peashooter85:

Getting Wasted on Torpedo Fuel During World War II,

During World War I the United States Navy first instituted a rule decreeing that no alcoholic beverages were permitted on ship. This didn’t mean that drinking stopped entirely on US Naval vessels, crafty sailors still found ways to smuggle alcohol on board or produce their own.  During World War II many sailors resorted to drinking the fuel from the Mark 14 torpedo. The Mark 14 was the standard torpedo used by the US Navy in early World War II which could be dropped from the air, used by surface ships, and used by submarines. To power the torpedo the Mark 14′s engine burned 180 proof (90%) ethyl alcohol. For those who don’t know, ethyl alcohol is the potable type of alcohol found in alcoholic beverages.  Sailors would mix the torpedo fuel with juice, preferably pineapple juice but also whatever they could get their hands on. The drink was commonly known as “torpedo juice”.

In response to an outbreak of sailors boozing on torpedo fuel, the US Navy began denaturing the fuel, which means they would add a 5-10% mixture of methyl alcohol to the fuel. Whereas ethyl alcohol is potable, methyl alcohol is poisonous, causing blindness or death when consumed. Denaturing was a process created during the Prohibition Era to prevent people from drinking non-beverage sources of alcohol such as fuel, cleaners, and sterilizing agents. The idea is that if you mixed it with  poison people would be smart enough not to drink it. In reality, people drank it anyway causing thousands of deaths. 

To this day denaturing is still done and taken for granted without a thought despite many thousands of people being poisoned to death, not just desperate boozers looking for a cheap drink but accidental poisonings of children. Regardless, the Federal Government and most other governments have yet to change their policies on denaturing. I guess it’s worth it to keep people from getting drunk on rubbing alcohol. However, the US Navy did modify it’s policy regarding fuel alcohol. Like denaturing in the civilian world, denaturing of torpedo fuel only led to hundreds of deaths of sailors by methanol poisoning. Sailors would try various methods of filtering out the methyl alcohol, some as harebrained as running it through a loaf of bread. Most methods failed resulting in illness and death. Thus, the US Navy ceased denaturing of torpedo fuel but substituted methanol with croton oil, which is a potent laxative. The Navy figured that if they weren’t going to poison sailors who broke the rules by drinking torpedo fuel, they could at least give them a really bad case of the runs. Unlike methyl alcohol however, croton oil can be successfully removed from alcohol, in particular through distillation. All over the Navy sailors constructed crude stills to distill the alcohol from the croton oil. 

So then the Navy found itself back to square one, with it’s hands full of unruly sailors drunk on torpedo fuel. The problem was mostly resolved however with the invention of the Mark 18 torpedo. The Mark 14 torpedo had several problems; it often failed to detonate or detonated too early, it would run too deep, it would run in circles, and of course sailors were getting smashed on it’s fuel. Thus in late 1943 the US Navy adopted the Mark 18 torpedo, which was much more reliable, more economical, and utilized an electric engine. Thus no need for alcohol fuel.  At that point, much of the supply of underground booze in the US Navy dried up.

If you want to “relive” World War II history and make torpedo juice for yourself, it’s relatively simple. Just mix one part 190 proof grain alcohol such as Everclear (found at any liquor store) with three parts pineapple juice. Please don’t use methyl alcohol or denatured alcohol. Don’t eat Tide pods either you dumb shits.

saxifraga-x-urbium:

moranion:

historicaltimes:

One person’s weekly rationing allowance in England in 1951

via reddit

… what the hell, this is like breakfast, lunch and dinner, and where’s anything along the lines of bread or at least flour, or rice, or smth grain-related, or potatoes??? or where those things not rationed?

Not rationed by 1950. Also it’s the 40s & 50s, you make your own damn bread. This is a reduction from the number of things rationed during active wartime

More info on rationing during and after WWII

That photo looks like it only includes “luxury” food products, which were being rationed at the time, Temporary bread rationing apparently did start after a wheat crop failure in 1946 (continuing into 1948), but staples like bread and potatoes weren’t rationed most of the time.

This did go on surprisingly long after the war ended:

February 1953: Confectionery rationing ended.

September 1953: Sugar rationing ended.

4 July 1954: Meat and all other food rationing ended in Britain.

Meanwhile, our local street market was apparently a persistent major source of black market goods. Besides food, that included items like new clothes sold as secondhand or “shop-soiled”. Kind of interesting history. (Not as good a source on that as I’ve seen before, but I could find it quickly.)

How the World’s Only Feudal Lord Outclassed the Nazis to Save Her People

rejectedprincesses:

From the article:

Dame Sybil fought the urge roll her eyes. She had been fending off the Nazis without any help from England since the war started. Why would she need help now? “As I have been left for nearly five years,” she said, “I can stand a few more days.”

