- USS Menhaden (SS-377)
USS "Menhaden" (SS-377), a "Balao"-class
submarine , was the first submarine and second ship of theUnited States Navy to be named for themenhaden , a marine fish of theherring family which, as the most abundant of fishes along the Atlantic coast, is found fromNew England waters southward; the fish is caught for bait or converted into oil and fertilizer."Menhaden" was laid down by
Manitowoc Shipbuilding Co. ,Manitowoc, Wisc. ,21 June 1944 ; launched20 December 1944 ; sponsored by Miss Mirium R. Johnson and commissioned at Manitowoc22 June 1945 , Commander David H. McClintock in command."Menhaden" was skippered by Commander McClintock and manned by sailors from the redoubtable USS|Darter|SS-227|3 which had been lost by grounding during the
battle of Leyte Gulf the previous October. "Menhaden", the last of the Manitowoc-built boats to have commissioned service duringWorld War II , trained inLake Michigan until15 July . Thence, she was floated down theMississippi River to New Orleans where she departed for the Canal Zone27 July . She conducted extensive training out of Balboa during the closing days of the war againstJapan , and between1 September and16 September cruised toPearl Harbor for duty with SubRon 19.On
24 November "Menhaden" broke the flag of Fleet Adm.Chester W. Nimitz ,CINCPAC andCINCPOA . Fleet Admiral Nimitz had selected "Menhaden" as hisflagship during Change of Command ceremonies, for she combined the new with the old. Although untried in combat, she was one of the newest boats in the Submarine Service and incorporated the latest improvements in submarine design and equipment. Moreover her “gallantly battle-tested” crew epitomized the “valor, skill, and dedicated service of submariners” during the long Pacific war. Thus, on her deck that morning Fleet Admiral Nimitz read his orders assigning him to duty asChief of Naval Operations , and his relief, Adm.Raymond A. Spruance , read orders making him CINCPAC and CINPOA."Menhaden" operated out of Pearl Harbor until
2 January 1946 when she sailed for the west coast, arrivingSan Francisco 8 January . Following inactivation overhaul at Mare Island, she decommissioned31 May 1946 and entered thePacific Reserve Fleet . She recommissioned at Mare Island7 August 1951 , Lt. Comdr. Ralph G. Johns, Jr., in command. Assigned to SubRon 5, she operated along the west coast out ofSan Diego during the next year. She again decommissioned at Mare Island13 August 1952 and began aGUPPY IIA overhaul and conversion to a snorkel submarine."Menhaden" recommissioned
6 March 1953 , Lt. Comdr. William R. Werner in command. She joined SubRon 3 at San Diego12 June , and on21 September she sailed for the Far East. Operating out of Yokosuka, she ranged the East andSouth China Sea s until11 February 1954 ; thence, she returned to San Diego23 March . For the next year and a half she operated in the eastern Pacific where she participated in fleet readiness exercises and type training assignments. On18 August 1955 she began her second deployment to WesPac where she joined and supported the ever-vigilantTaiwan patrol force. She returned to the west coast17 February 1956 ."Menhaden" completed six more deployments in the troubled waters of the Far East. As a unit of SubDiv 32, she cruised the western Pacific from Japan and Taiwan to the
Philippines andAustralia . She carried out surveillance and reconnaissance patrols off past and present areas of cold war conflict fromKorea toVietnam .When not deployed in the western Pacific, "Menhaden" maintained a schedule of intensive readiness and alert exercises. Home ported at San Diego, she participated in numerous fleet and intertype exercises. In addition, she supported sonar school operations and provided at-sea training for members of the Navy’s Submarine Reserve Force.
Early in 1968 "Menhaden" returned to the western Pacific. During a 6-month deployment she concentrated her operations in the troubled waters of
Southeast Asia as the United States increased the effort to protect and defend the independence and integrity ofSouth Vietnam from aggression of theNorth Vietnam ese Communists. Later in the year she returned to the west coast where she continued to prepare for future “keeping-the-peace” missions."Menhaden" was decommissioned,
13 August 1971 , and struck from theNaval Register ,15 August 1973 . In 1976, ex-"Menhaden" was towed fromCalifornia toWashington to begin a new career as the "Yellow Submarine." The boat, stripped of her engines and painted yellow, was operated by theNaval Undersea Warfare Engineering Station in Keyport, Wash. Affectionately referred to as "The Hulk", she served as a remotely controlled, unmanned acoustic test vehicle capable of submerging to moderate depths in support of undersea weapons testing, and as a target ship to trainTrident missile submarine crews off the coast of Washington.In 1988 she sank, due to a leaking main-ballast-tank vent-valve when she was being cut up for scrap. As the tide came in, she was not able to float fast enough to avoid being flooded through all of the holes cut through her pressure hull. The city of Everett eventually finished scrapping the abandoned hulk.
References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/m8/menhaden-ii.htm|http://hazegray.org/danfs/submar/ss377.htm
External links
*navsource|08/08377a|Menhaden
* [http://www.infomagic.net/~grog/ USS "Menhaden" website]
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