|
| Career
|
| Ordered:
|
|
| Laid down:
| 10 November 1941
|
| Launched:
| 30 June 1942
|
| Commissioned:
| 1 September 1942
|
| Fate:
| sunk as a target on 19 June 1970
|
| Struck:
| 30 June 1969
|
| General Characteristics
|
| Displacement:
| 1525 tons surfaced, 2424 tons submerged
|
| Length:
| 311 feet 8 inches
|
| Beam:
| 27 feet 3 inches
|
| Draft:
| 16 feet 10 inches
|
| Speed:
| 20.25 knots surfaced, 8.75 knots submerged
|
| Complement:
| 80 officers and men
|
| Armament:
| one five-inch (127 mm) gun, one 40 mm cannon, one 20 mm cannon, two .50 caliber (12.7 mm) machineguns, ten 21-inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes
|
USS Tunny (SS/SSG/APSS/LPSS-282), a Gato-class submarine, was the first submarine of the United States Navy to be named for the tunny, any of several oceanic fishes resembling the mackerel. Her keel was laid down on 10 November 1941 at Vallejo, California, by the Mare Island Navy Yard. She was launched on 30 June 1942 sponsored by Mrs. Frederick G. Crisp, and commissioned on 1 September 1942 with Lieutenant Commander Elton Watters Grenfell in command.
Following shakedown training out of California ports, Tunny arrived in the Hawaiian Islands on 12 December 1942. After an additional week of training and two weeks of availability, she got underway from Submarine Base, Pearl Harbor, on 12 January 1943 for her first war patrol. For nearly a week, rough seas hampered the progress of the submarine. Then, as she approached the Ryukyu Islands, sea traffic increased. Sightings of sampans became frequent, and Tunny often dove to avoid detection by suspicious-looking trawlers.
At 0530 on 26 January, Tunny sighted masts and a stack over the horizon indicating a possible target. During the day, she lessened the distance between herself and her quarry; and, near dusk, she closed a 400-ton trawler. Finding the prey not worth a torpedo, the submarine surfaced and opened fire with her deck gun. Soon, darkness forced her to discontinue the attack, and she continued on her way.
On 29 January, she began patrolling off Formosa. An hour and a half before midnight on 31 January, her periscope at last disclosed a worthwhile target, a freighter approaching Takao Ko. Tunny fired two "fish" from her bow tubes, but the freighter made a radical change of course which enabled her to evade the torpedoes. When her target counterattacked and dropped two depth charges, Tunny broke off the attack and submerged.
On 1 February, Tunny set her course for the China coast, running on the surface. As darkness fell on 2 February, she was only hours from Hong Kong, expecting to make landfall on Tamkan Island by daybreak. At 2130, she made radar contact; and, through the night, drew closer to her as yet unseen quarry.
A light rain was falling and visibility was poor when, half an hour before morning twilight, Tunny began a radar approach. Rapidly shoaling water less than 20 fathoms deep and land masses on two sides of the submarine limited her maneuverability. At 2200 yards, the extreme phosphorescence of the water illuminated her wake and betrayed her presence to the enemy ship, which began signaling the unidentified intruder with a blinker light. Despite her detection, Tunny continued the approach until she was only 1000 yards from the target and then fired three torpedoes. The Japanese ship, now discernible as a loaded tanker, began to maneuver radically and opened fire on the submarine. Undeterred, Tunny submerged and continued the attack, firing a second volley from her stern tubes. One of these torpedoes hit the side of the tanker with a thud, but without explosion, and a small column of water erupted just forward of the tanker's bridge. Duds and prematures were a problem for American submarines early in 1943, and verification that this torpedo had indeed hit the tanker, but failed to detonate, was forthcoming when members of the tanker's crew dashed to the spot in question and began examining the impact area with flashlights. Despite continuous fire from the ship and the proximity of land, Tunny managed to stay within firing range of her target by traveling at full speed. After the tanker successfully evaded Tunny's third salvo, the submarine fired a last torpedo from 1600 yards as the intended victim reached the passage into Hong Kong. Following this disappointing conclusion to her attack, Tunny dove in anticipation of search planes which appeared within two hours and continued their surveillance throughout the day.
After dark on 3 February, while patrolling Lema Channel, Tunny made radar contact with a sizable target. On this very dark night, visual identification was impossible; but, at 2005, the submarine approached to 900 yards and made
a three-torpedo attack. The sound of the target's screws ceased immediately, and Tunny claimed to have sunk this
unidentified ship which had been seen only on radar. When the submarine surfaced at daybreak the following day, the
submariners discovered an unexpected visitor on deck — a
six-foot black and yellow striped snake.
