<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</SPAN><br/> <span class="subhead"><span class="smcap">Warriors of the Paint-Brush</span></span></h2>
<p class="drop-cap3"><span class="smcap1">When</span> the great European war broke out,
it was very evident that the Entente
Allies would have to exercise every resource
to beat the foe which had been preparing for
years to conquer the world. But who ever
imagined that geologists would be called in to
choose the best places for boring mines under
the enemy: that meteorologists would be summoned
to forecast the weather and determine
the best time to launch an offensive; that psycologists
would be employed to pick out the men
with the best nerves to man the machine-guns
and pilot the battle-planes? Certainly no one
guessed that artists and the makers of stage
scenery would play an important part in the
conflict.</p>
<p>But the airplane filled the sky with eyes that
at first made it impossible for an army to conceal
its plans from the enemy. And then there<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</SPAN></span>
were eyes that swam in the sea—cruel eyes that
belonged to deadly submarine monsters, eyes
that could see without being seen, eyes that
could pop up out of the water at unexpected
moments, eyes that directed deadly missiles at
inoffensive merchantmen. They were cowardly
eyes, too, which gave the ship no opportunity
to strike back at the unseen enemy. A vessel's
only safety lay in the chance that out in the
broad reaches of the ocean it might pass beyond
the range of those lurking eyes. It was a game
of hide-and-seek in which the pursuer and not
the pursued was hidden. Something had to be
done to conceal the pursued as well, but in the
open sea there was nothing to hide behind.</p>
<h3>HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT</h3>
<p>There is such a thing as hiding in plain sight.
You can look right at a tree-toad without seeing
him, because his colors blend perfectly with
the tree to which he is clinging. You can watch
a green leaf curl up and shrivel without realizing
that the curled edge is really a caterpillar,
cunningly veined and colored to look just like
a dying leaf; and out in the woods a speckled
bird or striped animal will escape observation<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</SPAN></span>
just because it matches the spotted light that
comes through the underbrush. Nature is
constantly protecting its helpless animals
with colored coats that blend with the surroundings.</p>
<p>Long ago clumsy attempts at concealment
were made when war-vessels were given a coat
of dark-gray paint which was supposed to make
them invisible at a distance. Actually the
paint made them more conspicuous; but, then,
concealment did not count for very much before
the present war.</p>
<p>It was the eyes of the submarines that
brought a hurry call for the artists, and up to
them was put the problem of hiding ships in
plain sight. A new name was coined for these
warriors of the paint-brush: <i>camoufleurs</i> they
were called, and their work was known as
<i>camouflage</i>.</p>
<h3>MATCHING THE SKY</h3>
<p>Of course, no paint will make a ship absolutely
invisible at a short distance, but a large
vessel may be made to disappear completely
from view at a distance of six or seven miles
if it is properly painted.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</SPAN></span>
To be invisible, a ship must reflect as much
light and the same shade of light as do its surroundings.
If it is seen against the background
of the sea, it must be of a bluish or a greenish
tint, but a submarine lies so low in the water
that any object seen at a distance is silhouetted
against the sky, and so the ship must have a
coat of paint that will reflect the same colors
as does the sky. Now, the sky may be of almost
any color of the rainbow, depending upon the
position of the sun and the amount of vapor or
dust in the air. Fortunately in the North
Sea and the waters about the British Isles,
where most of the submarine attacks took place,
the weather is hazy most of the time, and the
ship had to be painted of such a color that it
would reflect the same light as that reflected by
a hazy sky. With a background of haze and
more or less haze between the ship and the
periscope of the U-boat, it was not a very difficult
matter to paint a ship so that it would be
invisible six or seven miles away. One shade of
gray was used to conceal a ship in the North
Sea and an entirely different shade was used
for the brighter skies of the Mediterranean.</p>
<div id="ip_212" class="figcenter" style="width: 499px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_212.jpg" width-obs="499" height-obs="301" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">(C) International Film</div>
<div class="caption0">A Giant Gun Concealed Among Trees Behind the French Lines</div>
</div>
<p>In this way, the artists made it possible for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</SPAN></span>
ships to sail in safety much nearer the pursuer
who was trying to find them, and by just so much
they reduced his powers of destruction. But
still the odds were too heavy against the merchantman.
Something must be done for him
when he found himself within the seven-mile
danger-zone. Here again the artists came to
the rescue.</p>
<div id="ip_213" class="figcenter" style="width: 551px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_213.jpg" width-obs="551" height-obs="386" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">(C) Committee on Public Information</div>
<div class="caption0">Observing the Enemy from a Papier-Mâché Replica
of a Dead Horse</div>
</div>
<p>Before merchant ships were armed, a submarine
would not waste a torpedo on them, but
would pound them into submission with shell.
