Independence Day in the Kuriles

Aboard the USS Sunfish SS-281, July 3-4, 1944…

Not every Fourth of July comes with flags and fireworks. Sometimes, it comes with fog, fishing boats, and a barometer that just can’t make up its mind.

On July 3, 1944, the submarine USS Sunfish slipped into her patrol zone. She was sixty miles southeast of Kurabu Zaki, off the northern edge of Paramushiru, one of the outermost of Japan’s Kurile Islands. This was not a place for parades or patriotic speeches. It was a place for shadows, silence, and submarine warfare. On this particular patrol, action was measured less in torpedoes and more in fathoms and fogbanks.

Continue reading “Independence Day in the Kuriles”

Wartime Glimpses into the Silent Service

On June 23, 1943, the Norfolk Ledger-Star published a rare look into one of the most secretive corners of the American war effort. Titled “Submarine Crews Submerge, Sweat, When Depth Charges Are Dropped,” the article gave readers at home a dramatic, carefully curated peek into life aboard a U.S. Navy submarine during World War II. For a service built entirely on secrecy, it was a surprising choice.

The story brings readers just close enough to the action. It describes the chaos and claustrophobia of a depth charge attack. The lights go out. The sub tilts and groans. Officers calculate courses, speeds, and firing angles in tense silence. Crewmembers hold their breath, literally and figuratively, as enemy destroyers hunt above them. And all of this unfolds without giving up a single operational detail.

Continue reading “Wartime Glimpses into the Silent Service”

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