On 4 February, Tunny set her course for Swatow, keeping to the shoreline in hopes of intercepting shipping. En route, she passed a large hospital ship well marked and brilliantly lighted. On 6 February and 7 February, Tunny patrolled off Swatow. Numerous junks plying the Formosa and Swatow banks at all hours added to the hazards imposed by shallow water, and an inoperable fathometer made it impossible for Tunny to approach the shore closer than six miles.
Early on the morning of 8 February, she went deep to
avoid a plane revealed by radar. When she surfaced, she
discovered a freighter 10,000 yards off her beam. She
shadowed the target during the day and, after sunset, made
her approach and launched two torpedoes from a distance of
830 yards. Due to bad runs, neither of these took effect,
but they did alert the freighter, which opened fire on
Tunny. The submarine fired two shots from her bow tubes,
but one torpedo missed, and the other circled around to the
right. Tunny then drew ahead for a surface approach and
fired three more torpedoes. Two of these found the mark;
but one put on an amazing show, veering sharply first to the
left and then to the right, before hitting the target. The
Kusayama Maru, a heavily-laden, 5000-ton cargo ship sank by
the stern in 20 minutes; Tunny had scored her first
confirmed kill. As she proceeded on toward Takao, a
searchlight suddenly pierced the dark not far ahead, and
Tunny dove to avoid detection.
The next day, Tunny sighted a large transport. Undetected by two nearby patrol vessels and a plane, she made her approach and scored two hits on the transport with her remaining torpedoes. However, the ship did not sink and later left the area.
On 11 February, Tunny set her course for Midway Island. En
route, she used a combination of 20-millimeter and five-inch
gunfire to sink a 100-ton fishing trawler. On 20 February, she
made contact with the harbor escort and proceeded to moor at
Midway Island, completing her first aggressive and successful
patrol. She later continued on to Hawaii, arriving at Pearl Harbor on 24 February 1943.
After refitting by tender Sperry (AS-12)
and three days of training, Tunny departed the Hawaiian Islands on
18 March, paused at Midway Island for replacement of her periscope,
and got underway for Wake Island on 24 March. Later, Commander,
Submarine Force, Pacific Fleet, would describe Tunny's
second war patrol as belonging "in that exceptional category
of one of the outstandingly aggressive patrols of the war."
On 27 March 1943, Tunny arrived off Wake Island and
operated within a 200-mile circle all day, flooding down the
decks awash when within 30 miles of the island. Before dawn
the next morning, she closed to within ten miles of the
Japanese-held island and watched as its awakening occupants
turned on their lights. A motor torpedo boat and two patrol
boats passed by less than 600 yards from the submarine
without detecting her presence. Trailing these vessels,
Tunny came upon a cargo ship, and all hands scrambled to
battle stations. Shortly after sunrise, the submarine
launched her attack, firing two torpedoes from a range of
700 yards. The first found its mark and blew the stern off
the enemy ship, but the buoyancy of the lightly loaded
vessel kept it afloat. Tunny was maneuvering at periscope
depth to avoid depth charges dropped across her bow at a
range of 300 yards when the first of several aerial bombs
fell close aboard. The submarine dove to 280 feet. When
she attempted to surface an hour later, Tunny was again
driven down by an aerial adversary. Later in the morning,
traveling submerged at 150 feet, she set her course for her assigned patrol area.
On 31 March, she entered he patrol area in the
Caroline Islands, and, on 1 April 1943, she conducted submerged
patrols off North Pass Island, Truk, and later in the day on the
Japanese naval base's western approaches. Failing to find
any action in these areas, she surfaced late in the
afternoon on 2 April and set her course for the channel
between Puluwat Island and Pulap Island. Later that day, as she
patrolled off Alet Island, Tunny made radar contact with a
ship dead ahead. Heading in for a flank attack, she sighted
a Momo-class destroyer 1000 yards astern of her chosen
target. Tunny fired three torpedoes from 960 yards and
noted a hit in the forward hold of the Japanese cargo ship
before diving to 300 feet to avoid the attention of the
destroyer. Minutes later, a series of nine depth charges
tumbled down in search of the submarine, but exploded at too
shallow a depth to achieve their purpose. Some 15 minutes
later, as Tunny started up to take a look, she was jolted by
a deep-set depth charge which caught her at 260 feet, but
caused only minor damage -- a small price to pay for the
sinking of Toyo Maru Number 2. Before midnight, the destroyer
gave up the search, and the submarine surfaced and set her
course for the Namonuito group to the north.