Even after ships were provided with guns, submarines
mounted heavier guns and unless a
ship was speedy enough to show a clean pair
of heels, the pursuing U-boat would stand off
out of range of the ship's guns and pour a
deadly fire into it. But the ships, too, mounted
larger guns and the submarines had to fall back
upon their torpedoes.</p>
<h3>GETTING THE RANGE FOR THE TORPEDO</h3>
<p>In order to fire its torpedo with any certainty,
the U-boat had to get within a thousand yards
of its victim. A torpedo travels at from
thirty to forty miles per hour. It takes time
for it to reach its target and a target which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</SPAN></span>
is moving at, say, fifteen knots, will travel
five hundred yards while a thirty-knot torpedo
is making one hundred yards. And so
before the U-boat commander could discharge
his torpedo, he had to know how fast the
ship was traveling and how far away it was
from him. He could not come to the surface
and make deliberate observations, but had to
stay under cover, not daring even to keep his
eye out of water, for fear that the long wake
of foam trailing behind the periscope would
give him away. All he could do, then, was
to throw his periscope up for a momentary
glimpse and make his calculations very quickly;
then he could move to the position he figured
that he should occupy and shoot up his periscope
for another glimpse to check up his calculations.
On the glass of this periscope, there
were a number of graduations running vertically
and horizontally. If he knew his victim
and happened to know the height of its smoke-stacks
or the length of the boat, he noted how
many graduations they covered, and then by a
set formula he could tell how far he was from
the boat. At the same time he had to work out
its rate of travel and note carefully the course<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</SPAN></span>
it was holding before he could figure where
his torpedo must be aimed.</p>
<p>There was always more or less uncertainty
about such observations, because they had to be
taken hastily, and the camoufleurs were not slow
to take advantage of this weakness. They increased
the enemy's confusion by painting high
bow-waves which made the ship look as if it were
traveling at high speed. They painted the
bow to look like the stern, and the stern to look
like the bow, and the stacks were painted so that
they appeared to slant in the opposite direction,
so that it would look as if the vessel were
headed the other way. U-boats came to have a
very wholesome respect for destroyers and
would seldom attack a ship if one of these
fast fighting-craft was about, and so destroyers
were painted on the sides of ships as scarecrows
to frighten off the enemy.</p>
<h3>MAKING STRAIGHT LINES LOOK CROOKED</h3>
<p>We say that "seeing is believing," but it is
not very hard to deceive the eye. The lines in
<SPAN href="#ip_217">Fig. 13</SPAN> look absolutely parallel, and they are;
but cross-hatch the spaces between them, with
the hatching reversed in alternate spaces, as in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</SPAN></span>
<SPAN href="#ip_217b">Fig. 14</SPAN>, and they no longer look straight.
Take the letters on the left, <SPAN href="#ip_217c">Fig. 15.</SPAN> They
look all higgledy-piggledy, but they are really
straight and parallel, as one can prove by laying
a straight-edge against them, or by drawing
a straight line through each letter, as shown at
the right, <SPAN href="#ip_234">Fig. 16.</SPAN> Such illusions were used on
ships. Stripes were painted on the hull that
tapered slightly, from bow to stern, so that the
vessel appeared to be headed off at an angle,
when it was really broadside to the watcher at
the other end of the periscope.</p>
<div id="ip_217" class="figcenter" style="width: 241px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_216.jpg" width-obs="241" height-obs="41" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="caption"><span class="smcap">Fig. 13.</span> Parallel lines that look straight</div>
</div>
<div id="ip_217b" class="figcenter" style="width: 244px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_216b.jpg" width-obs="244" height-obs="41" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="caption"><span class="smcap">Fig. 14.</span> Parallel lines that do not look straight</div>
</div>
<div id="ip_217c" class="figcenter" style="width: 333px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_216c.jpg" width-obs="333" height-obs="257" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">Courtesy of the Submarine Defense Association</div>
<div class="caption0"><span class="smcap">Fig. 15.</span> Letters that look all higgledy-piggledy, but are
really straight</div>
</div>
<p>There are color illusions, too, that were tried.
