R-1 through R-14: Difference between revisions

From PigBoats.COM
(Added Link)
(Added R-14 caption)
 
(24 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
=== <font size="5"><big>R-1 (SS-78)</big></font> ===
[[File:R-Boat Header 1.jpg|center]]
 
=== <big>R-1 (SS-78)</big> ===
[[File:R-1 wwII in service.jpg|left|500px|Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-1 in an unknown location, likely on the U.S. east coast, 1940-1945. R-1 had sat in reserve in Philadelphia, decommissioned between 1931 and 1940. As war loomed, the reserve O and R-class boats were reconditioned and put back into service. She served in a variety of unglamorous but vital roles, operating out of New London, Bermuda, Key West, and Casco Bay, Maine. She attacked and most likely damaged a German U-boat on April 16, 1942.</span>
 
[[R-1|See more R-1 photos]]
[[R-1|See more R-1 photos]]


=== [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
=== <font size="5"><big>R-2 (SS-79)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
 
=== <font size="5"><big>R-3 (SS-80)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
=== <big>R-2 (SS-79)</big> ===
=== <font size="5"><big>R-4 (SS-81)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
[[File:R-2 at sea.jpg|left|500px|Photo provided by MMCM(SS) Rick Larson, USN (Ret.)]]
=== <font size="5"><big>R-5 (SS-82)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-2 is shown here in an U.S. east coast port, 1935-1939. She has been painted black from the original haze gray and has received rescue/messenger buoys forward and aft. She has her name painted on the fairwater and superstructure as opposed to her hull number, so all this places the date in the time range given.</span>  
=== <font size="5"><big>R-6 (SS-83)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
 
=== <font size="5"><big>R-7 (SS-84)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
[[R-2|See more R-2 photos]]
=== <font size="5"><big>R-8 (SS-85)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
 
=== <font size="5"><big>R-9 (SS-86)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
=== <font size="5"><big>R-10 (SS-87)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
 
=== <font size="5"><big>R-11 (SS-88)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
=== <big>R-3 (SS-80)</big> ===
=== <font size="5"><big>R-12 (SS-89)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
 
=== <font size="5"><big>R-13 (SS-90)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
[[File:R-3 surfacing.jpg|left|500px|Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.]]
=== <font size="5"><big>R-14 (SS-91)</big></font> [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] ===
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">A nice aerial photo of the R-3 surfacing off the San Diego coast, 1921-1923. Water is sluicing off the fore deck and bow planes and the very point of the bow is already water free. Just behind the short mast the horizontal barrel of the deck gun can just be made out. The date on the photo back, when it was placed in the newspapers archive, is September 3, 1927 but that doesn't mean that is the date the photo was taken.
 
The newspaper caption says the submarine is diving but that is clearly wrong. She is moving forward and has an up angle. Right behind the submarine you can see the "pool" and feathered wake created when the conning tower first broke the surface.
 
The photo was taken from a biplane. The tips of both the upper and lower starboard wing can be seen on the left in the photo.</span></div>
 
[[R-3|See more R-3 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-4 (SS-81)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-4 greets u111.jpg|left|500px|Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">The newly commissioned R-4 greets an American crew bringing the surrendered German WW I submarine U-111, commanded by Lt. Commander Freeland A. Daubin, USN to the United States. The date is April 19, 1919. The R-4 had been commissioned less than a month before and still has not received her 3"/50 deck gun. Submarines of the Electric Boat design were still called "Holland Types", even though inventor John P. Holland had passed away in 1914. EB had absorbed the original Holland Torpedo Boat Company in 1899. There is an unusual pipe structure on the bow that was to protect the J-tube and SC sonar listening devices installed on the foredeck.</span>
 
[[R-4|See more R-4 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-5 (SS-82)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-5 at sea.jpg|left|500px|Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">A fine photo of R-5 underway sometime in 1922. The location is likely off the coast of San Diego, CA. This photo is an excerpt from a 1923 photo calendar.</span>
 
