USS Croaker’s First War Patrol: Deadly Strikes in the East China Sea, August 1944

In the summer of 1944, USS CROAKER SS-246, embarked on her first war patrol, leaving Pearl Harbor in July and pushing deep into the East China and Yellow Seas. The early days were a mix of training sharpened by caution, with sporadic contacts and long stretches of empty water. By mid-August, she had skirted mines, traded information with other submarines, and patrolled close enough to hostile shores to feel the reach of Japanese air and sea patrols. It was in this tense environment, between the fourteenth and seventeenth, that CROAKER struck two decisive blows, demonstrating both the skill of her crew and the deadly precision of a well-handled submarine.

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Paramushiro to Portland: The Story of Captain Robert F. Sellars, USN

 

On July 29, 1946, Portland’s Sunday Oregonian ran a proud headline: “Portland Submarine Officer Home from Pacific”. The article spotlighted Commander Robert F. Sellars, fresh from his command of USS Blackfish, returning to Oregon on a brief leave. He had completed four Pacific patrols after earlier duty in the Aleutians and the Atlantic. The piece offered readers a clean, clipped summary of Sellars’ wartime service. What it could not capture was the depth of experience behind his quiet return.

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Getting Tight

At a quiet submarine base in the Pacific in July 1945, the war still raged, but the mood had shifted. The end was near, and with it came time for reflection. Two veteran submariners sat nursing beers, their bodies young but their eyes older than they had any right to be. One of them was Chief Machinist Ray E. Cain, better known throughout the Silent Service as “Stinky.” His grin told half the story. His words, printed in the Winchester Sun that summer, told the rest.

“We’re not an ice cream navy,” he said, raising his glass. “We want a drink when we can get it.”

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