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A classic of maritime history updated with new information, John P.
Holland, 1841-1914 is the sole full-length biography of the man
whose technological innovations led to the launching of the first
modern submarine in May 1897. While David Bushnell may be
considered the father of the submarine, Holland devised the
technical improvements that enabled a craft to operate equally
effectively whether submerged or surfaced, and it was his design
that the U.S. Navy purchased in 1900. Richard Knowles Morris draws
on diaries and papers left by his grandfather, a longtime friend of
Holland and an superintending engineer of the Holland Torpedo Boat
Company (later Electric Boat), to trace the inventor's eventful
life. Morris recounts Holland's early years, his frustration in
dealing with the Fenians and the U.S. Navy, and his company's
negotiations with Japan, Great Britain, and Russia for Holland
boats. Of particular interest is the selection of photographs that
offer an enlightening pictorial of early submarine history.
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