- USS Remora (SS-487)
USS "Remora" (SS-487), a "Tench"-class submarine, was the only ship of the
United States Navy to be named for theremora , a fish with a suctorial disk on its head enabling it to cling to other fish and to ships. Her keel was laid down on5 March 1945 by thePortsmouth Navy Yard inKittery, Maine . She was launched on12 July 1945 sponsored by Mrs. T. W. Samuels, III, and commissioned on3 January 1946 with Commander Robert Sellars in command.Completing her
Caribbean Sea shakedown in April 1946, "Remora" operated out ofNew London, Connecticut , as a training submarine until January 1947. Then transferred to the Pacific, she transited thePanama Canal at midmonth and arrived atMare Island ,Vallejo, California , on14 February to begin aGreater Underwater Propulsive Power Program (GUPPY) conversion. Early in November, she completed trials and on22 February arrived atSan Diego, California , her new homeport.For the next two years, she remained in the eastern Pacific operating primarily off
California , but during the summer and early fall of 1948, ranged as far north as theAleutian Islands . On1 May 1950 she headed west for her first deployment in the Far East. On8 June she arrived at Sasebo, and on11 June she shifted toYokosuka , from which base she conducted ASW training exercises with units of Naval Forces Far East. Two weeks later theKorean War began.A unit of TF 96, Naval Forces Japan "Remora" patrolled
Soya Strait , betweenHokkaidō andSakhalin in late July and early August. Later in the month, she headed back to San Diego. During the next two years she underwent overhaul, provided services for the Line School atMonterey, California , and conducted local training exercises. She returned to the western Pacific in early 1953. Arriving atBuckner Bay on15 March , she continued on to Japan in April and at midmonth rejoined TF 96. In June she was back in Okinawan waters for patrols and exercises, after which she returned to Yokosuka. On2 July she headed east, reaching San Diego on3 August .After the fighting in Korea ended, "Remora" remained based at San Diego and through the decade continued to alternate training exercises and patrols in the western Pacific with similar First Fleet operations off the west coast and in
Hawaii an waters. She remained in the eastern Pacific during 1956 and 1958, but, during the spring of the latter year, was engaged in extended exercises offAlaska .In November 1961, "Remora" was transferred from San Diego to
Pearl Harbor . The following year she underwent a seven-monthGreater Underwater Propulsive Power Program (GUPPY) conversion which lengthened her hull by convert|15|ft|m|0 and her conning tower by five feet. Then, in 1963, she was employed to evaluate antisubmarine sonar in Hawaiian waters. In May 1964, she resumed a schedule of annual six-month WestPac deployments which she continued into 1969. "Remora" was one of the last diesel boats to receive the Navy Unit Commendation for "Meritorious Service for operations during the Summer and Fall of 1967."In August 1969, "Remora" shifted home ports, from Pearl Harbor toCharleston, South Carolina . With the exception of oneMediterranean Sea cruise, from16 February to26 June 1970 , she continued to operate out of Charleston, along the Atlantic seaboard, in theCaribbean Sea , and in theGulf of Mexico , until decommissioned29 October 1973 at Charleston.Greek submarine Katsonis (S-115)
After decommissionning from US Navy in 1973, she was transferred to the
Hellenic Navy and recommissioned as "Katsonis" (S-115)] .References
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