If you draw a red chalk-mark and a blue one on
a perfectly clean blackboard, the red line will
seem to stand out and the blue one to sink into
the black surface of the board, because your eye
has to focus differently for the two colors, and
a very dazzling effect can be had with alternating
squares of blue and red. Other colors give
even more dazzling effects, and some of them,
when viewed at a distance, will blend into the
very shade of gray that will make a boat invisible
at six miles. When U-boat commanders
took observations on a ship painted with a
"dazzle" camouflage, they saw a shimmering<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</SPAN></span>
image which it was hard for them to measure on
the fine graduations of their periscopes. Some
ships were painted with heavy blotches of black
and white, and the enemy making a hasty observation
would be apt to focus his attention
on the dark masses and overlook the white parts.
So he was likely to make a mistake in estimating
the height of the smoke-stack or in measuring
the apparent length of a vessel.</p>
<h3>A JOKE ON THE PHOTOGRAPHER</h3>
<p>Early in the submarine campaign one of our
boats was given a coat of camouflage, and when
the vessel sailed from its pier in the North
River, New York, the owners sent a photographer
two or three piers down the river to
photograph the ship as she went by. He took
the picture, but when the negative was developed,
much to his astonishment he found
that the boat was not all on the plate. In the
finder of his camera, he had mistaken a heavy
band of black paint for the stern of the ship,
quite overlooking the real stern, which was
painted a grayish white. The artist had fooled
the photographer and at a distance of not more
than two or three hundred yards!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">219</SPAN></span></p>
<h3>SEEING BEYOND THE HORIZON</h3>
<p>The periscope of a submarine that is running
awash can be raised about fifteen feet above
the water, which means that the horizon as
viewed from that elevation is about six miles
away, and if you draw a circle with a six-mile
radius on the map of the Atlantic, you
will find that it is a mere speck in the ocean;
but a U-boat commander could see objects
that lay far beyond his horizon because he was
searching for objects which towered many feet
above the water. The smoke-stacks of some
vessels rise a hundred feet above the water-line,
and the masts reach up to much greater
altitudes. Aside from this, in the early days
of the war steamers burned soft coal and their
funnels belched forth huge columns of smoke
which was visible from twenty to thirty miles
away.</p>
<p>When this was realized, efforts were made
to cut down the superstructure of a ship as much
as possible. Some vessels had their stacks
cut down almost to the deck-line, and air-pumps
were installed to furnish the draft necessary to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">220</SPAN></span>
keep their furnaces going. They had no masts
except for slender iron pipes which could be
folded down against the deck and could be
erected at a moment's notice, to carry the
aërials of the wireless system. Over the ship
from stem to stern was stretched, a cable,
familiarly known as a "clothes-line," upon
which were laid strips of canvas that completely
covered the superstructure of the ship.
These boats lay so low that they could not be
seen at any great distance, and it was difficult
for the U-boats to find them. They were slow
boats; too slow to run away from a modern
submarine, but because of their lowly structure,
they managed to elude the German U-boats.
When they were seen, the U-boat commanders
were afraid of them. They were suspicious of
anything that looked out of the ordinary, and
preferred to let the "clothes-line ships" go.</p>
<div id="ip_220" class="figcenter" style="width: 545px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_220.jpg" width-obs="545" height-obs="347" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="floatleft captionl">(C) Committee on Public Information</div>
<div class="floatright l4 captionr">From Western Newspaper Union</div>
<div class="clear caption0">Camouflaged Headquarters of the American 26th Division in France</div>
</div>
<h3>THE BRITISH MYSTERY SHIPS</h3>
<p>The Germans had some very unhealthy experiences
with the "Q-boats" or "mystery
ships" of the British. These were vessels
rigged up much like ordinary tramp steamers,
but they were loaded with wood, so that they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">221</SPAN></span>
would not sink, and their hatches were arranged
to fall open at the touch of a button, exposing
powerful guns. They also were equipped with
torpedo-tubes, so that they could give the U-boat
a dose of its own medicine. These ships would
travel along the lanes frequented by submarines,
and invite attack. They would limp along as
if they had been injured by a storm or a U-boat
attack, and looked like easy prey. When a submarine
did attack them, they would send out
frantic calls for help, and they had so-called
"panic" parties which took to the boats. Meantime,
a picked crew remained aboard, carefully
concealed from view, and the captain kept his
eye upon the enemy through a periscope disguised
as a small ventilator, waiting for the
U-boat to come within range of certain destruction.
