- USS Quillback (SS-424)
USS "Quillback" (SS-424), a "Tench"-class submarine, was the only ship of the
United States Navy to be named forquillback , a fish of the sucker family, widespread in the freshwaters of North America and Northern Asia.When her construction by the
Portsmouth Navy Yard inKittery, Maine , was authorized, her name was to be "Trembler", which would have made her the first ship named for the trembler, a torpedinoid fish of theWest Indies andBrazil , but she was given a less embarrassing name on7 December 1943 .Her keel was laid down on
27 June 1944 . She was launched on1 October 1944 sponsored by Mrs. J. A. Tyree, Jr., and commissioned on29 December 1944 with Lieutenant Commander R. P. Nicholson in command.After training at
New London, Connecticut , and work on an experimental ordnance project atKey West, Florida , "Quillback" departed forPearl Harbor and her maiden war patrol, off the coast ofKyūshū . During this patrol, from30 May to24 July 1945 , she destroyed a Japanese suicide motorboat and rescued one aviator from the water only a half mile from the heavily armed shore. Surrender of the enemy found "Quillback" refitting for her second patrol atGuam .Peacetime duties returned "Quillback" to New London for duty as a unit of Submarine Squadron 2. From 1945 to 1951, she operated with the Submarine School in a training capacity and as an experimental unit of the Naval Underwater Sound Laboratory. In April 1951, "Quillback" departed New London for a six month tour of duty with the Sixth Fleet in the
Mediterranean Sea . In April 1952, she reported to thePortsmouth Naval Shipyard for decommissioning and conversion.On
27 February 1953 , "Quillback" was recommissioned and joined the Submarine Force, Atlantic Fleet as a streamlinedGreater Underwater Propulsive Power Program (GUPPY) Submarine. She reported to ComSubRon 4 at Key West. There in local operations, with occasional trips to Guantanamo Bay, she assisted the Fleet Training Group in Destroyer ASW indoctrination. In 1956, 1957, and 1958, "Quillback" took part in major fleet andNATO exercises in the North Atlantic.In 1959, "Quillback" was transferred to Submarine Squadron 12. During 1960, she underwent extensive overhaul at
Charleston, South Carolina , to improve her offensive capabilities. She deployed to the Mediterranean in October 1961, returning to Key West in February 1962. Operating locally out of Key West from May to October, "Quillback" was deployed to Guantanamo Bay when the Cuban Quarantine was put into effect and remained there during the first ten days of theCuban Missile Crisis . During 1963, "Quillback" operated out of Key West and rendered services to the Fleet Training Group at Guantanamo."Quillback" deployed to the Mediterranean for six months in July 1964. Experimental torpedo research and development projects were assigned to "Quillback" in 1965 until she deployed to Guantanamo Bay in June. She continued to operate out of Key West until deploying to the Mediterranean again from August to November 1967. She spent most of 1968 and 1969 in the Caribbean.
Stricken from the
Naval Vessel Register on23 March 1973 , "Quillback" was sold on21 March 1974 ."Quillback" earned one
battle star forWorld War II service.References
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