H.L. Hunley Fact Sheet
* Hunley sank twice before its final voyage (three times in all)
killing 22 crewmembers. The first sinking occurred while the sub was tied to
its moorings and human error caused it to dive before its hatches were fastened
(5 died). Second sinking happened during a practice dive (8 died). Third
sinking occurred sometime after Hunley sank Housatonic, no one knows how or why
(9 died).
* There were reports that after Hunley succeeded in sinking
Housatonic it traveled safely to Georgetown, SC (about 40 miles north of
Charleston).
* Hunley was the first submarine to sink an enemy vessel. The next
sub to repeat the event was Britain's submarine E-9 when it sank the German
cruiser Hela more than fifty years after Hunley's historic feat.
* William Alexander, who was intimately involved in Hunley's construction
in Mobile and operations in Charleston, was issued new orders to leave Dixon
and crew only twelve days before its final voyage. Reports indicate that his
orders were to return to Mobile to develop a repeating gun for the Confederate
army.
* One of the investors in Hunley was E.C. Singer, nephew of the
man who invented the sewing machine prior to the beginning of the war. Singer
built the torpedo used on Hunley. It is interesting to note that a spool of
rope (similar to the spools of thread used on a sewing machine) was used in the
torpedo's rigging.
* Another of Hunley's investors was Gus Whitney, relative of Eli
Whitney who invented the cotton gin.
* General Pierre G.T. Beauregard’s words proved to indeed be true
when after the second sinking of the Hunley; he said "It's (H.L. Hunley)
more dangerous to those who use it than to the enemy." Only five Union
sailors were killed as a result of the Hunley sinking the Housatonic,
Twenty-two Confederates died in Hunley.
* Nicknames for H.L. Hunley included: "Peripatetic
Coffin,'" "Porpoise," "Fish Boat," "Murdering
Machine"
* Jules Verne wrote his classic novel of submarine adventure,
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, only four years after Hunley's historic feat.
* Legendary showman P.T. Barnum offered $100,000 for the recovery
of the Hunley for his show.
* In an endurance test dive, the crew of the Hunley sat on the
ocean bottom for two hours, thirty-five minutes without surfacing for air.
* Crewmembers reported that on test runs, Hunley would surface so
near enemy ships, they could hear Union sailors singing.
* The forty-foot long Hunley was propelled by eight men and could
reach a top speed of around four knots.
* Before young George Dixon left for the war, his sweetheart gave
him a $20 gold piece for luck. When Dixon was shot in the leg at the battle of
Shiloh, that gold piece caught the bullet, saving his leg and possibly his
life. That coin is one of the artifacts archaeologists hope to find aboard the
Hunley when it is recovered.
* Dr. William Dudley, Director of Naval History at the Naval
Historical Center said, "The Hunley's discovery was probably the most
important find of the century."
* No one knows how or why H.L. Hunley sank on February 17, 1864.