
Mine ready to be planted on the deck of a Army mine planter
Definition of a Controlled Mine (TM 2160-20, 1930) A controlled submarine mine, as employed by the United States Army, was a watertight steel case, containing explosive and a firing device, with a means for control of fire by electrical connection to shore. The case was of such size that it was held at a predetermined depth by the length of mooring rope that was attached to the anchor which retained it at the location at which planted.
The United States Army used controlled buoyant mines to defend American harbors during the period from the 1880s until early 1943. Some 4,000 controlled ground mines were used during the period 1943-1945.
Functions of Submarine Mines (TM 2160-20, 1930)
Controlled mines were used to close such portions of harbor entrances that led to channels required for the use of friendly naval forces and friendly commercial shipping, or included a debauching area required by naval forces. In addition, controlled mine fields were limited to distances not exceeding 10,000 yards from the shore and to depths not greater than 250 feet. The effective range was 2,000 yards from channel mouth inner limit, 8,000 yards from the outermost searchlight locations, with a minimum depth of 20 feet, and a maximum depth of 250 feet. The maximum current in the channel could not exceed 3 knots. The number of mines and their planting depth was determined by the locality to be defended.
Structures, Vessels and Equipment
For each defended harbor, one or more of each of the following was required:
The War Department policy was that the controlled mines, along with all essential accessory items required to plant and operate them, were to be stored locally, contiguous to the projects they were to be used in, in readiness for immediate use and in quantities sufficient to plant the mine field authorized by the project and provide maintenance of these projects after planting. In practice, most authorized projects did not have all the materials needed to plant a complete mine field at the sites they were to defend.

US Army controlled mine system
Mines proper were composed of the casing, explosive (gun cotton or dynamite before 1912, trinitrotoluene (TNT) thereafter) compound plug with mine transformer, moorings, and anchors. The unit for planting, called a group, consisted of 19 mines planted at intervals of 100 feet across the waterway to be defended, with submergence as required by tactical considerations. The mines in each group were numbered from left to right as viewed by an observer on the inshore side of the group. One group of mines thus defended 1,900 feet (18 intervals plus 50 feet to each flank). An appropriate number of mine groups to cover the length and breadth of the waterway provided the underwater defense. The groups of mines were numbered from left to right looking offshore, beginning with the most advanced line, if the project included two or more lines of mines. The mines were delineated by a numerical designation indicating displacement capacity. During this period there were two basic mine shapes: the spherical mine and the sphero-cylindrical mine
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Control Devices. The 1930 single-conductor system consisted of 19 mines, 19 lengths of single-conductor cable leading from the group back to the distribution box which contained the selector and accessories, the single conductor cable leading from the distribution box to the terminal hut on shore, the lead-covered cable running in a conduit from the terminal hut to the mining casemate, and the instruments and wiring included on the operating board. In the older 19-conductor system, an operating board with its master block and 19 individual mine blocks was used to control each mine in the group.
Power and Switchboard Equipment. The power system included a direct current (DC) generator (either directly connected to a stationary gasoline engine, or belt-driven by an oil engine), an 80-volt storage battery, motor-generating sets to provide alternating current (AC) for firing, a casemate transformer, a power panel to control direct and alternating current, and an interupter panel for the single conductor system.
Army controlled mines used direct current for operation, supervision, and signaling, and used alternating current for all firing. When a mine was fired, either by observation or contact, alternating current was sent though the selectors to the mine. Without the alternating current, the mines could not be detonated.

U.S. Army Mine Planter Franklin J. Bell in the Columbia River 1930s
The Mine Flotilla: Mine Planters, DB Boats, and Yawls
The mine flotilla consisted of a mine planter, a distribution box boat (DB boat, also known as a L-boat after the numerical designation on the side of the boat), and two to four yawls. There were rarely enough mine planters for one to be assigned to each harbor that had mines. Often one or two mine planters were assigned to a major harbor. They would be called on to perform service in other harbors or in the laying and maintenance of the military underwater cable systems. Smaller harbors without assigned mine planters would be visited by a planter for practice, and during wartime after it had performed its duty at its primary station. Many harbor defenses used vessels that were jury-rigged to serve as makeshift mine planters and DB boats due to the lack of a sufficient number of actual army mine planters.
Fort Columbia- Mine casemate, mine wharf, torpedo storehouse
Fort Stevens- Mine casemate, mine wharf, cable tanks, torpedo storehouse, loading room
Fort Columbia-Mine casemate (new)


Playing out the mine cable (Greg Hagge Colection)

Mines at Fort Stevens (Greg Hagge Collection)

Mine Casemate at Fort Stevens (Greg Hagge Collection)