USS Seal (SS-183)
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| | Career |  | USN Jack |
|
|---|
| Ordered: |
| Laid down: | 25 May 1936 |
| Launched: | 25 April 1937 |
| Commissioned: | 30 April 1937 |
| Decommissioned: | 1 May 1956 |
| Fate: | scrapped |
| Stricken: | 1 May 1956 |
| General Characteristics |
|---|
| Displacement: | 1450 tons surfaced, 2198 tons submerged |
| Length: | 308 feet |
| Beam: | 26 feet |
| Draft: | 14 feet 3 inches |
| Propulsion: |
| Speed: | 21 knots surfaced, 9 knots submerged |
| Range: |
| Complement: | 55 officers and men |
| Armament: | one three-inch gun, eight 21-inch torpedo tubes |
USS Seal (SS-183), a
Salmon-class submarine, was the second ship of the
United States Navy to be named for the
seal, a sea
mammal valued for its skin and oil. Her keel was laid down on
25 May 1936 by the
Electric Boat Company in
Groton, Connecticut. She was
launched on
25 April 1937 sponsored by Mrs. John F. Greenslade, and
commissioned on
30 April 1937 with Lieutenant Karl G. Hensel in command.
Following an extended shakedown cruise in the
Caribbean Sea and a post-shakedown yard period,
Seal departed
New England in late November and proceeded to the
Panama Canal Zone to commence operations out of her home port,
Coco Solo. Arriving on
3 December, she conducted local operations off
Balboa, Panama, and off Coco Solo into January
1939; then proceeded to
Haiti where she participated in type exercises prior to Fleet Problem XX. That exercise, to test the fleet's ability to control the approaches to
Central America and
South America, was conducted during late February in the
Lesser Antilles.
In March,
Seal returned to the
Haiti-
Cuba area for exercises with Destroyer Division 4. In April, she proceeded to
New London, Connecticut, for overhaul which included modification of her main engines. In June, the
submarine again sailed south, transited the Panama Canal, and continued on to
San Diego, California, and
Pearl Harbor. In
Hawaii from July to September, she took soundings for the Hydrographic Office and participated in various local exercises. At the end of the latter month, she returned to San Diego, her home port into
1941.
During the next two years, she conducted exercises and provided services to surface ships and to
United States Navy and
United States Army air units along the West Coast and in the Hawaiian area. In the fall of
1941, her division (SubDiv 21) was transferred to the
Asiatic Fleet. Departing Pearl Harbor on
24 October, she reached
Manila on
10 November; and,
34 days later, cleared that bay to commence her first war patrol. She headed north to intercept Japanese forces moving into northern
Luzon to reinforce those already landed at
Vigan and
Aparri.
Initially off
Cape Bojeador, she shifted south to the
Vigan area on
20 December and, on
23 December,
torpedoed and sank
Hayataka Maru, the last Japanese ship sunk by American torpedoes in December
1941.
From the Vigan area, the submarine moved into the approaches to
Lingayen Gulf; and, in January
1942, she again turned north to patrol the entrance to
Lamon Bay. She rounded
Cape Bojeador on
9 January and
Cape Engano on
10 January, and, on
11 January — as the Japanese invaded the
Netherlands East Indies at
Tarakan,
Borneo, and
Minahasa,
Celebes — she headed south for the
Molucca Passage. By
20 January, she was patrolling east of the Celebes to intercept enemy traffic into
Kema. On
27 January, she was ordered to patrol off
Kendari, which had been attacked on
24 January and then to proceed to the
Royal Netherlands Naval Base at
Soerabaja, then still under Allied control.
Seal arrived at Soerabaja on
5 February. Daily air raids necessitated diving during the day and precluded repairs to her engines, which smoked excessively, and to the broken prism control mechanism in her high periscope. On
11 February, she departed for
Tjilatjap on the south coast of
Java, and there, on
14 February, she went alongside the submarine tender
Holland (AS-3). That same day, the Japanese moved into southern
Sumatra; and, on
19 February, they invaded
Bali. Allied forces counterattacked; and, as air and surface forces hit the Japanese fleet,
Seal departed
Tjilatjap and transited
Lombok Strait to patrol north of
Java. On
24 February, she attacked two convoys but was able to damage only one freighter. The next day, she unsuccessfully attacked an enemy warship formation. On
1 March, as the Japanese moved against
Soerabaja, she was similarly disappointed. On
14 March, she headed east to patrol the southern approaches to
Makassar City; and, for the next week, with her forward air conditioning unit broken down and her refrigerating plant inoperable, she patrolled between that city and
De Bril Bank. On
21 March, she headed for
Fremantle, Western Australia — the
Netherlands East Indies had fallen.
Arriving on
9 April,
Seal departed again on
12 May and worked her way through the
Malay Archipelago, the
Celebes Sea, and the
Sulu Sea to her patrol area off the
Indochina coast. During the early morning hours of
28 May, she entered the
South China Sea; and, that night, she fired on and sank the 1946-ton
Tatsufuku Maru. On
7 June, while off
Cam Ranh Bay, she attacked an eight-ship convoy and underwent a seven-hour
depth charging by surface ships and aircraft. From
15 June to the evening of
17 June, heavy seas and high winds hampered hunting; and, on
18 June, "a healthy stream of air bubbles" was discovered "issuing from the starboard side...." On
19 June, she left the area and headed for
Balabac Strait. On
23 June, she moved into
Makassar Strait; and, on
4 July of July, she reached Fremantle.
On her fourth war patrol,
10 August to
2 October 1942,
Seal returned to the
Indochina coast and patrolled north from
Cape Padaran. Despite 11 sightings, she was plagued by uncertain torpedo performance against shallow draft vessels, by premature explosions and by leaky exhaust valves and holes in the fuel compensating line which resulted in air and oil leaks to the surface. She was able to damage only one cargo ship, on