Sometimes the panic party would lure
the submarine into a favorable position by
rowing under the stern as if to hide around the
other side of the ship. At the proper moment,
up would go the white ensign—the British
man-of-war flag—the batteries would be unmasked,
and a hail of shell would break loose
over the Hun. Many a German submarine was
accounted for by such traps.</p>
<div id="ip_221" class="figcenter" style="width: 506px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_221.jpg" width-obs="506" height-obs="350" alt="" /><br/>
<div class="captionl">(C) Underwood & Underwood</div>
<div class="caption0">A Camouflaged Ship in the Hudson River on Victory Day</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">222</SPAN></span>
Submarines themselves used all sorts of
camouflage. They were frequently equipped
with sails which they would raise to disguise
themselves as peaceful sloops, and in this way
they were able to steal up on a victim without
discovery. Sometimes they would seize a ship
and hide behind it in order to get near their
prey.</p>
<h3>CAMOUFLAGE ON LAND</h3>
<p>But the call for the wielders of the paintbrush
came not only from the sea. Their services
were needed fully as much on land, and the
making of land camouflage was far more interesting
because it was more varied and more
successful. Besides, it called for more than
mere paint; all sorts of tricks with canvas,
grass, and branches were used. Of course, the
soldiers were garbed in dust-colored clothing
and shiny armor was discarded. The helmets
they wore were covered with a material that cast
no gleam of light. In every respect, they tried
to make themselves of the same shade as their
surroundings. Like the Indians, they painted
their faces. This was done when they made
their raids at night. They painted their faces<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">223</SPAN></span>
black so that they would not show the faintest
reflection of light.</p>
<h3>A PAPER HORSE</h3>
<p>The most interesting camouflage work was
done for the benefit of snipers or for observers
at listening-posts close to the enemy trenches.
It was very important to spy on the enemy and
discover his plans, and so men were sent out
as near his lines as possible, to listen to the conversation
and to note any signs of unusual activity
which would be likely to precede a raid.
These men were supplied with telephone wires
which they dragged over No Man's Land, and
by which they could communicate their discoveries
to headquarters. Some very ingenious
listening-posts were established. In one case
a papier-mâché duplicate of a dead horse was
made, which was an exact facsimile of an animal
that had been shot and lay between the two
lines. One night, the carcass of the horse was
removed and the papier-mâché replica took its
place. In the latter a man was stationed with
telephone connection back to his own lines.
Here he had an excellent chance to watch the
enemy.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">224</SPAN></span>
On another occasion a standing tree, whose
branches had been shot away, was carefully
photographed and an exact copy of it made, but
with a chamber inside in which an observer could
be concealed. One night while the noise of the
workmen was drowned by heavy cannonading,
this tree was removed and its facsimile was set
up instead, and it remained for many a day before
the enemy discovered that it was a fake
tree-trunk. It provided a tall observation post
from which an observer could direct the fire of
his own artillery.</p>
<h3>FOOLING THE WATCHERS IN THE SKY</h3>
<p>In the early stages of the war, it seemed impossible
to hide anything from the Germans.
They had eyes everywhere and were able to anticipate
everything the Allies did. But the
spies that infested the sky were the worst handicap.
Even when the Allies gained control of
the air, the control was more or less nominal
because every now and then an enemy observer
would slip over or under the patrolling aëroplanes
and make photographs of the Allies'
lines. The photographs were carefully compared<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">225</SPAN></span>
with others previously taken, that the
slightest change in detail might be discovered.
Airplane observers not only would be ready
to drop bombs on any suspicious object or upon
masses of troops moving along the roads, but
would telephone back to their artillery to direct
its fire upon these targets. Of course, the
enemy knew where the roads were located and
a careful watch was kept of them.</p>
<p>The French did not try to hide the roads, but
they concealed the traffic on the roads by hanging
rows of curtains over them. As these curtains
hung vertically and were spaced apart, one
would suppose that they would furnish little
concealment, but they prevented an observer
in an aëroplane from looking down the length
of a road. All the road he could see was that
which lay directly under his machine, because
there he could look between the curtains; if
he looked obliquely at the road, the curtains
would appear to overlap one another and would
conceal operations going on under them.</p>
<p>In one case, the Germans completely covered
a sunken road with canvas painted to represent
a road surface. Under this canvas canopy,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">226</SPAN></span>
troops were moved to an important strategic
point without the slightest indication of such a
movement.</p>
<h3>HIDING BIG GUNS</h3>
<p>Nature's tricks of camouflage were freely used
in the hiding of the implements of war on land.
Our big guns were concealed by being painted
with leopard spots and tiger stripes, the color
and nature of the camouflage depending upon
the station they were to occupy. In many cases,
they were covered with branches of trees or
with rope netting overspread with leaves. So
careful was the observation of the air scouts
that even the grass scorched by the fire of the
gun had to be covered with green canvas to
prevent betrayal of the position of the gun.</p>
<h3>ROADS THAT LED NOWHERE</h3>
<p>In the making of an emplacement for a gun
it was of the utmost importance that no fresh
upturned earth be disclosed to the aërial observers.