[[R-5|See more R-5 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-6 (SS-83)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-6 post card.jpg|left|500px|Image courtesy of Digital Commonwealth, Massachusetts Collection Online.]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">A nice post card photo of R-6 preparing to moor at an unknown location, approximately 1922-1923. Crew are topside preparing mooring lines.</span>
 
[[R-6|See more R-6 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-7 (SS-84)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-7 pearl harbor1.jpg|left|500px|Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">A classic, but posed, photo of R-7 approaching the finger piers at Submarine Base Pearl Harbor, 1925. The crew is lined up on deck in dress whites. There are a few buildings of the shipyard visible in the background. The rest of the land there has yet to be developed. Within 15 years all of the land in the background would be incorporated into the growing base. The shoreline would have a pier running along it and it would be a major mooring location for Pacific Fleet units.</span>
 
[[R-7|See more R-7 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-8 (SS-85)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-8 and camden.jpeg|left|500px|USN Photo NH 101183 via NHHC.]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-8 in a nest of other R-boats alongside the USS Camden (AS-6) in San Diego in the early 1920's. The R-class were coastal patrol submarines, and thus their endurance was limited to about one week at sea. The presence of a tender like Camden or a base was a necessity of operations.</span>
 
[[R-8|See more R-8 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-9 (SS-86)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-9 and buoy.jpg|left|500px|USN photo #80-G-466178 via Sean Hert from the National Archives.]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">This photo was taken in the summer of 1941, as the nation was gearing up for war. R-9 is shown moored to a buoy in Chatham Bay near Coco's Island, just off the Caribbean entrance to the Panama Canal. By this time all USN submarines were painted a flat black, and hull numbers had become the primary external identifier. This particular buoy was used to store fresh water, and the crew topside is busy at work rigging hoses to the buoy so that they can replenish their fresh water supply. Whether this was potable water or battery water is not known.</span>
 
[[R-9|See more R-9 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-10 (SS-87)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-10 bone in teeth.jpg|left|500px|Photo provided by MMCM(SS) Rick Larson, USN (Ret.)]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-10 with a bone in her teeth returning to port. Mooring lines are up out of the deck lockers and the line handling crew is topside. Two crewmen are sitting on the aft deck maybe making plans for when they are on Liberty that evening. A chief petty officer is sitting in one of the pointer/trainer seats on the 3'/50 deck gun. Location is unknown, possibly Panama, circa 1921.</span>
 
[[R-10|See more R-10 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-11 (SS-88)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-11 NYC 1939.jpg|left|500px|USN photo NH 66365 via NHHC.]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-11 just off Battery Park, New York City, April 29, 1939 for the New York World's Fair. Jersey City is on the right in the background, and Ellis Island and Liberty Island are just out of view to the left. R-11 was one of the few R-boats that stayed in commission throughout the 1930's, based out of Groton, CT.</span>
 
[[R-11|See more R-11 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-12 (SS-89)*</big> ===
 
[[File:R-12 underway port side.jpeg|left|500px|USN photo NH 41517 via NHHC.]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-12 maneuvering into a mooring at Submarine Base Pearl Harbor, approximately 1921. On the side of her bridge is the Submarine Division 14 insignia. The large white X on the aft end of the fairwater is a visual identification scheme used in Hawaii during that time. The X indicated R-12. On these boats it was normal to have the gun pointed aft.</span>
 
[[R-12|See more R-12 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-13 (SS-90)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-13 on surface.jpg|left|500px|National Archives photo]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-13 in the main channel at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, early 1920's. The R-class submarines were coastal defense boats, and nearly the entire class spent the decade of the 1920's fulfilling that role in Hawaii. The majority of the operations that they undertook during this period were one to two day patrols in the waters around the islands. It is likely that R-13 is headed out on one of these short training hops in this photo.</span>  
 