Late on 4 April, Tunny headed west to intercept traffic
reported north of McLaughlin Bank. On 7 April, while
patrolling in that area, the submarine took advantage of a
rain squall to approach within 1000 yards of a
radar-tracked target. She then fired two torpedoes at the
Kosei Maru, an 8000-ton passenger-cargo ship, scoring a hit
amidships and one aft, and dove immediately to escape the
inevitable wrath of the escorting Hibiki-class destroyer
which had been patrolling just ahead of the now-stricken
transport. The ensuing depth charge counterattack continued
until the destroyer lost contact with the submarine in a
heavy rain squall. Having added a third cargo ship to her
list of kills, Tunny retired from the scene of the attack.
On 8 April, the submarine surfaced in a downpour to
continue patrols north of West Fayu Island. Later that day,
she set her course to intercept a convoy reported to be
southwest of Truk. At 2228 on 9 April, she made radar
contact with a formation less than three miles distant and
went to four engines to maneuver into position for an
attack. In a few minutes, the formation changed course,
putting Tunny in position to slow down to two-thirds speed
and head in, flooded down to decks awash to avoid detection.
As the convoy became visible, Tunny's commanding officer,
Commander James A. Scott, could hardly believe his luck. On
the starboard bow was a large aircraft carrier, to port two
auxiliary carriers, and on each bow of the formation, a
destroyer. Given this perfect setup, Tunny maneuvered to
swing the bow on twin targets, but her plans were disrupted
when three small boats similar to motor torpedo boats
appeared only 300 yards off her port bow. Tunny quickly
dove to 40 feet, turned right, ninety degrees, and fired
four torpedoes from her stern tubes at one of the auxiliary
carriers from a distance of 880 yards. As she turned her
attention to other targets, four torpedo explosions sounded through the night.
Signaling from her new target gave executive officer
Lieutenant Commander Roger Keithly at the conn a final check on the
target's bearing, and Tunny released a salvo of six
torpedoes from her bow tubes at the large carrier. Her
surprise attack completed, Tunny immediately dove amidst the
cacophony of depth charges and churning screws. The depth
charges rocked the submarine but did no damage; and the
crackling and grinding noises heard throughout the ship, as
well as on sonar, led those on board the submarine to
believe that their "fish" had found their mark. In
all this noise and confusion, Tunny unobtrusively slipped
away to the north. Later, examination of Japanese records
showed that this attack was ruined by prematures and duds,
and that damage to the enemy had been minor. However, the
skill and daring with which the raid was conducted remained
an example of excellence and prompted the Commander,
Submarine Force, Pacific Fleet, to commend Tunny's commander
for his actions on this patrol as "an illustrious example of
professional competence and military aggressiveness."
An hour and a half after midnight on 10 April, the
submarine surfaced and set her course to return to her
patrol area. While approaching North Pass about 25 miles
out of Truk on 11 April, Tunny dove when a searchlight
suddenly broke the night, 500 yards ahead on the starboard
bow. No depth charges followed, and the source of the
light -- not sizable enough to be detected on radar -- was
presumed to be a small boat.
Early on the afternoon of 11 April, a contact, at first
thought to be a patrol boat, turned out to be a Japanese
submarine. The designation symbol of the enemy submarine
was emblazoned on her conning tower, spelling out
I-9 in large white characters. Boldly taking the offensive, Tunny
fired her three remaining forward "fish" at the submarine,
only to see the vessel turn away and parallel the course of
the torpedoes. Tunny then began her own
evasive procedures, going deep and away from the Japanese
submersible -- and none too soon. Minutes later, she tracked
two torpedoes which passed harmlessly astern. An enemy
plane added bombs to Tunny's immediate concerns, but she
rigged for silent running and weathered the attack by
remaining submerged until after nightfall.
That same evening, as Tunny lay on the surface in the
bright moonlight charging her batteries, she made radar
contact with a ship moving at 18 knots. Within minutes, the
contact materialized into an enemy destroyer steaming on the
starboard bow. Tunny dove to 44 feet and began to swing for
a stern shot when the belligerent destroyer increased speed
to a thundering 30 knots and headed in from a distance of
less than 1400 yards. As the submarine dove for 400 feet,
the explosions of nine depth charges fairly close by pursued
her. Silent running and a quick reversal of course
eventually shook off the menacing destroyer, and Tunny
returned to the surface after the moon set, noting only
minor damage from the attack.
In the days that followed, Tunny patrolled off East Fayu Island and north of Mogami Bank before setting her course for Saipan on 15 April. Her surveillance of
Magicienne Harbor disclosed that it was not in use. Seeking
targets, the submarine passed through Saipan Channel and
later discovered two cargo ships in Garapan Harbor.