Even foot-paths leading to it had to
be concealed. Plans were carefully made to
cover up all traces of the work before the work
was begun. Where it was impossible to conceal<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">227</SPAN></span>
the paths, they were purposely made to lead
well beyond the point where the emplacement
was building, and, still further to deceive the
enemy, a show of work was sometimes undertaken
at the end of the path. Wherever the
sod had to be upturned, it was covered over
with green canvas. The earth that was removed
had to be concealed somewhere and the
best place of concealment was found to be some
old shell-hole which would hold a great deal
of earth without any evidence that would be apparent
to an observer in an aëroplane. If no
shell-hole were handy, the excavated material
had to be hauled for miles before a safe dumping-ground
could be found. As far as possible
everything was sunk below the earth level.
Big pits were dug in which the mortars were
placed, or if a shell-hole were empty, this was
used instead.</p>
<h3>SHADOWLESS BUILDINGS</h3>
<p>Any projection above the ground was apt to
cast a shadow which would show up on the observer's
photographs. This was a difficulty
that was experienced in building the hangars
for airplanes. The roofs of these sheds were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">228</SPAN></span>
painted green so as to match the sod around
them, but as they projected above their surroundings,
they cast shadows which made them
clearly evident to the enemy. This was overcome
by the building of shadowless hangars;
that is, hangars with roofs that extended all
the way to the ground at such an angle that they
would cause no shadow except when the sun was
low. In some cases, aëroplanes were housed
in underground hangars, the approach to which
was concealed by a canvas covering. As for
the machines themselves, they scorned the use
of camouflage. Paint was little protection to
them. Some attempt was made to use transparent
wings of <i>cellon</i>, a material similar to
celluloid, but this did not prove a success.</p>
<h3>THE PHOTOGRAPHIC EYE</h3>
<p>Although camoufleurs made perfect imitations
of natural objects and surroundings, they were
greatly concerned to find that the flying observers
could see through their disguises. To the
naked eye the landscape would not show the
slightest trace of any suspicions object, but by
the use of a color-screen to cut out certain rays
of light, a big difference would be shown between<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">229</SPAN></span>
the real colors of nature and the artist's copies
of them. For instance, if a roof painted to
look like green grass were viewed through a
red color-screen, it would look brown; while the
real grass, which apparently was of exactly the
same shade as the roof, would look red. It
had not been realized by the artists who had
never studied the composition of light, that there
is a great deal of red in the green light reflected
by grass, and that if they were to duplicate
this shade of green, they must put a certain
amount of red paint in their imitation grass
roofs. Air scouts did not depend upon their
eyes alone, but used cameras so that they could
study their photographs at their leisure and by
fitting the cameras with different color-screens,
they could analyze the camouflage and undo the
patient work of the artist.</p>
<h3>A CALL FOR THE PHYSICIST</h3>
<p>To meet this situation, another man was summoned
to help—the physicist, who looks upon
color merely as waves of ether; who can pick
a ray of light to pieces just as a chemist can
analyze a lump of sugar. Under his expert
guidance, colors of nature were imitated so that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230">230</SPAN></span>
they would defy detection. Aside from this, the
physicist helped to solve the tricks of the
enemy's camoufleurs.</p>
<p>But the physicist had barely rolled up his
sleeves and got into the fray when the armistice
was signed which put an end to the shams
as well as to the realities of the great war.
While the work of camouflage was not completed,
we owe an inestimable debt to the men
who knew how to fake scenery and to their
learned associates who count the wave lengths
of light, and although their trade was a trade of
deception and shams, there was no sham about
the service they rendered.</p>
<h3>MAKING SHIPS VISIBLE</h3>
<p>While in war safety lies in invisibility, in
peace the reverse is true. Now that the war is
over, it may seem that the work of the camoufleurs
can find no useful application; but it
was impossible to learn how to make objects
invisible without also learning how to make
them conspicuously visible. As a consequence,
we know now how to paint a ship so that it
will show up more clearly in foggy weather,
thereby reducing the danger of collision. We<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">231</SPAN></span>
know, too, how to paint light-ships, buoys, etc.,
so that they will be much more conspicuous
and better guides to mariners, and how to color
railroad signals and road signs so that they
will be more easily seen by locomotive engineers
and automobile drivers.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">232</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />