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USS Argonaut (SM-1)

USS Argonaut (V-4/SF-7/SM-1/A-1/APS-1/SS-166) was a submarine of the United States Navy, the first boat to carry the name. Argonaut was laid down as V-4 on 1 May 1925 at Portsmouth Navy Yard. She was launched on 10 November 1927, sponsored by Mrs. Philip Mason Sears, the daughter of Rear Admiral William D. MacDougall, and commissioned on 2 April 1928. Although never officially designated as "SS-166", at some point she displayed this number on her conning tower.[11]

USS Argonaut underway.
History
United States
NameUSS Argonaut
BuilderPortsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine[1]
Laid down1 May 1925[1]
Launched10 November 1927[1]
Commissioned2 April 1928[1]
FateSunk by Japanese destroyers off Rabaul on 10 January 1943[2]
General characteristics
Class and typeV-4 (Argonaut)-class composite direct-drive diesel and diesel-electric submarine[2]
Displacement
  • Surfaced: 2,710 long tons (2,753 t)[4] (standard); 3,046 long tons (3,095 t) (full load)[3]
  • Submerged: 4,161 long tons (4,228 t)[3]
Length358 ft (109 m) (waterline),[8] 381 ft (116 m)[3] (overall)
Beam33 ft 9.5 in (10.300 m)[3]
Draft16 ft .25 in (4.8832 m)[3]
Propulsion
Speed
  • Surfaced: 15 kn (17 mph; 28 km/h) (design);[3] 13.6 kn (15.7 mph; 25.2 km/h) (trials)[2]
  • Submerged: 8 kn (9.2 mph; 15 km/h) (design);[3] 7.43 kn (8.55 mph; 13.76 km/h) (trials)[3]
Range8,000 nmi (9,200 mi; 15,000 km) at 10 kn (12 mph; 19 km/h);[3] 18,000 nmi (21,000 mi; 33,000 km) @ 10 kn (12 mph; 19 km/h) with fuel in main ballast tanks[3]
Endurance10 hours @ 5 kn (5.8 mph; 9.3 km/h)[3]
Test depth300 ft (91 m)[3]
Capacity173,875 US gal (658,190 L) diesel fuel[10]
Complement
Armament
NotesTwo Battle stars

Design edit

V-4 was the first of the second generation of V-boats commissioned in the late 1920s, which remain the largest non-nuclear submarines ever built by the United States. V-4 was the behemoth of its class. These submarines were exempt by special agreement from the armament and tonnage limitations of the Washington Treaty. Her configuration, and that of the following V-5 and V-6, resulted from an evolving strategic concept that increasingly emphasized the possibility of a naval war with Japan in the far western Pacific. This factor, and the implications of the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty, suggested the need for long-range submarine "cruisers", or "strategic scouts", as well as long-range minelayers, for which long endurance, not high speed, was most important. The design was possibly influenced by the German "U-cruisers" of the Type U-139 and Type U-151 U-boat classes, although V-4, V-5, and V-6 were all larger than these. V-4 and her near-sisters V-5 (Narwhal) and V-6 (Nautilus) were initially designed with larger and more powerful MAN-designed diesel engines than the Busch-Sulzer engines that propelled earlier V-boats, which were failures. The specially built engines failed to produce their design power, and some developed dangerous crankcase explosions. V-4 was ultimately completed with smaller MAN diesels of 1,400 hp (1,000 kW), compared with 2,350 hp (1,750 kW) for V-5 and V-6. The smaller diesels were required to allow sufficient space for mine storage.

The engine specifications as built were two BuEng-manufactured, MAN-designed direct-drive 6-cylinder 4-cycle main diesel engines, 1,400 hp (1,000 kW) each.[3][5] A BuEng MAN 6-cylinder 4-cycle auxiliary diesel engine of 450 hp (340 kW), driving a Ridgway[6] 300 kW (400 hp)[6] electric generator,[3][5] was provided for charging batteries or for additional diesel-electric propulsion power.

A more successful propulsion improvement in V-4 was the replacement of earlier submarines' pairs of 60-cell batteries with a pair of 120-cell batteries, thus doubling the available voltage to the electric motors when submerged. This battery configuration would be standard until the GUPPY program following World War II. V-4 and her sisters were slow in diving and, when submerged, were unwieldy and slower than designed. They also presented an excellent target for surface ship sonar and had a large turning radius.

For the first time in U.S. submarine construction, the Portsmouth Navy Yard utilized welding during the assembly process. Led by Navy welding expert James W. Owens, welding was used in non-critical areas such as the superstructure, piping brackets, and support framing. V-4 ended up being built to a mixed method construction, with both the inner and outer hulls still riveted. Owens was eager to expand the use of welding in ship construction, and its use on V-4 was entirely successful. All subsequent submarines built for the USN used welding to some extent, with the method adopted in whole in 1936.[12]

Designed primarily as a minelayer, and built at a cost of US$6,150,000,[9] V-4 was the first and only such specialized type ever built by the United States. She had four torpedo tubes forward and two minelaying tubes aft. At the time of construction, V-4 was the largest submarine ever built in the U.S., and was the largest in U.S. Navy service for 30 years.[9]

Her minelaying arrangements were "highly ingenious, but extremely complicated",[9] filling two aft compartments.[9] A compensating tube ran down the center of the two spaces, to make up for the lost weight as mines were laid, as well as to store eight additional mines.[9] The other mines were racked in three groups around this tube, two in the fore compartment, one aft,[9] with a hydraulically driven rotating cage between them.[9] Mines were moved by hydraulic worm shafts, the aft racks connecting directly to the launch tubes,[9] which had vertically sliding hydraulic doors[9] (rather than the usual hinged ones of torpedo tubes). Each launch tube was normally loaded with four mines,[9] and a water 'round mines (WRM) tube flooded to compensate as they were laid, then pumped into the compensating tube.[13] Eight mines could be laid in 10 minutes.[14]

Interwar period edit

Following commissioning, V-4 served with Submarine Division 12 based at Newport, Rhode Island.

She proved perennially underpowered, but engine replacement was postponed by war,[9] and her MAN diesels were a constant source of trouble.[15]

In January–February 1929, V-4 underwent a series of trials off Provincetown, Massachusetts. On a trial dive during this period, she submerged to a depth of 318 ft (97 m). This mark was the greatest depth an American submarine had reached up to that time. On 26 February 1929, V-4 was assigned to Submarine Division 20 (SubDiv 20), and arrived at San Diego, California on 23 March. From there, she participated in battle exercises and made cruises along the West Coast.

In 1931, the V-4 was heavily featured in Seas Beneath, an American action film directed by John Ford. The V-4 was repainted to appear as a World War I German submarine, the fictional 'U-172'.

V-4 was renamed Argonaut on 19 February 1931, and redesignated SM-1 (submarine, minelayer) on 1 July. On 30 June 1932, she arrived at Pearl Harbor, where she was assigned to SubDiv 7. She carried out minelaying operations, patrol duty, and other routine work. In October 1934 and again in May 1939, Argonaut took part in joint Army-Navy exercises in the Hawaiian operating area. Argonaut became the flagship of Submarine Squadron 4 (SubRon 4). The submarine returned to the West Coast in April 1941 to participate in fleet tactical exercises.

World War II edit

On 28 November 1941 Argonaut, commanded by Stephen G. Barchet[16] left Pearl Harbor to patrol around Midway Island with USS Trout as Midway Defense Group 7.2. She was notified by radio of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor when she surfaced a few minutes after sunset on 7 December. Argonaut set general quarters two hours later to investigate naval gunfire around Midway. While designed as a minelayer and not an attack submarine, Argonaut made the first wartime approach on enemy naval forces; but poor maneuverability prevented reaching a suitable position for surfaced torpedo launch against the two Japanese destroyers shelling Midway. One of the destroyers saw Argonaut as she dived to make a submerged second approach in the bright moonlight; but the destroyer was unable to locate the submerged submarine, and Argonaut was again unable to maneuver into position to launch torpedoes. After being held down all night, Argonaut surfaced at dawn to recharge batteries and was unsuccessfully bombed by a United States plane from Midway.[17]

