Submarine Classes
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Harbor Defense, Coastal Defense, and Concept Development Submarines
What the U.S. Navy wanted in a submarine changed rapidly and often during the 1900-1933 years. These boats filled several different roles while the Navy refined the strategic and tactical concepts of submarine operations. All of these boats contributed something to this effort, although not all were successful.
Holland | A-class | B-class | C-class | D-class | E-class | F-class | G-class |
H-class | K-class | L-class | M-class | N-class | O-class | R-class | S-class |
T-class | V-class |
Later Fleet Submarines
By 1933 the Navy had benefitted from rapidly improving technology and in its own refinement of submarine operational doctrine. The result was the Fleet Submarine era, a fortuitous convergence of events that would greatly contribute to eventual victory in World War II.
Submarines with the * after the name were lost in combat in WW II.
Porpoise (SS 172) | Pike (SS 173) | Shark (SS 174) * |
Tarpon (SS 175) | Perch (SS 176) * | Pickerel (SS 177) * |
Permit (SS 178) | Plunger SS 179 | Pollack SS 180 |
Pompano SS 181 * |
Tambor SS 198 | Tautog SS 199 | Thresher SS 200 |
Triton SS 201 * | Trout SS 202 * | Tuna SS 203 |
Mackerel SS 204 |
Gar SS 206 | Grampus SS 207 * | Grayling SS 209 * |
Grenadier SS 210 * |
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