How the World’s Only Feudal Lord Outclassed the Nazis to Save Her People

hornygold:

wizardshark:

fizzy-dog:

tilthat:

TIL that carrots aren’t actually good for your eyes… it’s just a myth that the British government fabricated during WWII. They wanted to keep their newly developed radar system secret from the Germans and had to find some way to explain how they were suddenly shooting down a lot more planes.

via reddit.com

germany: how are you guys destroying our planes so easily?

british guy who’s about to invent the myth about carrots being good for your eyes: oh you haven’t heard?

the best part though is that the germans BELIEVED IT

That’s because the people making the decisions were Nazis and, like most people on the far right (Brexiteers, Trump voters, etc.) Nazis are numpties. The Brits hoodwinked the Nazis again and again and again all the way through the war, with such startling regularity that they must have been in a state of perpetual surprise that so many of their schemes worked.

It helped that the Nazis never established a spy network of their own in Britain: of the 115 agents the Nazis sent to the UK during the war, 114 were either captured (and very often turned) or were already British double agents. The one exception committed suicide to avoid capture.

But it’s the various ruses the Brits pulled that are worth reading, and the whole carrot thing completely fits with their style. Two of my personal favorites are Operation Mincemeat, and Agent Zigzag.

saxifraga-x-urbium:

kropotkindersurprise:

olaeinaiflou:

kropotkindersurprise:

1944 – Snowball the cat tries to take over a machine gun in Normandy so she can shoot some Nazis herself. Good luck to you, Snowball! 

I prefer the version that the cat tries to stop him from shouting another human being.

Well, luckily that version isn’t true, and the Nazis were defeated by shooting lots of them. Good job, Snowball!

snowball the cat plays with a man’s finger because she is a cat

Rare Photos of Black Rosie the Riveters

endangered-justice-seeker:

During World War II, 600,000 African-American women entered the wartime
workforce. Previously, black women’s work in the United States was
largely limited to domestic service and agricultural work, and wartime
industries meant new and better-paying opportunities – if they made it
through the hiring process, that is. White women were the targets of the
U.S. government’s propaganda efforts, as embodied in the lasting and
lauded image of Rosie the Riveter.Though largely ignored in America’s
popular history of World War II, black women’s important contributions
in World War II factories, which weren’t always so welcoming, are
stunningly captured in these comparably rare snapshots of black Rosie
the Riveters.

exigetspersonal:

dancesontheedge:

glitterspacequeen:

tehzii:

barefootdramaturg:

thewinterotter:

writerlyn:

I unabashedly loved this scene.

My favorite thing about this is that Dottie is getting fucking object concealment tips from these genius food-stealing women and she’s probably using that knowledge to hide idek small thermonuclear devices in her bra or something. Probably went back to the Red Room afterward like “omg girls let me teach you what I learned in America. It’s vital we teach our tiny assassins to knit, I met a woman who successfully concealed a whole chicken in her sweater, they’ll need this kind of ingenuity in the field.”

I also really love that this is a large group of women who unabashedly like food and eating. None of them are going “oh no my diet, what if I get fat?”, they’re like “I CAN FIT A  CHICKEN IN MY SWEATER AND THEN LATER, I HAVE A WHOLE CHICKEN FOR ME.”

I’ve reblogged this before and seen it at least a dozen times, but every time I see “AND THEN LATER, I HAVE A WHOLE CHICKEN FOR ME.” I start ugly laughing and can’t stop and frighten the dog.

Remember that these women grew up during the depression. A lot of them probably learned food hoarding tactics because they never knew when their next meal was going to be. So yeah, if you have the chance to shove an entire chicken in your sweater so later, when there is suddenly *no food*? You’re gonna take it.

Also, Peggy is British.  She’s shocked and a little appalled at these food-stealing women, because Britain had such heavy rationing during the war.  

British rationing did not end until 1954 (that’s still 8 years away from the time this scene takes place).  Rations applied to all food staples, soap, clothing, fuel, and paper.  In some cases, they became worse or more stringent after the war.  In 1946, when this story takes place, Britain instituted bread rationing for the first time, food packages weighing more than 5lbs from foreign countries sent to private citizens were subtracted from that citizen’s ration book (so decreasing the amount of food they could buy), and gas was rationed again.   While America also rationed during the War, the rations were never as severe as the ones in the UK and were lifted immediately after peace was declared.

Peggy’s reaction is “I would never betray my country by stealing food.”

Reblogging for history lesson. I feel like a lot of people don’t know just how bad things got in the UK for a while. Sugar, eggs and fat were so heavily rationed that there were recipes for cakes made with paraffin – in other words, mineral oil.

Rationing of meat actually continued until 1954, when my father was two years old. So there’s some food for thought, pun not intended.