[[R-13|See more R-13 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
 
=== <big>R-14 (SS-91)</big> ===
 
[[File:R-14 at Groton.jpg|left|500px|Courtesy of Life Magazine Archives, Carl Mydans photographer.]]
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">R-14 maneuvering into a berth, 1939. The location is either Groton, CT. or the Portsmouth Navy Yard in Kittery, ME. R-14 was assigned to the Submarine School in Connecticut as a training boat.</span>
 
[[R-14|See more R-14 photos]]
 
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
<center>[[R-class|Return to the R-class page]] | [[Submarine Classes|Return to the Submarine Classes page]]</center>
<center>An asterisk * denotes a submarine lost in WWII.</center>
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]]
<center>
<span style="color:#00008B">
Page created by:<br>
<small>Ric Hedman & David Johnston<br>
1999 - 2023 - PigBoats.COM<sup>©</sup><br>
Mountlake Terrace, WA, Norfolk, VA<br>
webmaster at pigboats dot com</small>
</center>
[[File:Subs bottom line 2.jpg]]

Latest revision as of 13:35, 22 September 2023

R-1 (SS-78)

Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman
R-1 in an unknown location, likely on the U.S. east coast, 1940-1945. R-1 had sat in reserve in Philadelphia, decommissioned between 1931 and 1940. As war loomed, the reserve O and R-class boats were reconditioned and put back into service. She served in a variety of unglamorous but vital roles, operating out of New London, Bermuda, Key West, and Casco Bay, Maine. She attacked and most likely damaged a German U-boat on April 16, 1942.

See more R-1 photos

R-2 (SS-79)

Photo provided by MMCM(SS) Rick Larson, USN (Ret.)
Photo provided by MMCM(SS) Rick Larson, USN (Ret.)
R-2 is shown here in an U.S. east coast port, 1935-1939. She has been painted black from the original haze gray and has received rescue/messenger buoys forward and aft. She has her name painted on the fairwater and superstructure as opposed to her hull number, so all this places the date in the time range given.

See more R-2 photos

R-3 (SS-80)

Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
A nice aerial photo of the R-3 surfacing off the San Diego coast, 1921-1923. Water is sluicing off the fore deck and bow planes and the very point of the bow is already water free. Just behind the short mast the horizontal barrel of the deck gun can just be made out. The date on the photo back, when it was placed in the newspapers archive, is September 3, 1927 but that doesn't mean that is the date the photo was taken.

The newspaper caption says the submarine is diving but that is clearly wrong. She is moving forward and has an up angle. Right behind the submarine you can see the "pool" and feathered wake created when the conning tower first broke the surface.

The photo was taken from a biplane. The tips of both the upper and lower starboard wing can be seen on the left in the photo.

See more R-3 photos

R-4 (SS-81)

Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
The newly commissioned R-4 greets an American crew bringing the surrendered German WW I submarine U-111, commanded by Lt. Commander Freeland A. Daubin, USN to the United States. The date is April 19, 1919. The R-4 had been commissioned less than a month before and still has not received her 3"/50 deck gun. Submarines of the Electric Boat design were still called "Holland Types", even though inventor John P. Holland had passed away in 1914. EB had absorbed the original Holland Torpedo Boat Company in 1899. There is an unusual pipe structure on the bow that was to protect the J-tube and SC sonar listening devices installed on the foredeck.

See more R-4 photos

R-5 (SS-82)

Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
A fine photo of R-5 underway sometime in 1922. The location is likely off the coast of San Diego, CA. This photo is an excerpt from a 1923 photo calendar.

See more R-5 photos

R-6 (SS-83)

Image courtesy of Digital Commonwealth, Massachusetts Collection Online.
Image courtesy of Digital Commonwealth, Massachusetts Collection Online.
A nice post card photo of R-6 preparing to moor at an unknown location, approximately 1922-1923. Crew are topside preparing mooring lines.

