When Germany deployed magnetic mines early in the war, Britain countered with aircraft that could explode them by mimicking a ship’s magnetic signature. On September 3, 1939, two days after Germany invaded Poland, the German submarines U-13, U-14 and U-17 started laying three fields of magnetic-influence mines on the sea floor just off Britain’s east coast. Within days, four ships totaling 14,575 gross registered tons were sunk and another 10,391 GRT of shipping was damaged. Although mines were suspected, minesweepers dispatched to the area did not find any, leading most Royal Navy officials to believe that the losses were due to U-boat torpedo attacks, even though survivors did not report seeing torpedo wakes. The mystery remained unsolved until a mine was successfully recovered on November 21, 1939. HMS Vernon, the Royal Navy’s shore establishment technology research center in Portsmouth, initiated an effort to learn the mine’s triggering mechanism and recommend effective countermeasures. Steel warships generate a magnetic signature as they steam through sea-lanes, cutting across the Earth’s magnetic field. The German magnetic-influence mines were designed to capitalize on this, detonating when they detected that signature, even from considerable depths. A Wellington DWI Mark II readies for de-mining duty in Egypt. (IWM CM5312) Britain worked to rapidly developed shipborne degaussing equipment and deperming operations to neutralize and remove ships’ magnetic signatures, respectively. The Royal Navy also introduced shipborne magnetic minesweeping equipment and tactics in record time, but full-scale implementation lay months away. Moreover, building and crewing the large numbers of minesweepers required to cover all British ports and coastal waterways would take months that Britain did not have. By year’s end, Germany had deployed 470 magnetic mines that claimed 79 ships of 162,697 GRT. With so much coastline and waters to protect, it was imperative that Britain de...
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