Prevented from attacking by the presence of intervening
reefs, Tunny departed the area and moored in the lagoon at
Midway Island on 23 April for a welcome rest. So aggressive had
been her handling on this eventful patrol that not one of
her firing ranges exceeded 1000 yards. She was awarded the
Presidential Unit Citation for this outstanding patrol.
After refitting at Midway Island, Tunny continued on to Hawaii
for additional repairs. She departed Pearl Harbor on 25 May
1943 and, after fueling at Johnston Island, got underway on
27 April for Eniwetok. Her first contact with the enemy on
this third war patrol came early in the afternoon on 31 May
when she dove to avoid a radar contact whose speed
identified it as a plane. As Tunny passed 300 feet, a bomb
exploded over her after torpedo room breaking lights and
thermometers, flooding the after torpedo tubes, and causing
miscellaneous other damage. An unsatisfactory makeshift
repair of the broken bridge speaker prompted a note in the
war patrol report that "the only dependable communication
system was the open hatch and a powerful set of lungs."
Other repairs were completed before nightfall, and Tunny
continued on her way. She patrolled off Eniwetok for two
days; then moved on to her assigned area, arriving at Truk
on 6 June.
As this patrol progressed, Tunny discovered that
antisubmarine action by the Japanese at Truk had shifted to
aerial detection. On 7 June, her first day of patrol, she
was harassed by a single float biplane and an ineffectual
Japanese destroyer. Tunny found the enemy biplanes a great
nuisance, since her radar detected them late or not at all.
Soon she came to regard the aircraft as an arch-enemy which
thwarted attacks on convoys by hovering overhead and guiding
possible targets around the submarine, out of firing range.
On 14 June, as Tunny cruised on the surface following a
submerged patrol east of Murilo Island in the Hall group,
one of her lookouts sighted a convoy bearing 090 degrees.
Made up of two small freighters and a large transport and
accompanied by two destroyers, the convoy was a tempting
target. As Tunny made her approach, an unobserved escort
vessel suddenly challenged her with a searchlight and
several rounds of four-inch fire which fell astern. The
submarine dove to 300 feet but continued her approach. She
then surfaced and fired four torpedoes at the transport from
a range of 3400 yards. Three explosions and a tremendous
cloud of smoke and water over the target indicated that
Tunny had damaged the enemy vessel. The submarine dove to
avoid the escorts, but no depth charging ensued. Shortly
after midnight, as she ran on the surface attempting to
intercept the convoy, an undetected vessel fired shots which
splashed astern. Tunny dove again.
As June wore on, Tunny continued patrols as far as Saipan without success. On 26 June, she conducted routine and photographic reconnaissance of Saipan Harbor and Tinian Channel and, later that day, surfaced to patrol the Truk-Empire shipping lanes east of Rota Island. Patrolling off Harnum Point and Rota harbor on 28 June, Tunny sighted a converted gunboat zigzagging madly, went to battle stations, and dispatched the enemy vessel with a salvo of three torpedoes from 1500 yards. Sighting an armed trawler bearing down on her, the submarine dove. Those on board felt the concussion of three sharp explosions close aboard, perhaps from aerial bombs, as Tunny went deep and rigged for silent running, maneuvering to avoid the trawler. Seconds later, two heavy explosions marked the death throes of Tunny's most recent victim. Tunny was chased down again by the trawler when she attempted to surface an hour later. Returning to periscope depth some three hours after the attack, her commanding officer at the periscope was relieved to find no sign of the trawler, but his relief quickly turned to alarm when the periscope revealed a close-up of the bomb bay of a Mitsubishi 97 at 300 feet, directly overhead. This time Tunny waited four hours before surfacing again 13 miles from Guam.
She patrolled off Guam until 4 July when she received orders to leave the area. Early the next day, she set her course for Johnston Island. Japanese aircraft continued to badger the submarine for two days as she proceeded toward Hawaii. After taking on fuel and provisions at Johnston Island on 11 July, she completed her third patrol at Pearl Harbor on 14 July.
After refitting and three days of training, Tunny departed Hawaii on 5 August for Midway Island. She arrived at Midway Island on 9 August and was again underway on 10 August. On 18 August, she sighted Pagan Island and Alamagan Island; and, on 22 August, she entered her assigned area in the Palau Islands and began patrols. Early in the morning of 24 August, she sighted a six-ship convoy as it emerged from Toagel Mlungui Pass. Tunny trailed the convoy until she could obtain a good firing position and, at moonrise on 25 August, she submerged to 40 feet and began her approach. At 0140, she fired three torpedoes and then another two in rapid
succession. She then ducked her periscope and dove to avoid
being rammed by the first target. The convoy passed
overhead as Tunny dove deep in expectation of depth charges.
