Notable Submarine Accidents: Difference between revisions
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[[File:S-4 dd starboard.jpg|left|500px|U.S. Navy photo.]] | [[File:S-4 dd starboard.jpg|left|500px|U.S. Navy photo.]] | ||
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">USS S-4 (SS-109) served the Navy well for nearly 16 years, but her career was marred by at tragic accident that occurred on December 17, 1927. On that date she was conducting submerged trials on the measured mile in Cape Cod Bay off Provincetown, MA. While coming to the surface at the end of the run, she was accidently rammed by the Coast Guard Cutter Paulding (CG-17). S-4 sank immediately with her entire crew, but six men were still alive in the forward torpedo room. A frantic rescue effort followed, but it was not successful and the entire crew perished. The boat was subsequently salvaged and partially reconditioned, but it was not returned to full service. Instead, she was used as a test bed to develop new technologies and techniques for submarine escape, rescue, and salvage. She was finally decommissioned in 1933 and eventually scrapped. She is shown here in drydock following her salvage at the Boston Navy Yard, March 19, 1928. We have a series of photos that depict the [[S-4 salvage|'''subsequent salvage efforts at this link''']]. The webmasters can also highly recommend the book [https://www.amazon.com/Seventeen-Fathoms-Deep-Submarine-Disaster/dp/1613731388/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3RPBCEB23D3QP&keywords=seventeen+fathoms+deep&qid=1690921492&sprefix=seventeen+fathoms%2Caps%2C102&sr=8-1 '''Seventeen Fathoms Deep: The Saga of the Submarine S-4 Disaster'''] by historian Joseph A. Williams. The webmasters were happy to act as technical advisors for the book. Mr. Williams wrote an incredible tale of danger, tragedy, perseverance, and ingenuity. You will not be disappointed with this true story.</span></div> | <div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">USS S-4 (SS-109) served the Navy well for nearly 16 years, but her career was marred by at tragic accident that occurred on December 17, 1927. On that date she was conducting submerged trials on the measured mile in Cape Cod Bay off Provincetown, MA. While coming to the surface at the end of the run, she was accidently rammed by the Coast Guard Cutter Paulding (CG-17). S-4 sank immediately with her entire crew, but six men were still alive in the forward torpedo room. A frantic rescue effort followed, but it was not successful and the entire crew perished. The boat was subsequently salvaged and partially reconditioned, but it was not returned to full service. Instead, she was used as a test bed to develop new technologies and techniques for submarine escape, rescue, and salvage. She was finally decommissioned in 1933 and eventually scrapped. She is shown here in drydock following her salvage at the Boston Navy Yard, March 19, 1928. We have a series of photos that depict the [[S-4 salvage|'''subsequent salvage efforts at this link''']]. The webmasters can also highly recommend the book [https://www.amazon.com/Seventeen-Fathoms-Deep-Submarine-Disaster/dp/1613731388/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3RPBCEB23D3QP&keywords=seventeen+fathoms+deep&qid=1690921492&sprefix=seventeen+fathoms%2Caps%2C102&sr=8-1 '''Seventeen Fathoms Deep: The Saga of the Submarine S-4 Disaster'''] by historian Joseph A. Williams. The webmasters were happy to act as technical advisors for the book. Mr. Williams wrote an incredible tale of danger, tragedy, perseverance, and ingenuity. You will not be disappointed with this true story.</span></div> | ||
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=== <big>Squalus (SS-192), Equipment failure during a test dive, May 23, 1939.</big> === | |||
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[[File:Squalus Salvage 1.jpg|left|500px|U.S. Navy photo.]] | |||
<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B">On the morning of May 23, 1939, the two month old Squalus headed out from the Portsmouth Navy Yard for diving tests off the Isle of Shoals in the Atlantic off New Hampshire. At 0740 in the morning she began the dive. Immediately after submerging it was reported that the after engine room was flooding through the large air induction piping. The main induction valve inside the conning tower fairwater had failed, sending huge amounts of water into the compartment, flooding it. The weight of the water dragged the boat down and she came to settle on the bottom at 240 feet (73 m). Unfortunately, 24 crewmen and two civilian yard workers perished in the after compartments. This left 32 crew and one civilian alive in the forward compartments. They immediately sent up the rescue buoy and fired off flares. They were eventually found by their sister boat [[191|'''Sculpin (SS-191)''']] and rescue operations were immediately commenced. | |||
What followed was an epic story of the courage and tenacity of our sea service. In the first, and only, operational use of the McCann Rescue Chamber in the USN, all 33 men in the forward compartments were rescued and brought to the surface. Over the next three and a half months the Squalus was salvaged under very difficult conditions and returned to Portsmouth for repair and refurbishment. She was renamed [[192a|'''Sailfish (SS-192)''']] and returned to full service. She went on to have a fine war record. | |||
PigBoats.COM has compiled a collection of rescue and salvage photos of this incident and they can be found [[192 salvage|'''at this link''']]. | |||
[[File:Red bar sub new.jpg]] | [[File:Red bar sub new.jpg]] |
Revision as of 17:35, 20 November 2023
Notes
Grampus (Submarine No. 4) and Pike (Submarine No. 6) gasoline fire, September 19, 1908

For a contemporary newspaper article that goes into depth on this incident, please see this link. Note: please disregard the clerical date error at the top of the NHHC photograph. The fire did happen in 1908.
F-4 (Submarine No. 23), Hull failure during a test dive, March 25, 1915

A-7 (Submarine No. 8), Gasoline explosion and fire, July 24, 1917

F-1 (Submarine No. 20), Collision with F-3 (Submarine No. 22), December 17, 1917

O-5 (SS-66), Battery explosion, October 5, 1918

S-6 (SS-111), Collision with a destroyer, 1922

O-5 (SS-66), Collision with a merchant ship, October 28, 1923

S-51 (SS-162), Collision with merchant ship, September 25, 1925

In addition, a granddaughter of one of the lost crewmen maintains an excellent informational site on the accident, which can be accessed at the enclosed link.
S-4 (SS-109), Collision with USCGC Paulding, December 17, 1927

Squalus (SS-192), Equipment failure during a test dive, May 23, 1939.

What followed was an epic story of the courage and tenacity of our sea service. In the first, and only, operational use of the McCann Rescue Chamber in the USN, all 33 men in the forward compartments were rescued and brought to the surface. Over the next three and a half months the Squalus was salvaged under very difficult conditions and returned to Portsmouth for repair and refurbishment. She was renamed Sailfish (SS-192) and returned to full service. She went on to have a fine war record.
PigBoats.COM has compiled a collection of rescue and salvage photos of this incident and they can be found at this link.
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