See more R-6 photos

R-7 (SS-84)

Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
A classic, but posed, photo of R-7 approaching the finger piers at Submarine Base Pearl Harbor, 1925. The crew is lined up on deck in dress whites. There are a few buildings of the shipyard visible in the background. The rest of the land there has yet to be developed. Within 15 years all of the land in the background would be incorporated into the growing base. The shoreline would have a pier running along it and it would be a major mooring location for Pacific Fleet units.

See more R-7 photos

R-8 (SS-85)

USN Photo NH 101183 via NHHC.
USN Photo NH 101183 via NHHC.
R-8 in a nest of other R-boats alongside the USS Camden (AS-6) in San Diego in the early 1920's. The R-class were coastal patrol submarines, and thus their endurance was limited to about one week at sea. The presence of a tender like Camden or a base was a necessity of operations.

See more R-8 photos

R-9 (SS-86)

USN photo #80-G-466178 via Sean Hert from the National Archives.
USN photo #80-G-466178 via Sean Hert from the National Archives.
This photo was taken in the summer of 1941, as the nation was gearing up for war. R-9 is shown moored to a buoy in Chatham Bay near Coco's Island, just off the Caribbean entrance to the Panama Canal. By this time all USN submarines were painted a flat black, and hull numbers had become the primary external identifier. This particular buoy was used to store fresh water, and the crew topside is busy at work rigging hoses to the buoy so that they can replenish their fresh water supply. Whether this was potable water or battery water is not known.

See more R-9 photos

R-10 (SS-87)

Photo provided by MMCM(SS) Rick Larson, USN (Ret.)
Photo provided by MMCM(SS) Rick Larson, USN (Ret.)
R-10 with a bone in her teeth returning to port. Mooring lines are up out of the deck lockers and the line handling crew is topside. Two crewmen are sitting on the aft deck maybe making plans for when they are on Liberty that evening. A chief petty officer is sitting in one of the pointer/trainer seats on the 3'/50 deck gun. Location is unknown, possibly Panama, circa 1921.

See more R-10 photos

R-11 (SS-88)

USN photo NH 66365 via NHHC.
USN photo NH 66365 via NHHC.
R-11 just off Battery Park, New York City, April 29, 1939 for the New York World's Fair. Jersey City is on the right in the background, and Ellis Island and Liberty Island are just out of view to the left. R-11 was one of the few R-boats that stayed in commission throughout the 1930's, based out of Groton, CT.

See more R-11 photos

R-12 (SS-89)*

USN photo NH 41517 via NHHC.
USN photo NH 41517 via NHHC.
R-12 maneuvering into a mooring at Submarine Base Pearl Harbor, approximately 1921. On the side of her bridge is the Submarine Division 14 insignia. The large white X on the aft end of the fairwater is a visual identification scheme used in Hawaii during that time. The X indicated R-12. On these boats it was normal to have the gun pointed aft.

See more R-12 photos

R-13 (SS-90)

National Archives photo
National Archives photo
R-13 in the main channel at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, early 1920's. The R-class submarines were coastal defense boats, and nearly the entire class spent the decade of the 1920's fulfilling that role in Hawaii. The majority of the operations that they undertook during this period were one to two day patrols in the waters around the islands. It is likely that R-13 is headed out on one of these short training hops in this photo.

See more R-13 photos

R-14 (SS-91)

Courtesy of Life Magazine Archives, Carl Mydans photographer.
Courtesy of Life Magazine Archives, Carl Mydans photographer.
R-14 maneuvering into a berth, 1939. The location is either Groton, CT. or the Portsmouth Navy Yard in Kittery, ME. R-14 was assigned to the Submarine School in Connecticut as a training boat.

See more R-14 photos

Return to the R-class page | Return to the Submarine Classes page
An asterisk * denotes a submarine lost in WWII.

Page created by:
Ric Hedman & David Johnston
1999 - 2023 - PigBoats.COM©
Mountlake Terrace, WA, Norfolk, VA
webmaster at pigboats dot com