Argonaut's dehumidifiers were ineffective at preventing condensation, which caused electrical fires making various pieces of electrical machinery inoperative. Three crewmen were sick with high fevers, but President Roosevelt's mention of Argonaut's contribution to the war effort in a radio speech encouraged Barchet to resist the temptation to abort the patrol. By trimming the submarine 17 tons heavy, the crew was able to reduce diving time to 52 seconds by skillfully coordinated pumping between fore and aft ballast tanks; but that time was still considered too slow to avoid hostile aircraft. Argonaut successfully rendezvoused with USS Litchfield at 06:00 20 January 1942, so the destroyer could escort her back to Pearl Harbor.[17]

Conversion to troop transport edit

On 22 January 1942, she returned to Pearl Harbor and, after a brief stop, proceeded to Mare Island Naval Shipyard for major overhaul. While there, her diesels were replaced with General Motors Winton 12-258Ss totaling 4,800 hp (3,600 kW)[14] with hydraulic drive through reduction gears,[7] and her minelaying gear was removed to prepare for conversion to a troop transport submarine.[9] The auxiliary diesel generator was replaced by a 300 kW (400 hp) GM Winton 8-268A and a 150 kW (200 hp) GM Winton 4-268A.[7] She was also fitted with a Torpedo Data Computer[14] (lack of which likely inhibited her ability to score with torpedoes), new electronics,[14] and two external stern torpedo tubes on the after casing, along with two stern deck stowage tubes. It appears she was not fitted with bow external torpedo tubes, as were Narwhal and Nautilus, as photos taken after the refit do not show them.[14][18][19] On return to Pearl Harbor, the conversion to a troop transport submarine was "hastily" finished.[14]

 
A Marine Raider, injured during the Makin operation, is lifted through a hatch on USS Argonaut to be taken ashore at Pearl Harbor, 26 August 1942.

Argonaut returned to action in the South Pacific in August. Admiral Chester W. Nimitz assigned Argonaut and Nautilus to transport and land Marine Raiders on Makin Island in the Gilbert Islands for the Makin Raid. This move was designed to relieve pressure on American forces that had just landed on Guadalcanal. On 8 August, the two submarines embarked 120[14] troops of Companies A and B, 2nd Raider Battalion, and got underway for Makin. Conditions during the transit were unpleasant, and most of the marines became seasick. The convoy arrived off Makin on 16 August, and at 03:30 the next day the Marines began landing. Their rubber rafts were swamped by the sea and most of the outboard motors drowned. The Japanese—either forewarned or extraordinarily alert—were ready for the Americans' arrival. Snipers were hidden in the trees, and the landing beaches were in front of the Japanese forces instead of behind them as planned. However, by midnight of 18 August, the Japanese garrison of about 85 men was wiped out; radio stations, fuel, and other supplies and installations were destroyed, and all but 30 of the troops had been recovered.

Sinking edit

Argonaut arrived back in Pearl Harbor on 26 August. Her hull classification symbol was changed from SM-1 to APS-1 (transport submarine) on 22 September. She was never formally designated SS-166, but that hull number was reserved for her and a photo shows she occasionally displayed it.[2][18] Her base of operations was transferred to Brisbane, Queensland, later in the year. In December, she departed Brisbane under Lieutenant Commander John R. Pierce to patrol the hazardous area between New Britain and Bougainville Island, south of Bismarck Archipelago. On 2 January 1943, Argonaut sank the Japanese gunboat Ebon Maru in the Bismarck Sea.[20] On 10 January, Argonaut spotted a convoy of five freighters and their escorting destroyers – Maikaze, Isokaze, and Hamakaze – returning to Rabaul from Lae. By chance, a United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) aircraft – which was out of bombs – was flying overhead and witnessed Argonaut's attack. A crewman on board the plane saw one destroyer hit by a torpedo, and the destroyers promptly counterattacking. Argonaut's bow suddenly broke the water at an unusual angle. It was apparent that a depth charge had severely damaged the submarine. The destroyers continued circling Argonaut, pumping shells into her; she slipped below the waves and was never heard from again.[14] One hundred and two officers and men went down with her, the worst loss of life for an American submarine in wartime.[21] Her name was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 26 February.

