A WALL OF MINES

When America entered the war, we were very insistent that something must be done to block the North Sea, and we proposed that a barrage of anchored mines be stretched across the sea and that these mines be set at different levels so as to make a "wall" that submarines could not dive under. This would do away with all the drawbacks of a net. Ocean currents and masses of seaweed could not affect individual mines as they would a net. Furthermore, an American inventor had devised a new type of mine which was peculiarly adapted to the proposed mine barrage. It had a firing-mechanism that was very sensitive and the mine had twice the reach of any other.

At length the British mine-laying forces were prevailed upon to join with us in laying this enormous mine. It was one of the biggest and most successful undertakings of the war. It was to be two hundred and thirty miles long and twelve miles wide on the average, reaching from the rocky shores of the Orkney Islands to Norway. There was plenty of deep water close to the coast of Norway and it was against international law to lay mines within three miles of the shores of a neutral nation, so that the U-boats might have had a clear passage around the end of the barrage. But as it was also against the law for the U-boats to sail through neutral waters, Norway laid a mine-field off its coast to enforce neutrality, and this was to join with that which the British and we were to lay. Most of the mine-laying was to be done by the United States and we were to furnish the mines.

The order to proceed with the work was given in October, 1917, and it was a big order. A hundred thousand mines were to be made and to preserve secrecy, as well as to hurry the work as much as possible, it was divided among five hundred contractors and subcontractors. The parts were put together in one plant and then sent to another, where each mine was filled with three hundred pounds of molten TNT. To carry them across the ocean small steamers were used, so that if one should be blown up by a submarine the loss of mines would not be very great. There were twenty-four of these steamers, each carrying from twelve hundred to eighteen hundred mines and only one of them was destroyed by a submarine. The steamers delivered their loads on the west coast of Scotland and the mines were taken across to the east coast by rail and motor canal-boats. Here the mines were finally assembled, ready for planting. Seventy thousand mines were planted, four fifths of them by American mine-layers and the rest by the British.