- USS Queenfish (SS-393)
USS "Queenfish" (SS/AGSS-393), a "Balao"-class
submarine , was the first ship of theUnited States Navy to be named for thequeenfish , a small food fish found off the Pacific coast of North America.The first "Queenfish" was laid down by the
Portsmouth Navy Yard inKittery, Maine ,27 July 1943 ; launched30 November 1943 ; sponsored by Mrs.Robert A. Theobald ; and commissioned11 March 1944 , Lieutenant CommanderCharles E. Loughlin in command.First patrol: August – October 1944
After shakedown off the east coast and further training in
Hawaii an waters, "Queenfish" set out on her first patrol4 August 1944 , inLuzon Strait . She joined "Ed's Eradicators", a wolf pack which also included USS|Barb|SS-220|3 and USS|Tunny|SS-282|3. The wolfpack was under the command of E.R. Swinburne who rode aboardEugene B. Fluckey 's "Barb""Tunny" had to withdraw after being damaged by air attack, but on
31 August , "Queenfish" made her first kill, 4,700-ton tanker "Chiyoda Maru". On9 September she scored twice more, on 7,097-ton passenger-cargo ship "Toyooka Maru" and 3,054-ton transport "Manshu Maru".ComSubPac ordered the Eradicators to assist another wolf pack in rescuing Allied
POW s who had been on transports in another convoy. The Japanese had picked up their own survivors from the wreckage, but they made no attempt to save any survivors from among the 2,100 British andAustralia n POWs embarked in the transports. The submarines managed to get 127 out of the water. An approachingtyphoon terminated the hunt and the patrol. "Queenfish" put intoMajuro for refit3 October .Second and third patrols: October 1944 – January 1945
"Queenfish"’s second war patrol was conducted in the northern part of the
East China Sea . This time Cdr. Loughlin had pack command as well as ship command. "Loughlin's Loopers" included "Barb" and USS|Picuda|SS-382|3. On8 November "Queenfish" sank 1,051-ton "Keijo Maru" and the 1,948-ton "Hakko Maru". On9 November , she sent 2,131-ton "Chojusan Maru", a former gunboat, to the bottom. Alerted by ComSubPac to the approach of a large convoy fromManchuria carrying reinforcements for thePhilippines , the "Loopers" and another wolfpack, the "Urchins", combined to attack. "Queenfish" struck first on15 November , sinking the 9,186-ton aircraft ferry "Akitsu Maru". Over the next two days the subs destroyed eight ships of the convoy, including the 21,000-ton carrier and the largest of the troop transports. The attacks cost the Japanese army defending the Philippines the bulk of a division.Having received the Presidential Unit Citation for her first two patrols, "Queenfish" spent her third war patrol,
29 December to29 January 1945 , in theFormosa Strait s and waters adjacent to theChina coast without sinking any ships.Fourth patrol: February – April 1945
"Queenfish" returned to the same area for her fourth war patrol,
24 February to14 April , as a member of another wolf pack. Cdr. William S. Post, Jr., the senior commanding officer in USS|Spot|SS-413|3, also had USS|Sea Fox|SS-402|3 in his wolf pack, "Post's Panzers", the second of that name. After "Spot" expended all her torpedoes, she left to reload; pack command devolved on Cmdr. Loughlin.On
1 April "Queenfish" sank 11,600-ton passenger-cargo ship "Awa Maru". Unfortunately her victim was a ship whose safe passage had been guaranteed by the United States government, since she was to carryRed Cross relief supplies toJapan eseprisoner-of-war camps. The sinking occurred in heavy fog, and "Awa Maru" was not sounding her fog horn, as required by international treaty. The incident caused considerable controversy. When the one survivor picked up by "Queenfish" told his story, "Queenfish" was ordered back to port; Cdr. Loughlin was relieved of command, tried by court-martial and convicted of one of three charges, negligence in obeying orders. After the war, it was confirmed that "Awa Maru" was loaded with munitions and contraband. Loughlin survived to continue an illustrious career that led toflag rank .On
12 April "Queenfish" rescued the 13-man crew of a Navyflying boat ."Queenfish" spent her fifth patrol under Cdr. Frank N. Shamer on lifeguard duty in the
East China Sea -Yellow Sea area. She was at Midway preparing for another patrol when the war ended.Post-World War II operations, 1945 – 1963
After overhaul at
Mare Island Naval Shipyard , "Queenfish" assumed duties asFlagship , Submarine Force, Pacific Fleet. Homeported atPearl Harbor after the war, "Queenfish" returned to the Far East during March 1946 and in June–July 1949, but spent most of the period to 1950 in training operations in the eastern Pacific. In late 1947 she operated in theBering Sea .In February and March 1950 "Queenfish" took part in combined Operations with units of the U.S. Pacific and British Fleets. She made cruises to
Korea n waters in 1951 and 1953. In February 1954 she sailed to her new homeport ofSan Diego . The next four years were spent operating off the west coast of the United States, with the exception of two weeks in Hawaii in late 1956. On16 January 1958 she departed for a 6-month deployment to WestPac, returning to San Diego27 July to resume operations off the west coast of the United States."Queenfish" was reclassified AGSS-393
1 July 1960 . She decommissioned and was struck from the Navy List1 March 1963 . Slated for scrapping, she was instead sunk as target, by USS|Swordfish|SSN-579|3,14 August 1963 ."Queenfish" was awarded the
Presidential Unit Citation (US) , and received 6battle star s forWorld War II service."Queenfish" was used for the opening and closing scenes and some exterior shots in the movie "
Operation Petticoat ". [ [http://queenfish.org/noframes/petticoat.html queenfish.org] ]Raiding career
8 Japanese ships
References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/q1/queenfish-i.htm|http://hazegray.org/danfs/submar/ss393.txt
External links
*navsource|08/08393|Queenfish
* [http://www.rddesigns.com/ww2/queenfish.html Sinkings by boat: USS "Queenfish"]
* [http://www.subnet.com/FLEET/ss393.htm subnet.com: USS "Queenfish"]
* [http://queenfish.org/noframes/393.html USS "Queenfish" website]
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