She heard her torpedoes explode at the end of their run, but
the absence of depth charges was both welcome and
unexpected. Near dawn, Tunny made another attack, launching
six torpedoes at ships of the convoy without success.
Meanwhile, a destroyer escort had joined the convoy.
Alerted to Tunny's presence, she now bore down on the
submarine. Tunny dove, and, for the next two hours, the
enemy ship remained overhead pinging and tracking. The
destroyer escort dropped two patterns of six depth charges
close by the submarine but finally gave up the search. At
noon, Tunny came to periscope depth and, finding no sign of
the convoy, set her course for Toagel Mlungui, securing from
battle stations after an exhausting 15 hours.
At mid-morning on 26 August, she spotted two vessels
with a submarine chaser escort approaching Toagel Mlungui Pass and launched a five-torpedo attack. As Tunny dove, the screws of the first ship were heard to stop; and, shortly
thereafter, two depth charges exploded overhead. Two
minutes later, another pattern of depth charges exploded all
around the submarine. A small fire broke out in the
maneuvering room, causing main power to be lost momentarily.
In order to check the fire, the main motors were stopped for
one minute; then started again. Although the fire was
small, dense smoke from burning insulating varnish made it
difficult at first to assess the damage. Meanwhile, Tunny's
bow planes jammed and the submarine climbed to 200 feet,
then went into a steep glide which took her down to 380 feet
before control was regained. Within five minutes, coolly
efficient damage control parties had restored operating
conditions to nearly normal, and the submarine began her
retirement to the southwest. Once again the sound of screws
caused tense moments for those on board Tunny, but this time no depth charges fell.
Early that evening, Tunny surfaced and headed away from
the heavily-traveled lanes she had been patrolling in order
to assess her damages and effect repairs. Inspection
disclosed considerable damage to the bow, ripped-up plating
aft of the torpedo room, and sheared-off rivets and bolts.
The torpedo room pressure hull was badly dished in between
frames; and this damage in turn immobilized the bow plane
tilting gears. The explosions had jammed the gyro spindles
in the stern torpedo tubes, impaired the usefulness of sound
and radar gear, and caused other damage visible throughout
the ship. Sailors inspecting topside found fragments of the
destructive depth charges scattered over the deck.
For two days, her crew labored to restore her to order
and make the necessary repairs. Having done everything
within his means to restore Tunny to normal operating
condition, her commanding officer found her still short of
combat readiness. Her bow planes, despite all efforts, were
still inoperative; her bow buoyancy tank unusable; and
various other problems, which could not be remedied at sea,
remained. Thus, on 29 August 1943, she departed her patrol
area leaving these hunting grounds to other submarines in
better condition. The war-scarred submarine moored at Pearl Harbor on 8 September.
After a preliminary assessment of battle damage, Tunny departed Pearl Harbor on 11 September 1943. She arrived at Hunters Point on 17 September for overhaul and repairs and remained there until 2 February 1944. Then, repairs and tests completed, she departed the West Coast. Tunny returned to Hawaii a week later, underwent voyage repairs and training, and departed Pearl Harbor for her fifth war patrol on 27 February.
She stopped at Midway Island on 2 March, got underway the next day for the Palau Islands, and entered her patrol area on 15 March. On 20 March, a persistent observation plane kept Tunny down for three hours off the entrance to Toagel Mlungui and dropped eight light bombs without damaging the submarine. In the following days, the submarine patrolled the northern and western approaches to the islands.
On 22 March, Tunny's radar picked up what proved to be
a large convoy. Day was breaking, and Tunny was maneuvering
for a position ahead when an escorting destroyer appeared on
the radar at 14,000 yards. The enemy soon sighted the
submarine and challenged her with a blinker. Tunny took
advantage of a nearby rain squall for concealment and
continued to close the convoy, keeping a watchful eye on the
destroyer. Despite bad visibility and the pinging of the
escort, Tunny continued her approach and soon found herself
in the midst of a group of tankers and cargo ships. Choosing two heavily loaded cargo ships for her targets, she launched a six-torpedo attack and heard or observed hits on
both. Immediately, attention on board Tunny was diverted
when a small tanker nearly collided with the submarine.
Tunny now obtained a setup on a destroyer moving at high
speed across her stern, fired four Mark 18 torpedoes, then
dove quickly even as depth charges from a nearby trawler
exploded on the port quarter. During the next four hours,
the Japanese ships dropped 87 depth charges in an effort to
finish off the submarine but without effect. Late in the
day, Tunny surfaced and began a futile search for stragglers
and cripples from the morning's attack. She found only debris and an oil slick.
