- USS S-40 (SS-145)
USS "S-40" (SS-145) was a first-group ("S-1" or "Holland") "S"-class submarine of the
United States Navy . Her keel was laid down on5 March 1919 by theBethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation inSan Francisco, California . She was launched on5 January 1921 sponsored by Mrs. John H. Rosseter, and commissioned on20 November 1923 with Lieutenant Commander E. F. Morrissey in command.Early Years
Assigned to Submarine Division 17 on commissioning, "S-40" operated off southern
California until January 1924, when she proceeded toPanama , thence continued into theCaribbean Sea . Engaging in Fleet Problems II, III, and IV en route to and during her stay there, she returned toSan Diego, California , in late March. In May, she completed her final trial runs at San Francisco, then prepared for transfer to theAsiatic Fleet ."S-40" departed San Francisco, with her division, on
17 September and arrived atManila on5 November . During the winter of 1925, she conducted exercises in sound and target approaches, crash dives, and torpedo firing in the waters offLuzon . In May, she moved north with her division to Tsingtao,China , and, through the summer, engaged in operations off the China coast. In September, she returned to thePhilippines , and, for the next fifteen years, maintained a schedule of overhaul, exercises, and patrols in the Philippines during the winter and operations off China during the summer.During the summer of 1940, however, hostilities on the Asiatic mainland brought a change in her schedule and she conducted increasingly extended "familiarization" cruises among the
Philippine Islands and in adjacent waters. With 1941, jointUnited States Army -United States Navy exercises were conducted atCorregidor , and patrols off likely invasion beaches were stepped up.First and Second War Patrols
On
8 December ,7 December east of theInternational Date Line , "S-40" was anchored offSangley Point alongside thesubmarine tender "Canopus" (AS-9). With the receipt of the news of the Japaneseattack on Pearl Harbor , she was ordered out on patrol. Underway on9 December , she anchored off Boaya Point,Veradero Bay , on10 December , and, with a lookout stationed on a nearby hill, watched the approaches to theVerde Island passage betweenMindoro andLuzon . On12 December , she shifted to an area offBatangas , and, on14 December , returned to Veradero Bay. On18 December , she was back atManila , only to depart again on19 December to patrol betweenBotolan Point andSubic Bay . On21 December , she headed north to intercept a Japanese force reportedly bound for theLingayen area.Early on
23 December , "S-40" sighted the enemy; fired fourtorpedo es, unsuccessfully, at a transport, then, for much of the remainder of the day, remained submerged, avoidingdepth charge s dropped by the Japanese screening forces. After dark, she anchored inAgno Bay ; made temporary repairs to her hull, engines, pumping system, and port air compressor; then patrolled offBolinao . On29 December , she was ordered to head south.Manila andCavite had become untenable.Escape from the Philippines
On
30 December , three days before Manila and Cavite fell, "S-40" departed Luzon and pointed her bow toward theNetherlands East Indies . By midnight on8 January 1942 , she was offMakassar , whence she was ordered toBalikpapan for repairs, fuel, and supplies. There, enemy air attacks increased, but repairs were accomplished, fuel was taken on, and limited supplies were received. On14 January , she took up patrol duties on theNorth Watcher -Mangkalihat line. By19 January , her food supplies were again low, but she continued her efforts to impede the Japanese envelopment of theEast Indies . On20 January , she took up patrol off Balikpapan. On25 January , she was ordered back to Makassar. Thence, on28 January , she headed forSoerabaja to join the American-British-Dutch-Australian (ABDA) forces operating from that still-Allied base.Third War Patrol
She arrived at Soerabaja on the north coast of Java on
2 February , her crew frustrated by their attempts to intercept enemy shipping, but with information on tides, currents, navigational aids, and Japanese tactics. Nine days later, she got underway to patrol the northern approaches toMakassar City and intercept Japanese reinforcements expected to move throughMakassar Strait and theFlores Sea . Arriving on15 February , she patrolled initially between De Bril bank and the reefs to the south, then shifted to other areas. Her hunting remained unsuccessful.By
