Growlers Legendary Down-the-Throat Torpedo Attack of September 12, 1944

The night sea was calm, almost deceptively so. A thin scatter of clouds drifted across the stars, and the horizon was a dark, featureless smear. Below the surface lay silence, but on the bridge of Growler, men kept their eyes sweeping and their nerves sharp. This was wolf pack country now, waters between Luzon and Formosa, where Japanese convoys crept through the straits and where three American submarines waited to pounce.

In the conning tower, red lamps threw their dull glow over the dials and the men hunched around them. Commander Thomas B. “Ben” Oakley Jr. stood steady, his voice measured, his presence calm. He had a knack for that, keeping himself even while every other heart on the boat ran a little faster.

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USS Queenfish at the North Pole: Captain Jim Harvey Recalls the 1985 Arctic Submarine Mission

Submariners live for the sea stories, and some are colder than others. On this episode of Patrol Reports, Dave Bowman sat down with Captain Jim Harvey, former commanding officer of USS Queenfish (SSN-651), to revisit a patrol that pushed the limits of technology, seamanship, and nerves: surfacing at the North Pole in August of 1985.

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An Irish Mystery Submarine?

It started with a newspaper clipping. A yellowed scrap from the Hope Pioneer, dated July 8, 1920. One of those curious little stories buried deep inside the paper, just above the church picnic announcements and well below the latest grain prices. It claimed that the Irish revolutionaries, in a bold move that sounded half like a punchline and half like a legend, had once considered buying a submarine. Not just any submarine. One built right here in America. The tale went that the whole enterprise fizzled when the boat was struck by a coal barge in Long Island Sound and sank during its trial run. Just like that, the dream went under.

Or… did it?

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