- USS Kete (SS-369)
USS "Kete" (SS-369), a "Balao"-class
submarine , was the only ship of theUnited States Navy to be named for thekete , the foureye butterflyfish "Chaetodon capistratus". Her keel was laid down byManitowoc Shipbuilding Company ofManitowoc, Wisconsin . She was launched on9 April 1944 sponsored by Mrs. E. S. Hutchinson, and commissioned on31 July with Commander R. L. Rutter in command.Departing Manitowoc
20 August , "Kete" sailed viaNew Orleans, Louisiana , toPanama . Arriving5 September , she trained with SubRon 3 until28 September ; then the new submarine sailed toPearl Harbor , arriving15 October , and steamed westward on31 October for her first war patrol.She topped off her fuel at
Midway Island on4 November and reached her assigned patrol area in theEast China Sea on15 November in company with USS|Sea Lion|SS-315|3. Harassed by heavy weather and nonfunctioning bow planes, she sailed19 November forSaipan , where she arrived24 November . She departedSaipan with USS|Kraken|SS-370|3 on24 December and resumed her war patrol north ofOkinawa four days later. Despite prolonged periods of heavy weather, she made lifeguard patrols off the centralRyukyu Islands from1 January to27 January 1945 searching for American fliers downed during air strikes on theRyukyu Islands . After gathering vital weather data, she sailed toGuam and arrived30 January for refit.With Lieutenant Commander Edward Ackerman in command, "Kete" cleared
Guam on1 March for her second war patrol. Assigned to waters surrounding theNansei Shoto Chain , she resumed lifeguard duty and gathered weather data for the forthcoming invasion ofOkinawa . While patrolling west ofTokara Retto on the night of9 March and10 March , she surprised an enemy convoy and torpedoed three marus totaling 6881 tons. During the night of14 March , she attacked a cable-laying ship.With only three torpedoes remaining, she was ordered to depart the area
20 March , refuel atMidway Island , and proceed toPearl Harbor for refit. "Kete" acknowledged these orders19 March ; and, while steaming eastward the following day, she sent in a weather report from a position south ofColnett Strait . She was neither seen nor heard from again. She was scheduled to arrive Midway by31 March ; when repeated attempts to contact her by radio failed she was reported as presumed lost on16 April .Circumstances surrounding her loss remain a mystery. The cause could have been an operational malfunction, a mine explosion, or enemy action.
"Kete" received one
battle star forWorld War II service.References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/k3/kete.htm
External links
*navsource|08/08369|Kete
* [http://www.oneternalpatrol.com/uss-kete-369.htm On Eternal Patrol: USS "Kete"]
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