Silent Pioneer

In the early days of the twentieth century, when the United States was just beginning to understand the promise and peril of undersea warfare, a small, steel-hulled boat slipped into the waters of the Puget Sound. She wasn’t flashy. There were no cheering crowds on the dock and no headlines outside the Navy towns. But when USS F-3, originally named Pickerel, was commissioned on August 5, 1912, she quietly joined the ranks of a fledgling force that would one day shape the future of naval combat.

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Silent Sacrifice

In the early 20th century, the U.S. Navy was taking its first daring steps into the unknown realm of submarine warfare. These undersea vessels were cramped, untested, and dangerous, but they represented a bold new chapter for the Navy’s evolving Silent Service. Among the pioneers of this era was the USS F-1 (SS-20), originally named Carp. At just 142 feet long and displacing 330 tons, she was small by today’s standards but sturdy and agile, a formidable achievement for her time. Laid down in 1909 at Union Iron Works in San Francisco, she was commissioned on June 19, 1912. Her crew—volunteers to an unknown life beneath the waves—would navigate new technology, constant risk, and a sea of uncertainty. Continue reading “Silent Sacrifice”

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