3 September.
Twelve days later,
Seal was en route back to Fremantle. She arrived on
2 October and departed again on
24 October to patrol in the shipping lanes in the
Palau area. On
16 November, she intercepted a convoy of five cargomen in two columns with a
destroyer escort and conducted a submerged attack on the leader of the near column as the formation zigzagged toward the submarine. Less than a minute after firing,
Seal collided with, or was rammed by, another enemy ship. The
periscope went black and vibrated severely. The submarine rose to 55 feet; hung there nearly a minute then started down. A few minutes later, depth charging began and
Seal leveled off at 250 feet. Breaking up noises were heard. Four hours later, the area was clear and
Seal surfaced. The high periscope had been bent horizontally, and the housing on the low periscope had been sprung, preventing its operation. The radar antenna had been broken off the radio mast. Quantities of uncooked rice and beans, unlike those used on the submarine, were found between the wooden deck pieces of the
cigarette deck, on the bridge, and caught in the
bathythermograph. The
periscope shears yielded "a good sample of Japanese
bottom paint."
Captured Japanese documents later confirmed the sinking of the 3500-ton freighter
Boston Maru by an American submarine on that date in that location. Whether that ship was
Seal’s target or the colliding ship is not known, but it is possible that the freighter's hull had been badly punctured by the submarine's periscope shears.
On
17 November,
Seal was ordered to start for
Pearl Harbor. She arrived on
30 November; and, after temporary repairs, continued on to the
Mare Island Navy Yard for permanent repairs. On
2 April 1943, she returned to
Hawaii; and, 12 days later, she departed on her sixth war patrol. On
18 April, she topped off at
Midway Island; and, by
1 May, she was patrolling off the
Palau Islands. On
2 May, she attacked a freighter, missed and subsequently came under an aerial bombing attack. On
4 May, she sank a tanker,
San Clemente Maru, but for the remainder of the patrol, was unable to close any targets.
Seal returned to Midway on
3 June. Refit took two weeks; training, a third. On
24 June, she was ready for sea. On
2 July, she entered her area off
Todo Saki on the northeastern
Honshu coast; and, on
8 July, she underwent a severe, ten-hour, depth charging which resulted in persistent air and oil leaks and forced her to turn back for repairs.
She arrived at Pearl Harbor on
24 July. Her repairs were quickly completed; and, in mid-August, she sailed west again. On
27 July, she entered the southern
Kuril Islands. On
31 July, while the submarine was diving, the conning tower hatch failed to latch; and the hatch flew open. The pumproom was flooded before the boat could be surfaced. Substantial damage to her electrical circuits resulted and
Seal retired eastward to make temporary repairs. The work continued for a week; and, on
8 August, as the air compressors were being jury-rigged to provide sufficient air pressure to launch torpedoes, she returned to the Kurils and crossed into the
Sea of Okhotsk. On
17 August, she attacked two freighters with no success. On
25 August, she cleared the area; and, on
4 October, she returned to Pearl Harbor.
During her next two war patrols,
Seal provided lifeguard services and conducted reconnaissance missions — at
Kwajalein on the ninth (
7 November to
19 December 1943) and at Ponape on the tenth (
17 January to
6 March 1944). She then proceeded to
Mare Island, and, after reengining and overhaul, returned to the northern
Hokkaido-
Kuril Islands area for her eleventh war patrol,
8 August to
17 September 1944.
With 14 to 15 hours of daylight, she hunted in the coastal and inter-island shipping lanes to
Muroran,
Matsuwa, and
Paramushiro. On
24 August, she attacked and sank
Tosei Maru off
Erimo Saki. On
5 September, after a six-hour chase, she fired four torpedoes at a maru with one escort; but all missed. On the night of
8 September, she encountered a two-column, six-ship convoy with an escort on each wing, and closed in to the leading ship. Shortly after 2045, she fired four torpedoes at overlapping targets, then opened to the eastward as the torpedoes started hitting. Just before midnight, she again attacked the convoy, now comprised of only four ships. One freighter took two hits. A second maru turned to chase
Seal.
Seal retired briefly; and, just before 0300 on
9 September, hit the remainder of the convoy. Daylight brought antisubmarine aircraft to the scene, and
Seal fishtailed at deep submergence until 1700. At 2026, having sunk the
Shonan Maru and damaged three or four other ships, she headed for Midway, arriving on
17 September.
On her twelfth and final war patrol,
10 October to
29 November 1944,
Seal again hunted in the Kurils. Her 30 days in the area, however, yielded only two contacts worthy of torpedo fire. On
25 October, she caught and sank the three-island freighter
Hakuyo Maru as it ran down the convoy lanes away from
Paramushiro. Three weeks later, she attacked and damaged another maru off
Etorofu (now
Iturup). During the last days of the patrol, she ranged off the coast of
Sakhalin, scoreless. On
17 October, she cleared the area.
Seal arrived at Pearl Harbor on
29 November, and, after refit, assumed training duties in the Hawaiian area. In June
1945, she returned to New London where she continued her training duties through the end of
World War II. After the war, she was ordered inactivated and disposed of. In early November, she proceeded to
Boston, Massachusetts, where she was decommissioned on
15 November; and, after a change in her orders, was retained in the Reserve Fleet. On
19 June 1947, she was placed in service and assigned to Boston as a Naval Reserve training ship, and, in March
1949, she was transferred to
Portsmouth, New Hampshire, where she continued to serve the Naval Reserve until placed out of service and struck from the
Naval Vessel Register on
1 May 1956. Six days later, she was removed from the
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard for scrapping.
Seal was awarded ten
battle stars for her
World War II service.
See
USS Seal for other ships of the same name.