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Before Modern Warfare: The 1878 Law That Put Explosives Under U.S. Harbors

Before Modern Warfare: The 1878 Law That Put Explosives Under U.S. Harbors

Published 3 days, 8 hours ago
Description
March 3, 1878 — Congress quietly authorized a weapon most Americans never knew existed: underwater mines wired to shore, capable of detonating beneath enemy ships without warning. In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, host Amy dives into the obscure history of 19th-century “submarine torpedoes,” the early evolution of underwater warfare, and the strange legal and ethical debates surrounding invisible explosives hidden beneath American harbors. We explore how the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built covert harbor defense systems in New York, San Francisco, and other key ports; how Civil War experiments paved the way for controlled detonation networks; and how these early weapons reshaped the psychology of warfare. From copper wiring and saltwater corrosion to Victorian-era moral panic over “dishonorable” combat, this episode uncovers a forgotten turning point in military history. Blending engineering history, naval warfare, political legislation, and obscure 19th-century innovation, this episode reveals how modern invisible warfare began long before submarines and drones. If you love strange history, forgotten laws, military oddities, naval engineering, hidden infrastructure, and obscure historical events, this episode belongs in your queue. Follow The Strange History Podcast for more deep dives into the dates that quietly changed the world.

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