H · L · Hanley started with Horace · Slough · Henry, the owner of a large plantation as a lawyer and custom staff of two people who made equipment for steam equipment, New Orleans. Horace was angry with the alliance because of the blockade. He can neither ship nor sell his sugar and cotton. He was so crazy that he became the captain of a blockade runner. And they transported supplies quietly through the blockade at night. Horace wants to destroy a large barge that forms a blockade with a torpedo of a submarine that builds a submarine and destroys something of the target.
Horace Lawson Hunley, L. It is a character of the same name of submarine of Hunley League. (Ragan, 7) People can only guess, but since he was the main beneficiary of the submarine plan since the beginning of the civil war it may be named after him. Horace Hunley partially funded Pioneer, funded Pioneer II completely, and already paid one-third of the necessary funds to build Hunley. (Ragan, 7) This is one of the disappointing people who died. It is easy to see that someone should cite his reputation. (Kussler, 7)
There are armor and submarines in new technologies of naval battle. The Civil War was the first great war involving steel ships. These are ship protected by steel or steel armor plate. It is almost impossible for them to sink using conventional weapons and to change the way ships are used in battle forever. At the same time, the civil war led the submarine to battle. The first submarine that infiltrated the enemy ship was a submarine H. L. Hunley, a submarine submarine that sank the Union's USS Housatonic on February 17, 1864.
However, the grave we visited on this day was not orthodox. It was a submarine H. H during the Federal Civil War. Well-known Hanley sank the aircraft carrier Housatonic before disappearing more than 130 years ago, and took the whole crew. This was invented by James McClintock who designed it and Horows Lawson Henry to raise the funds. When we first entered the museum, I immediately felt something happened. When you visit a historical civil war site to find a refiner for milling (a large site such as Gettysburg, they are almost everywhere), that is not uncommon. When I was a person, I was not immediately thrown out of the gift shop.