February Tolling of the Boats

February has a way of thinning the ranks. It sits awkwardly in the calendar, shorter than it ought to be, often colder than expected, and in the war years it carried a particular weight for the men of the Silent Service. The United States Navy submarine force never occupied much physical space in the wartime Navy. Fewer than two percent of personnel wore dolphins. Yet by the end of the Pacific War, submarines had strangled more than half of Japan’s merchant shipping. That success did not come cheaply. Fifty-two boats did not return. Thirty-five hundred and six men went on what submariners still call eternal patrol. No other branch of American service lost such a high percentage of its own.

Continue reading “February Tolling of the Boats”

USS Shark SS-174

The first months of 1942 were a time of chaos and desperation in the Pacific. The United States Navy, still reeling from the shock of Pearl Harbor, scrambled to stem the Japanese advance that seemed to roll forward with unstoppable force. The Asiatic Fleet, a relic of peacetime deployments that had suddenly found itself on the frontlines, was left to face the onslaught of the Japanese offensive, alone. Continue reading “USS Shark SS-174”

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