Simon Lake


 
 
Simon Lake

Simon Lake (September 4, 1866 - June 23, 1945) was an American mechanical engineer and naval architect who obtained over two hundred patents for advances in naval design and competed with John Holland to build the first submarines for the United States Navy.

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Born in Pleasantville, New Jersey, Lake joined his father's foundry business after attending public schools in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Lake had a strong interest in undersea travel. He built his first submarine,

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Argonaut,

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in 1894 in response to an 1893 request from the Navy for a submarine torpedo boat. Neither Argonaut nor Lake's following submarine,

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Protector,

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built in 1901, were accepted by the Navy. Protector was the first submarine to have diving planes mounted forward of the conning tower and a flat keel. Four diving planes allowed Protector to maintain depth without changing ballast levels. Protector also had a lock-out chamber for divers to leave the submarine. Lake, lacking Holland's financial backers, was unable to continue building submarines in the United States. He sold Protector to Russia in 1904 and spent the next seven years in Europe designing submarines for the Austro-Hungarian Navy, the Kaiserliche Marine, and Imperial Russian Navy. When he returned to the United States in 1912, he founded the Lake Torpedo Boat Company in Bridgeport, Connecticut, which built 24 submarines for the U.S. Navy during and after World War I. Lake's first submarine for the U.S. Navy,

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USS G-1 (SS-19?),

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set a submergence record of 256 feet in November 1912. Financial difficulties forced the Lake Torpedo Boat Company to close in the mid-1920s. Following company closure, Lake continued designing maritime salvage systems, and advised the U.S. Navy on submarine technology and maritime salvage during World War II. By his death, Lake had witnessed the submarine's arrival as a front-line weapon in the U.S. Navy.

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The US Navy built a class of vessels for use as submarine tenders named in his honor the

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Simon Lake class; USS Simon Lake (AS-33) was in service between 1964 and 1999.

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September 4: September 4 is the 247th day of the year (248th in leap years). There are 118 days remaining....

1866: 1866 is a common year starting on Monday....

June 23: June 23 is the 174th day of the year (175th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 191 days remaining....


Simon Lake related Images and Photos (experimental)

Diver from a ''Simon Lake'' Submarine Placing a Mine in Channels Used by Enemy Ship 2 of 2
Diver from a "Simon Lake" Submarine Placing a Mine in Channels Used by Enemy Ship 2 of 2
Simon
Simon
Simon & Simon
Simon & Simon
Simon Sez
Simon Sez
Simon Pegg
Simon Pegg
Simon Ward
Simon Ward
Simon Birch
Simon Birch
Simon Gagne
Simon Gagne
Lake Bell
Lake Bell
Simon Kenton
Simon Kenton
Lake Tahoe
Lake Tahoe
Lake Scene
Lake Scene

~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
Book
Web site
 


 

~ Related Subjects ~

Leap year (2) - 1912 (2) - June 23 (2) - September 4 (2) - Lake Torpedo Boat (1) - World War I (1) - Bridgeport, Connecticut (1) - Imperial Russian Navy (1) - Europe (1) - 1904 (1) - Kaiserliche Marine (1) - Austro-Hungarian Navy (1) - 1964 (1) - USS ''Simon Lake'' (AS-33) (1) - Gregorian Calendar (1) -
 

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