The slow-running torpedo was derived from
Raffaele Rossetti's
Mignatta (Italian for "leech"), used in
World War I to sink the Austrian battleship
Viribus Unitis. The nickname "
maiale" (Italian for "pig") was adopted as a code name by Tesei to protect the secrecy of the craft. The idea was born during training, when an exasperated sailor used the term to refer to the torpedo. , one of the naval engineers who conceived the "
maiale" and was awarded the
Medaglia d'Oro This project was conceived in 1935 by the Naval Engineer diver captains
Teseo Tesei and Elios Toschi. Teseo Tesei later died in action with one of his
pigs in
Malta. The first two prototypes of the SLC were tested in October 1935, in the San Bartolomeo torpedo workshops of
La Spezia in the presence of Mario Falangola who at the time directed the Submarine Inspectorate. Falangola was so enthusiastic about it that he commissioned the construction of two more SLCs. In 1939 the navy department that trained in the use of the SLC was transferred to a secret base located in Bocca di Serchio, in the stretch of sea in front of the mouth of the river
Serchio. During repeated training tests, the weapon was perfected (see
Mario Giorgini and
Gino Birindelli) and between 1939 and ’43 the Italian navy manufactured more than 50 SLCs. On December 19, 1941 the "maiali" carried out their most famous action, the
raid on Alexandria, Egypt, in which they and sank the British battleships and , the tanker
Sagona and the destroyer
Jervis. The three SLCs had been transported close to the enemy base by the submarine
Sciré inside three cylinders placed on deck. SLCs operated secretly from the oil tanker
Olterra, interned in the neutral port of
Algeciras, 2 miles from the
Port of Gibraltar. The Italians smuggled SLCs parts and reassembled them within the
Olterra before launching them from a hidden underwater hatch. They sank or damaged nine Allied cargo vessels totaling 42,000 tons. Only after Italy capitulated in September 1943 did the Allies discover
Olterra’s role. The British used captured specimens of the SLC to develop their own
Chariot manned torpedo. SLCs sank or damaged a total of three warships and 111,527 tons of merchant shipping. Italy developed an improved version, the SSB (
Siluro San Bartolomeo) but fielded only three of them before the armistice. == Design ==