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How One Scientist's "Crazy Idea" Made Allied Ships Invisible to Nazi Weapons | WWII Degaussing Story In 1940, Britain faced a terrifying mystery: ships were exploding without warning in supposedly safe waters. No torpedoes. No attacks. Just sudden catastrophic detonations that baffled the Royal Navy. The culprit? Germany's secret magnetic mines that detected ships by their metal hulls. Enter Charles Goodeve—a Canadian chemistry professor with an idea so wild the Admiralty thought he'd lost his mind: wrap entire ships in electrical cables and turn them into giant electromagnets to become magnetically invisible. This is the untold story of how one scientist's unconventional thinking saved thousands of ships, countless lives, and possibly Britain itself during the darkest days of the Battle of the Atlantic. 🎯 What You'll Learn: How magnetic mines worked and why they were so deadly The physics behind degaussing and magnetic field cancellation How Britain degaussed over 10,000 ships in months during wartime The crash engineering program that changed naval warfare forever Why this crucial WWII innovation remains largely unknown ⚓ Key Topics: Battle of the Atlantic | U-boat warfare | Magnetic mines | Naval engineering | WWII technology | British Home Fleet | Charles Goodeve | Degaussing | HMS Vernon | Convoy system | 1940 Blitz | Military innovation SOURCES Historical Sources & References: "The Secret War" by Brian Johnson (1978) - Comprehensive coverage of British scientific warfare developments including degaussing operations Goodeve, Charles. "The Degaussing of Ships." Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers (1945) - First-hand technical account by Goodeve himself "The Battle of the Atlantic" by Andrew Williams (2003) - Detailed convoy warfare statistics and magnetic mine threat analysis Imperial War Museum Archives - HMS Vernon records, Admiralty documents on magnetic mine countermeasures (ADM 1/10247, ADM 116/4492) "Most Secret War" by R.V. Jones (1978) - British scientific intelligence operations, including magnetic mine recovery and analysis "Business in Great Waters: The U-Boat Wars 1916-1945" by John Terraine (1989) - U-boat tactics and Atlantic convoy losses with specific dates and tonnage The National Archives (UK), Kew - Degaussing program records (ADM 204 series), HMS Borde test reports "Churchill's Scientists" by Simon Ball (2013) - Goodeve's role in the Department of Miscellaneous Weapons Development Naval Historical Branch, Ministry of Defence - Official statistics on magnetic mine casualties 1939-1945 "The Second World War" by Winston Churchill, Volume II (1949) - Churchill's direct quotes about U-boat concerns Canadian War Museum Archives - Biographical material on Charles Goodeve and Canadian contributions to naval science "The Secret History of World War II" edited by Douglas Brinkley - Technical details of German magnetic mine development and deployment #battleofbritain #ww2 #ww2history #militaryhistory #worldwar2