At 2119 on 23 March, while patrolling off Angaur Island,
Tunny picked up a radar contact which she identified by
sight as a large I-class submarine. For nearly an hour and
a half, Tunny and the enemy submarine maneuvered for
position, each attempting to prevent the other from
obtaining a shot. Then, at 2324, Tunny fired four torpedoes
from a range of 1900 yards, swung hard to starboard to
prevent a collision, and dove to avoid a possible return
attack. Before the hatch was closed, two hits were heard
and felt and a flash was seen inside Tunny's conning tower.
For one terrible moment, observers on board Tunny feared
that their own submarine had been hit. As Tunny dove to 150
feet and began circling the area, the screws of the enemy
submarine stopped, and a crackling racket began and
continued for an hour. When the noise ceased, Tunny
surfaced and cleared the area, but Japanese submarine I-42
had met her end.
Tunny returned to waters off Toagel Mlungui and resumed
patrols. On the morning of 29 March, she observed a large
number of small vessels leaving Malakal Harbor, none worth
an attack. Apparently, the enemy had somehow received word
of the Fifth Fleet's impending bombing attack on Japanese
installations in the Caroline Islands and made a desperate attempt
to clear the area. Late in the afternoon, a larger
formation appeared: the 63,000-ton
Japanese battleship Musashi, one light cruiser, and three destroyers, also fleeing the expected aerial bombardment. After a daring
approach, Tunny fired six torpedoes at the battleship from
her bow tubes. The torpedoes passed directly under an alert
destroyer of the screen which immediately hoisted flags to
warn the battleship, swung parallel to the torpedo tracks,
and made a run on the submarine. Tunny went deep and ran
for the southwest while the destroyer dropped 38 depth
charges in a short, but concentrated counterattack. Toward
sunset, the submarine lost contact with the formation.
Later that night, she encountered what she thought to be the
same force and was held down for two hours by one of the
escorting ships. Hits by two of Tunny's torpedoes had
damaged but failed to slow the powerful battleship.
At 0200 on 30 March, Tunny arrived on station to begin
lifeguard duties for the Fifth Fleet's air attack on the
Palau Islands. At 0700, a series of explosions followed by the
appearance of heavy smoke from the vicinity of the harbor
indicated that American planes were finding their mark.
During the morning, more than 100 planes passed over the
submarine on their return from the strike. Then, as Tunny
circled on station shortly after noon, two American torpedo
bombers approached. One sheared off for a strafing attack
which was not completed; the other went into a steep glide
and released a bomb from an altitude of 300 feet.
Incredulous watchers on the submarine saw the bomb cross
over the deck gun on the bow, pass the bridge at what
appeared to be no more than arm's length, and strike the
water with a tremendous impact, only ten yards to starboard
of the forward engine room. The entire ship lifted with a
snap as if it had collided with an underwater object, and an
explosion followed some seconds later, throwing personnel
and gear in all directions in the maneuvering and after
torpedo rooms. Damage to the main control cubicle and to
Tunny's remaining torpedoes resulted. Tunny completed
repairs during the night, and the next morning manned her
lifeguard station as before, only a little more wary of
"friendly" aircraft.
Tunny departed the Palau Islands on 2 April, stopped at Milne Bay on 7 April, and arrived in Australia on 11 April. She received the Presidential Unit Citation for this patrol.
Following refit, the submarine departed Brisbane on 29 April and set her course for New Guinea. She underwent voyage repairs at Milne Bay, then proceeded via Langemak Bay
to her patrol area in the Mariana Islands. She arrived in the patrol area on 11 May and, in the days that followed, encountered many enemy planes as she patrolled off Saipan and Guam.
On 17 May, she received a report from submarine Sand Lance (SS-381)
of a convoy in the area and set out to intercept it. Late in the afternoon, she sighted the smoke
of her quarry; and, just after sunset, the masts came into view. The convoy consisted of three cargo ships escorted by a like number of destroyers. Racing against fading twilight, Tunny made her approach; launched a spread of three torpedoes at the second ship of the column; then rapidly fired three more at the last cargo ship. Before the converging escorts forced her down, Tunny observed that a hit had left the last ship of the column down by the stern, emitting clouds of dense black smoke. Although the escorting vessels dropped 81 depth charges, none fell close, and Tunny withdrew to the southeast, having scored her sixth kill of the war, a 4900-ton cargo ship, the Nichiwa Maru. Shortly after midnight, Tunny surfaced and saw an ill-fated cargo ship, the victim of Sand Lance, ablaze from stem to stern. Frequent minor explosions punctuated the night as the ship went down in the darkness.