 
The ship's bell of USS Argonaut – lost in combat in 1943 – still serves in the Submarine Memorial Chapel at Pearl Harbor

Japanese reports made available at the end of the war recorded a depth charge attack followed by gunfire, at which time they "destroyed the top of the sub".

On the basis of the report given by the USAAF flier who witnessed the attack in which Argonaut sank, she was credited with damaging a Japanese destroyer on her last patrol. (Postwar, the JANAC accounting gave her none.) Since none of the histories of the three escorting destroyers reports damage on 10 January 1943, the destroyer "hit" may have been a premature explosion.[22][23][24]

Before her crew left for their third war patrol, they donated Argonaut's bell. Nearly 20 months after her loss, the Submarine Memorial Chapel was built and dedicated on the Submarine Base in Pearl Harbor. The bell hanging in her steeple comes from Argonaut, and still rings today for services.

Awards edit

 
 
 
 
 
 

See also edit

  • HMS M3 – British minelaying submarine of same period.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Friedman, Norman (1995). U.S. Submarines Through 1945: An Illustrated Design History. Annapolis, Maryland: United States Naval Institute. pp. 285–304. ISBN 1-55750-263-3.
  2. ^ a b c d e Bauer, K. Jack; Roberts, Stephen S. (1991). Register of Ships of the U.S. Navy, 1775–1990: Major Combatants. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. pp. 266–267. ISBN 0-313-26202-0.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u U.S. Submarines Through 1945 pp. 305–311
  4. ^ Alden, John D., Commander, USN (retired). The Fleet Submarine in the U.S. Navy (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1979), p. 211.
  5. ^ a b c d U.S. Submarines Through 1945 pp. 259
  6. ^ a b c d Alden, p. 211.
  7. ^ a b c d Friedman, p. 176
  8. ^ Lenon, H. T. American Submarines (New York: Doubleday, 1973), p. 31.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Alden, p. 28.
  10. ^ Alden, p. 28; Lenton, p. 31, says 696 tons.
  11. ^ Photo of Argonaut at NavSource.org with "166" on the conning tower.
  12. ^ Johnston, David "No More Heads or Tails", pp. 52, 56–57
  13. ^ Alden, pp. 28–29.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Alden, p. 29.
  15. ^ Blair, Clay, Jr. Silent Victory (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1975).
  16. ^ . fleetsubmarine.com. November 2015. Archived from the original on 20 October 2020. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
  17. ^ a b O'Kane, Richard H. (1996). "Not 'Just Practice'". Naval History. 10 (6). United States Naval Institute: 21–23.
  18. ^ a b "PigBoats.COM – V-Class Submarines Page 2 Argonaut V-4". pigboats.com. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 April 2014. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  20. ^ "The Official Chronology of the U.S. Navy in World War II – 1943". www.ibiblio.org. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  21. ^ "On Eternal Patrol – USS Argonaut (APS-1), (SS-166)". On Eternal Patrol. Retrieved 18 November 2014.
  22. ^ "Long Lancers". www.combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  23. ^ "Long Lancers". www.combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  24. ^ "Long Lancers". www.combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  • This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.
  • Schlesman, Bruce and Roberts, Stephen S., "Register of Ships of the U.S. Navy, 1775–1990: Major Combatants" (Greenwood Press, 1991), ISBN 0-313-26202-0
  • Lenton, H. T. American Submarines (Navies of the Second World War) (Doubleday, 1973), ISBN 0-38504-761-4
  • Silverstone, Paul H., U.S. Warships of World War II (Ian Allan, 1965), ISBN 0-87021-773-9
  • Campbell, John Naval Weapons of World War Two (Naval Institute Press, 1985), ISBN 0-87021-459-4
  • Gardiner, Robert and Chesneau, Roger, Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946, Conway Maritime Press, 1980. ISBN 0-83170-303-2.
  • Friedman, Norman "US Submarines through 1945: An Illustrated Design History", Naval Institute Press, Annapolis:1995, ISBN 1-55750-263-3.
  • Johnston, David "No More Heads or Tails: The Adoption of Welding in U.S. Navy Submarines", The Submarine Review, June 2020, pp. 46–64
  • Pigboats.com V-4 page
  • DiGiulian, Tony Navweaps.com 6"/53 caliber gun

