S-2
Design and Construction Notes
Her original silhouette was changed (see below) after her trials showed that she lacked sufficient buoyancy forward. This resulted in a tendency to burrow into the waves while surfaced. Simon Lake designed and had installed a bulbous bow buoyancy tank, similar to one he installed on R-22 (SS-99). This gave S-2 a distinctive outline.
Despite her shortcomings, S-2 proved useful to the Navy. Just one year after her commissioning, she shifted her homeport to Naval Station Cavite in the Philippines, and spent the next eight years in the western Pacific. In 1929 she returned to the U.S. where she was decommissioned and scrapped to keep the USN within the limits of the London Naval Treaty.
For further information on this unique submarine, please read the article at this link.
Photos in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
A special note about this photo: An email correspondence on July 7, 2001 about this photo was the beginning of a 20+ year friendship between the webmasters of this site, Ric Hedman and David Johnston.
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
The crew of the S-2 gathered around the deck gun for a formal photograph, July 12, 1921. The location is likely the Portsmouth Navy Yard in Kittery, ME. The crew was finishing up final preparations for a homeport change to the Asiatic Fleet in the Philippines. S-2's commanding officer, LT Lewis Hancock, Jr. is the officer in the center left. In the background is a Pennsylvania-class armored cruiser.
Photo in the private collection of Ric Hedman.
This photo was likely taken at the same time as the one above, this time the crew is gathered around the conning tower fairwater. The CO, LT Lewis Hancock, is in the lower center. The forward battery ventilation pipe with its mushroom shaped head valve can be clearly seen on the forward edge of the bridge.
Photo in the private collection of David Johnston.
All photos are provided from the private collection of the late Rick Larson.
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Ric Hedman & David Johnston
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