Happy Birthday!

On April 11, 1900, the United States Navy quietly acquired a strange, torpedo-shaped vessel that would alter the nature of sea power for generations to come. It was not a battleship or a cruiser. It had no tall masts or broad decks. It did not fly into battle under a banner of cannon smoke and gallant brass. But it changed everything. That vessel, the privately built Holland VI, would become USS Holland, the first modern submarine commissioned by the U.S. Navy. Her acquisition on that date is now honored as the official birthday of the United States Navy Submarine Force.

Continue reading “Happy Birthday!”

USS Thresher SSN-593

The morning sun rose over a calm Atlantic on April 10, 1963, bearing silent witness to what should have been a routine trial for America’s most advanced submarine. Approximately 220 miles east of Cape Cod, USS Thresher (SSN-593), the pride of the U.S. Navy’s nuclear fleet, was conducting post-overhaul deep-dive trials following nine months of maintenance at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. Onboard were 129 men—submariners, shipyard workers, engineers, and civilian technicians—all aboard to verify that Thresher was ready to return to frontline service.

Continue reading “USS Thresher SSN-593”

USS Snook SS-279

 

When we talk about the legacy of the U.S. Submarine Force during the Second World War, we often gravitate toward the celebrated names—Tang, Wahoo, Barb. But woven just as tightly into the silent steel of America’s wartime submarine story is the USS Snook (SS-279), a Gato-class boat launched in 1942 that would go on to serve valiantly and vanish mysteriously in the closing months of the war. Her story begins with the hard-earned lessons of a young submarine fleet still feeling its way through the murky depths of undersea warfare.

Continue reading “USS Snook SS-279”

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