As Tunny continued patrols in the Mariana Islands, she sighted
numerous aircraft and noted explosions and burning
ships -- apparently the work of sister ship
Silversides (SS-236). At this time, however, planes attached to enemy
convoys seemed effective in detecting Tunny and routing
convoys around her, out of range of her torpedoes.
On 8 June, she rendezvoused with submarines
Pilotfish (SS-386)
and Pintado (SS-387)
to form a coordinated attack group, the "Blair Blasters." The three submarines formed a scouting line for a patrol across the western Pacific to the South China Sea. Tunny passed through Balintang Channel on 14 June and sighted Luzon the next morning. While returning through Balintang Channel on 16 June, she made a surface approach on a small sampan and sank it with gunfire. She conducted patrols in the Philippine Sea until 22 June when she parted company with the attack group. On 29 June, she fueled at Midway Island; then proceeded to Oahu, having traveled over 14,500 miles on her sixth war patrol.
After refitting, she departed Pearl Harbor on 4 August 1944 as a member of a coordinated attack group called "Ed's Eradicators." With wolf pack members
Barb (SS-220) and
Queenfish (SS-393),
she set her course, via Midway Island, for the South China Sea. She arrived in her patrol area on 25 August. Her first action came hours after midnight on 31 August when the wolf pack attacked a convoy. Queenfish was the first to score a hit, and Tunny witnessed the explosion of a tanker, the victim of her sister submarine. As Tunny maneuvered in the bright moonlight, she was suddenly startled by gunfire, which seemed to those on board to come from all directions. She dove and avoided damage from the depth charges which soon followed. Later on the same day, a hit by Barb alerted the convoy's air escort to Tunny's presence; and she was forced down again without opportunity to launch her torpedoes. Time after time, the submarine surfaced only to be forced down by escorting planes as the attack on the convoy continued into the evening.
A second disappointing day came on the heels of the first. Tunny patrolled submerged for most of 1 September in order to avoid enemy aircraft. Late in the afternoon, she was advancing westward on a scouting line formed by the wolf pack, when she sighted a plane dead ahead and about six miles distant. She immediately began to dive, but 90 seconds later, as she passed 110 feet, two bombs hit close aboard aft, sending the ship upward at an eight degree angle and causing extensive damage. As the third and fourth bomb exploded, Tunny was already heading for 300 feet to assess her damages.
Inspection disclosed that the bombs had dished in the
hull plating in the vicinity of the after torpedo room and
the maneuvering room, causing a leak in a vent riser. Less
than ten minutes after the Japanese plane had been sighted,
the commanding officer decided to discontinue the patrol.
Throughout the ship, sheared off valves and bolts, damaged
meters, clocks, and gauges attested to the force of the
bomb's explosion. In addition, all three radio antennae
were down, a leak in her pressure hull had been aggravated,
and Tunny's rudder action indicated possible damage. She
set her course for Balintang Channel and surfaced late in
the day on 2 September. Tunny continued to sight Japanese
airplanes as she made her way to Hawaii. She completed this
patrol on 17 September at Pearl Harbor.
Tunny departed Oahu for California on 20 September; and, on 26 September, she arrived at Hunter's Point for battle damage repairs and an overhaul. She returned to Hawaii in January 1945 and, after a training period departed Pearl Harbor on 3 February for her eighth war patrol.
On 14 February, she entered Tanapag Harbor and
moored to submarine tender
Fulton (AS-11)
for repairs to her
main engine. Later in the month, she conducted sonar tests
out of that port. On 5 March, she departed Saipan and, in
the days that followed, was slowed by heavy seas as she
proceeded to her patrol area in the Ryukyu Islands.
On 13 March and 14 March, she conducted a special
reconnaissance mission off the Nansei Shoto in preparation
for landings planned for Okinawa on 1 April. On 14 March,
Tunny plotted over 230 mines which she detected on sonar as
she traveled through the hazardous waters at 150 feet. On
15 March, all hands breathed a sigh of relief as Tunny got
underway for her patrol area, her special mission safely and
successfully completed.
Her pursuit of a distant convoy ended in disappointment
on 18 March, when a change of course allowed the cargo ships
and their escort to slip away from Tunny around sunset. For
two days, the submarine patrolled off Amami Ōshima; then,
on 23 March, she took up a lifeguard station. Days later, as
Tunny searched for a downed flier, a twin-float enemy plane
took her by surprise and dropped two bombs. One fell quite
close but caused only minor damage to the submarine. As the
month drew to its close, Tunny rescued two fliers from
aircraft carrier
Intrepid (CV-11)
and one from
Bennington (CV-20)
as those ships took part in the assault on Okinawa.
