General L-boat photos: Difference between revisions
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[[File:L-9 L-3.jpg|left|500px]] | [[File:L-9 L-3.jpg|left|500px]] | ||
L-9 and L-3 moored in a nest at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, February 1919. These boats had just returned from the war zone and were looking pretty weary. They were in need of a thorough overhaul. Note that the shutter door is open for #1 torpedo tube on the L-3. It appears that the muzzle door for the tube is shut, as it would need to be to prevent accidental flooding. Most likely the mechanical linkage between the shutter door and the muzzle door has been disengaged for maintenance. | |||
<small>Photo NH 51166 courtesy of the NHHC.</small> | |||
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] | [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] | ||
[[File:L-9 L-3 L-11.jpg|left|500px]] | [[File:L-9 L-3 L-11.jpg|left|500px]] | ||
Shortly after the photo above was taken, the nest was expanded by adding L-11 to the inboard side. This photo shows the three boat nest being warped out so that another L-boat in the background can be inserted into the inboard position. Philadelphia Navy Yard, February 1919. | |||
<small>Photo NH 51168 courtesy of the NHHC.</small> | |||
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] | [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] | ||
[[File:L-class and Ks at Norfolk.jpg|left|500px]] | [[File:L-class and Ks at Norfolk.jpg|left|500px]] | ||
[[K-3|'''K-3 (SS-34)''']] and an unidentified K-boat moored outboard of L-11, L-2, L-3, and L-9 at the Norfolk Navy Yard, Portsmouth, VA. approximately 1923. These boats were all decommissioned and would soon be moved to Philadelphia and later scrapped. Note that none of the chariot bridge fairwaters on the L-boats are exactly the same. | |||
A few years after the end of WW I, the Navy decommissioned a large percentage of the coastal patrol submarines for two reasons. The first was to keep the United States in compliance with the post war treaty limits on tonnage of submarines. The second was that the Navy was rapidly shifting emphasis away from the coastal operations mindset for submarines and towards an open ocean, long range fleet submarine concept. WW I experience had shown how far behind technologically our submarines were when compared to the German U-boats. WW I had begun a paradigm shift in USN mindset. | |||
<small>Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman</small> | |||
[[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] | [[File:Red bar sub.jpg]] |
Revision as of 13:13, 10 October 2023
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman
Photo courtesy David Wright, Navsource, Destroyer Archives Manager, Yard & District Archives Manager.
Photo contributed by Patricia Lynn.
L-9 and L-3 moored in a nest at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, February 1919. These boats had just returned from the war zone and were looking pretty weary. They were in need of a thorough overhaul. Note that the shutter door is open for #1 torpedo tube on the L-3. It appears that the muzzle door for the tube is shut, as it would need to be to prevent accidental flooding. Most likely the mechanical linkage between the shutter door and the muzzle door has been disengaged for maintenance.
Photo NH 51166 courtesy of the NHHC.
Shortly after the photo above was taken, the nest was expanded by adding L-11 to the inboard side. This photo shows the three boat nest being warped out so that another L-boat in the background can be inserted into the inboard position. Philadelphia Navy Yard, February 1919.
Photo NH 51168 courtesy of the NHHC.
K-3 (SS-34) and an unidentified K-boat moored outboard of L-11, L-2, L-3, and L-9 at the Norfolk Navy Yard, Portsmouth, VA. approximately 1923. These boats were all decommissioned and would soon be moved to Philadelphia and later scrapped. Note that none of the chariot bridge fairwaters on the L-boats are exactly the same.
A few years after the end of WW I, the Navy decommissioned a large percentage of the coastal patrol submarines for two reasons. The first was to keep the United States in compliance with the post war treaty limits on tonnage of submarines. The second was that the Navy was rapidly shifting emphasis away from the coastal operations mindset for submarines and towards an open ocean, long range fleet submarine concept. WW I experience had shown how far behind technologically our submarines were when compared to the German U-boats. WW I had begun a paradigm shift in USN mindset.
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman
Page created by:
Ric Hedman & David Johnston
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