hatch could have slightly opened on such a dive, allowing enough
    water into the hull to sink the sub. It didn't take much to rob the
    boat of neutral buoyancy.

    The definitive answers remain hidden in concretion that covers much
    of the sub's interior and exterior. McConnell said he hopes the
    project will be able to borrow a powerful X-ray machine in the next
    few months that will allow closer examinations of both the locking
    mechanism and the settings on the ballast tank valves.

    "Better X-rays will provide a better picture, and hopefully tell us
    whether they were trying to bilge the sub," McConnell said. "This is
    just another little piece of a giant jigsaw puzzle."
  • Guest

    #2
    Mr. Smalley, I just wanted

    Mr. Smalley, I just wanted to say thank you for keeping an eye out and keeping us posted on the latest Hunley info. This is an endlessly fascinating story!
    Thanks again,
    Randy

    Comment

    • tmsmalley
      SubCommittee Member
      • Feb 2003
      • 2376

      #3
      Thanks Randy. It has been

      Thanks Randy. It has been my favorite submarine topic since 1955. I wish it was moving a little faster towards the final museum display, but archeology moves at its own pace.


      I'm glad Brian Hicks is the reporter on the story. He really loves the boat and does a good job staying away from the politics of the thing.
      Tim

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