On 1 April, Tunny completed her lifeguard duties and
set her course for Midway Island. En route, she sank a 200-ton
lugger with her deck gun. After stopping at Midway Island, she
arrived at Oahu on 14 April.
Following refitting and a week of sonar and approach
training, Tunny departed Pearl Harbor on 14 April for her
ninth war patrol. She stopped at Guam for repairs and
additional sonar exercises, then got underway on 28 May.
Together with submarines Skate (SS-305)
and Bonefish (SS-223), Tunny formed the second group of "Hydeman's
Hellcats" known as "Pierce's Polecats." On 2 June, Tunny
passed through the Nansei Shoto and, as she approached
Kyushu two days later, encountered increasing small boat
traffic. On 5 June, Tunny passed through Korea Strait,
repeating the hair-raising task of mine detection by sonar,
this time in Nishi Suido. She plotted over 80 mines; then
continued on to conduct patrols on the western shore of Honshu.
Operating in the supposedly inviolable waters of the
Sea of Japan, the wolf pack attacked shipping and made
exploratory attempts to enter Japanese harbors. Late on 9 June, Tunny attacked a cargo vessel. One torpedo hit the enemy vessel with a thud but failed to explode, and Tunny
discontinued the attack. In the harbor entering phase of
the patrol, Tunny closed the breakwater of Etomo Ko to 8000
yards (7.3 km) shortly before midnight on 12 June. Town and
waterfront lights provided illumination, but no suitable
target could be found, and the submarine cleared the harbor
before midnight. A few minutes later, Tunny approached
within 5000 yards of the harbor mouth at Uppuri Wan but
discreetly withdrew when searchlights located and then
brilliantly illuminated the intruder.
On 16 June, Tunny sighted numerous rafts filled with
the Japanese survivors of a successful action by Bonefish
and later took prisoner a Japanese chief petty officer who
had escaped from the sinking ship. On the following day, as
Tunny and Bonefish closed a radar-located target, Tunny
suddenly found herself the object of gunfire, with the
closest shot falling only 200 yards off her port beam. She
quickly changed course and eluded both the gunfire and the
depth charges which followed. On 19 June, shallow coastal
water foiled Tunny's attack on a 4,000-ton cargo ship.
Tunny rendezvoused with Skate on 23 June to depart the Sea of Japan. She remained off Hokkaido for two days on the chance that she might be able to aid Bonefish, missing since her request to make a daylight submerged patrol of Toyama Wan some days earlier. On 27 June, Tunny discontinued her vigil; proceeded via the Kuril Islands and Midway Island; and arrived at Pearl Harbor on 6 July.
The submarine then made her way back to the west coast. Tunny was decommissioned on 13 December 1945 and placed in the Mare Island Group, 19th Fleet.
Communist aggression in Korea placed new demands on the resources of the Navy and led to Tunny's being placed in commission, in reserve, on 28 February 1952. She saw no service at this time, however, and was decommissioned in April 1952. On 6 March 1953, she was placed in commission for the third time. Converted to carry guided missiles, she was reclassified with hull identification symbol SSG-282 and served as a Regulus missile submarine for nearly 12 years.
For the first four of those years, she operated out of Point Mugu, contributing to the development of the Regulus missile system. Except for a short period of type training, Tunny engaged entirely in the launching and guidance of Regulus missiles for purposes of missile evaluation in the development of the system. In 1957, she shifted her base of operations to Hawaii where she conducted deterrent patrols and fired exercise missiles.
In May 1965, the Regulus missile system was phased out, and Tunny was redesignated with hull identification symbol SS-282. She remained in the Hawaiian operating area until the end of the year, conducting training exercises and providing various other services. In 1966, she was converted to a troop-carrying submarine and redesignated with hull identification symbol APSS-282. In February 1967, Tunny began missions in unconventional warfare, operating off the coast of Vietnam. She conducted reconnaissance in preparation for amphibious assault operations and gathered navigational and oceanographic information. Ideally suited for transporting small teams for specialized operations as well as for gathering information, she participated in Operation Deckhouse VI.
On 1 January 1968, the veteran submarine was reclassified with hull identification symbol LPSS-282. She was decommissioned on 28 June 1969, and, on 30 June 1969, her name was struck from the Naval Vessel Register. She was sunk as a target on 19 June 1970.
Tunny received nine battle stars and two Presidential Unit Citations for her World War II service. She received five battle stars for her operations during the Vietnam War.
See USS Tunny for other ships of the same name.
References
This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.
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