USS Tarantula (B-3) SS-12

In the dawn of the twentieth century, submarines were something between daring science fiction and mechanical gamble. For the United States Navy, the dream of underwater warfare was becoming real—though not without growing pains, near-disasters, and more than a few hard-earned lessons.

One of the Navy’s early forays into undersea warfare was the B-class submarine—three compact, steel-hulled pioneers that marked a turning point in submarine design. Among them was USS Tarantula (SS-12), a vessel whose name alone evoked a certain predatory elegance. She was laid down in Quincy, Massachusetts, and launched on March 30, 1907. The Navy would later simplify her name to B-3, but those who served aboard her knew exactly what she was: a trailblazer.

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USS Tullibee SS-284 and USS Trigger SS-237

In the waning years of World War II, two American submarines—USS Tullibee (SS-284) and USS Trigger (SS-237)—found themselves at the heart of the Pacific conflict, stalking enemy convoys with nerves of steel and engines of quiet fury. Their service represented the grit and daring of the Silent Service at a time when the stakes could not have been higher, and the dangers were all too real. Continue reading “USS Tullibee SS-284 and USS Trigger SS-237”

USS F-4 SS-23

The USS F-4 was not the pride of the fleet. She was not a grand battleship, nor a sleek destroyer cutting through the waves with an imposing presence. She was, however, an experiment, a step forward in the infancy of submarine warfare, when the U.S. Navy was still feeling out the dangers of the deep. Continue reading “USS F-4 SS-23”

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