26 February , she was again in need of repairs and was ordered toExmouth Gulf on the Western Australia coast. There, she took on needed supplies and continued on to Fremantle. On6 March , she sighted a Japanese submarine, but was able neither to attack nor to transmit a message concerning its presence.Fourth War Patrol
On
9 March , "S-40" reached Fremantle. During the next month and a half, she underwent overhaul and shifted her base toBrisbane ,Queensland . On4 May , she departed the Queensland coast for her fourth war patrol. Ordered into theNew Britain -New Ireland area, she reconnoiteredDeboyne en route and arrived on station on16 May . On3 June , she returned to Brisbane again with information, but still scoreless.Fifth War Patrol
At the end of the month, she was underway again. Initially assigned to intercept enemy traffic into the
Salamaua -Lae area ofNew Guinea , she was ordered to theSolomon Islands on2 July to relieve "S-38" (SS-143), which had been forced to vacate her position offTulagi . "S-40" patrolled betweenTulagi andLunga Roads and offSavo Island ; fired on a maru, but did not score; then shifted to theNew Georgia -Santa Isabel area to interceptRabaul shipping. Failing to directly impede Japanese traffic there, she returned toAustralia on29 July .Sixth War Patrol
On
28 August , "S-40" again clearedMoreton Bay and moved north. By4 September , she was off theGizo Island anchorage. Thence, she crossed theSolomon Sea to theD'Entrecasteaux Islands off Papua to impede the movement of enemy reinforcements intoMilne Bay . Poor weather and mechanical problems inhibited her hunting; and, still scoreless, she returned to Brisbane on25 September .Seventh War Patrol
Repairs to "S-40"’s deteriorating main motor cables and attempts to correct fuel leaks into the after battery occupied the next three weeks. On
19 October , she got underway for San Diego and an extensive overhaul. Patrolling in theGilbert Islands en route, she arrived atPearl Harbor on19 November ; exchanged her four-inch (102 mm) gun for a three-inch (76 mm) gun from submarine
"Whale" (SS-239)and continued on to the west coast, arriving on7 December . Delays in the delivery of needed equipment slowed the yard work; but on4 June 1943 , she emerged with air conditioning and more up to date electronic equipment.Eighth War Patrol
On
7 June , she moved north, toward theAleutian Islands , with 60% of her crew new to the Navy and to submarines. She trained en route to Dutch Harbor, whence she departed on her eighth war patrol on24 June . Further training exercises were carried out prior to reaching Attu, where she topped off and departed again on30 June , heading for theKuril Islands . Despite dense fog and heavy seas, she reached theKamchatka peninsula on3 July and stood down the coast towardParamushiro .Japanese fishermen, with their innumerable nets and set lines, hindered her freedom of movement. Dense fog impeded her hunting. On
12 July , she suffered a steering casualty which was temporarily repaired by the crew; and, on31 July , she put back intoDutch Harbor .Ninth War Patrol
"S-40"’s ninth war patrol, from
12 August to10 September , was again conducted in the fog and heavy swells of the northernKurile Islands , but was cut short by repeated material failures which included the seemingly ever present problems of deterioration of the main power cables and fuel oil leaks into the after battery.After voyage repairs, the
S-boat was ordered to San Diego and training duty. Reporting to Commander, Submarine Squadron 45 on arrival on3 October , she conducted training operations for theWest Coast Sound School and for Fleet Air, West Coast for the remainder ofWorld War II . Then ordered inactivated, she shifted to San Francisco where she was stripped and decommissioned on29 October 1945 . Struck from theNaval Vessel Register on13 November 1945 , she was sold to theSalco Iron and Metal Company of San Francisco in November 1946 and was scrapped in July 1947."S-40" earned one
battle star duringWorld War II .References
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