On sighting a submarine, or finding indication of its presence, the tactical doctrine might call either for attack, or to stand by, summoning airplanes and surface craft in for the kill, keeping the enemy under unsuspected surveillance the while, and saving the blimp’s own depth bombs for another action.
The airship is capable of carrying on patrol and escort missions day after day under a wide range of weather conditions, going for months at some stations, even in the winter, without missing a day.
Though no detailed summary of airship activities is possible now, it is no secret that, just as in the last war, the submarines avoided attack upon convoys where airships were on guard. The German high command tacitly admitted that this was one type that the U-boats did not want to meet, an enemy immune to its torpedoes, whose presence the sub’s under-water detectors did not reveal, and which might appear overhead without warning. Admiral Doenitz, commanding the German submarine force, testified in a press interview to their respect for our blimps.
The battle against the submarines will be long and difficult, and ships will still go down and men will be lost, but the chase will be relentless as long as the menace exists. Airships, non-rigid, have taken their place in that phase of America’s war effort.
References
Little is available in the way of bibliography on lighter-than-aircraft, their history and characteristics. Among the best works dealing with this subject are Captain C. E. Rosendahl’s, “What About the Airship?” (Scribner’s), and “Up Ship” (Dodd Mead); Captain Ernst Lehmann’s “Zeppelin” (Longman’s) and Captain J. A. Sinclair’s “Airships in Peace and War” (Rich & Cowan, London).
Copies of “The Story of the Airship (Non-Rigid),” may be procured through The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. at Akron, Ohio; or at Los Angeles, or branch offices.
Index
[A] [B] [C] [D] [E] [F] [G] [H] [I] [J] [K] [L] [M] [N] O [P] Q [R] [S] [T] [U] [V] [W] X Y Z
A Alcock (and Brown) Atlantic Crossing, [16].