- USS Sea Fox (SS-402)
USS "Sea Fox" (SS-402), a "Balao"-class
submarine , was a ship of theUnited States Navy named for thesea fox , a largeshark , also called thethresher shark , which frequents the coast ofEurope and theAmericas ."Sea Fox" was laid down on
2 November 1943 at thePortsmouth Navy Yard inKittery, Maine ; launched on28 March 1944 , sponsored by Mrs. Robert N. Robertson; and commissioned on13 June 1944 , Lieutenant Commander Roy C. Klinker in command.First patrol: October – November 1944
Two months after commissioning, "Sea Fox" departed New London for
Hawaii and duty in Submarine Division 282 (SubDiv 282). She arrived atPearl Harbor on11 September and, on4 October , got underway on her first war patrol. On16 October , she entered her initial patrol area near theBonin Islands , and remained in the Bonin-Volcano Islands area through25 October , hunting enemy shipping and serving on lifeguard duty forB-24 Liberator strikes againstIwo Jima .On
26 October , she conducted her first attack and damaged an enemy freighter; then proceeded on to theNansei Shoto in the Ryukyus. There, on8 November , after firing 11 torpedoes in four attacks, she sank an engines-aft cargoman. Of the 11 torpedoes fired, several broached and one circled and passed over "Sea Fox"'sconning tower . On15 November , the submarine departed her assigned area and arrived atMajuro on24 November for refit.Second patrol: December 1944 – February 1945
On her second war patrol,
20 December 1944 to5 February 1945 , "Sea Fox" returned to the Nansei Shoto as a unit of Task Group 17.19, a coordinated attack group comprised of herself, USS|Blueback|SS-326|3, and USS|Puffer|SS-268|3. En route toSaipan to top off with fuel, the submarines and their PC escort picked up survivors of a downed Liberator. On28 December , the submarines departed the Marianas for the Ryukyus; and, on1 January 1945 , "Sea Fox" reached her patrol area.Nine days later, she made her only contact worthy of
torpedo fire but, despite two attacks, was unsuccessful. "Puffer", to which she reported the contact, later sank the target, "Coast Defense Vessel No. 42". In February 1945, while undergoing refit atGuam , five of her crewmembers were killed in a Japanese ambush.Third and fourth patrols: March – July 1945
"Sea Fox"'s third war patrol,
8 March to6 May 1945 , saw her in theSouth China Sea -Formosa area. She made six contacts but was able to close and attack only one, aconvoy of three merchantmen and four escorts. During that action, conducted in heavy fog on the morning of1 April , she damaged one of the freighters.That same day, USS|Queenfish|SS-393|3 sank the “mercy” ship, "Awa Maru"; and, on
2 April , "Sea Fox" was ordered into the area to pick up survivors and wreckage to determine the type of cargo the maru had been carrying. "Sea Fox" located no survivors but found bales of sheet rubber covering the area where the ship had gone down. She took aboard one of the sheets and continued her patrol.The next day, one of "Sea Fox"'s crew was accidentally shot by another crewman. Efforts to transfer the wounded man to a homeward-bound submarine were thwarted by rough seas, and the patient remained aboard for the duration of the patrol.
In mid-April, "Sea Fox" was off the northwest coast of Formosa where she encountered a shift in
Japan ese ASW tactics. Patrol planes were numerous at night, precluding recharging. The planes, however, were relatively inactive during daylight hours, and "Sea Fox" surfaced and recharged accordingly.On the night of
16 April –17 April , "Sea Fox" departed her patrol area. Progress towardSaipan was slowed by a casualty in the bow plane rigging mechanism on19 April ; but, on26 April , she arrived in the Marianas, and she reached Pearl Harbor on6 May . Refit took a month, and "Sea Fox" sailed on7 June for her last war patrol. Assigned primarily to lifeguard duty during the 53-day patrol, she picked up nine Army aviators nearMarcus Island and a tenth in theNanpō Islands . On29 July , she completed the patrol at Midway.1945 – 1952
The war ended with the completion of refit, and Sea Fox headed toward Pearl Harbor for a two-week visit prior to getting underway for postwar duty with
Submarine Squadron 5 (SubRon 5) in thePhilippines . Based atSubic Bay , she operated in the Philippine area into 1946; then, on12 January , got underway to return to the United States."Sea Fox" arrived in
San Francisco Bay on2 February . Overhaul followed; and in mid-May, she returned to Pearl Harbor where she rejoinedSubmarine Division 52 (SubDiv 52). During the remainder of the1940s , she was deployed three times: to the central Pacific in the summer of 1946, and to the western Pacific in the winter of 1948 and in the fall of 1949. The end of the latter year also brought a brief assignment to SubDiv 13, but January 1950 saw her a unit of SubDiv 12. Six months later, theKorean War broke out; and "Sea Fox"'s training exercises—mine planting, torpedo approaches, gunnery, and ASW—increased.On
2 September 1951 , the submarine sailed west. A six-month tour in the western Pacific followed during which she supported theUnited Nation 's effort inKorea by providing services to the ASW training group and by patrolling in the northernSea of Japan . In March 1952, she returned to the Hawaiian Islands to resume local operations and to prepare for aGUPPY IIA conversion.1953 – 1970
Decommissioned on
15 October 1952 atMare Island Naval Shipyard , "Sea Fox" completed conversion the following spring and was recommissioned on5 June 1953 . In August, she returned to Pearl Harbor and resumed operations—training exercises, special operations, and western Pacific deployments—as a unit of SubDiv 71.Reassigned to SubDiv 33 at
San Diego on1 July 1955 , she becameflagship of the division on1 August and commenced local operations off the southernCalifornia coast. A year later, she sailed west for another six-month tour with the 7th Fleet; and, from then until 1969, she continued to rotate between training operations out of San Diego and duty with the 7th Fleet in the western Pacific. From 1964, her tours in WestPac included support of the Allied effort inVietnam .On
21 December 1968 , "Sea Fox" returned to San Diego from her last WestPac deployment. Local operations, overhaul, and training exercises followed; and, in November 1970, she was declared unfit for further service. She was decommissioned, her name was struck from the Navy list on14 December 1970 .TCG "Burakreis" (S 335)
"Sea Fox" was sold to
Turkey on14 December 1970 at Hunters Point Navy Yard in San Francisco. TheTurkish Navy renamed her TCG "Burakreis" (S 335), after the great Ottoman admiralBurak Reis . She sailed for her new home on9 April 1971 from San Diego after conducting ASW training. She was commissioned on8 August 1971 .In 1996, "Burakreis" was struck from the Turkish Naval rolls.
"Sea Fox" earned four
battle star s duringWorld War II and fourcampaign star s for service during theVietnam War .References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/s8/sea_fox.htm|http://hazegray.org/danfs/submar/ss402.txt
External links
*navsource|08/08402|Sea Fox
* [http://seafoxss402.homestead.com/indexa.html USS "Sea Fox" website]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.