External links edit

  • On Eternal Patrol: USS Argonaut

5°40′14″S 153°54′56″E / 5.67056°S 153.91556°E / -5.67056; 153.91556

argonaut, redirects, here, other, uses, other, ships, with, same, name, argonaut, argonaut, submarine, united, states, navy, first, boat, carry, name, argonaut, laid, down, 1925, portsmouth, navy, yard, launched, november, 1927, sponsored, philip, mason, sears. SF 7 redirects here For other uses see SF7 For other ships with the same name see USS Argonaut USS Argonaut V 4 SF 7 SM 1 A 1 APS 1 SS 166 was a submarine of the United States Navy the first boat to carry the name Argonaut was laid down as V 4 on 1 May 1925 at Portsmouth Navy Yard She was launched on 10 November 1927 sponsored by Mrs Philip Mason Sears the daughter of Rear Admiral William D MacDougall and commissioned on 2 April 1928 Although never officially designated as SS 166 at some point she displayed this number on her conning tower 11 USS Argonaut underway History United States NameUSS Argonaut BuilderPortsmouth Naval Shipyard Kittery Maine 1 Laid down1 May 1925 1 Launched10 November 1927 1 Commissioned2 April 1928 1 FateSunk by Japanese destroyers off Rabaul on 10 January 1943 2 General characteristics Class and typeV 4 Argonaut class composite direct drive diesel and diesel electric submarine 2 DisplacementSurfaced 2 710 long tons 2 753 t 4 standard 3 046 long tons 3 095 t full load 3 Submerged 4 161 long tons 4 228 t 3 Length358 ft 109 m waterline 8 381 ft 116 m 3 overall Beam33 ft 9 5 in 10 300 m 3 Draft16 ft 25 in 4 8832 m 3 PropulsionAs Built 2 BuEng MAN designed direct drive main diesel engines 1 400 hp 1 000 kW each 3 5 1 BuEng MAN auxiliary diesel electric diesel generator 300 kW 400 hp 3 5 6 Re Engined 1942 4 General Motors Winton main diesel engines 1 200 hp 890 kW each 7 1 GM Winton 300 kW 400 hp and 1 GM Winton 150 kW 200 hp auxiliary diesel generators 7 2 120 cell Exide ULS37 batteries 6 2 Ridgway electric motors 1 100 hp 820 kW each 2 3 2 shafts SpeedSurfaced 15 kn 17 mph 28 km h design 3 13 6 kn 15 7 mph 25 2 km h trials 2 Submerged 8 kn 9 2 mph 15 km h design 3 7 43 kn 8 55 mph 13 76 km h trials 3 Range8 000 nmi 9 200 mi 15 000 km at 10 kn 12 mph 19 km h 3 18 000 nmi 21 000 mi 33 000 km 10 kn 12 mph 19 km h with fuel in main ballast tanks 3 Endurance10 hours 5 kn 5 8 mph 9 3 km h 3 Test depth300 ft 91 m 3 Capacity173 875 US gal 658 190 L diesel fuel 10 ComplementAs Built 8 officers 78 men 9 1931 9 7 officers 9 chief petty officers 9 71 enlisted 3 ArmamentAs Built 4 21 inch 533 mm torpedo tubes bow 16 torpedoes 3 9 2 40 inch 1 016 mm 9 minelaying tubes aft 60 mines 3 2 6 inch 152 mm 53 caliber Mark XII Mod 2 9 wet type 9 deck guns 3 1942 6 21 inch 533 mm torpedo tubes 4 bow 2 stern external 20 torpedoes 9 minelaying tubes removed 9 2 6 inch deck guns as above 2 20 mm cannon 2 30 caliber machine guns NotesTwo Battle stars Contents 1 Design 2 Interwar period 3 World War II 3 1 Conversion to troop transport 3 2 Sinking 4 Awards 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDesign editV 4 was the first of the second generation of V boats commissioned in the late 1920s which remain the largest non nuclear submarines ever built by the United States V 4 was the behemoth of its class These submarines were exempt by special agreement from the armament and tonnage limitations of the Washington Treaty Her configuration and that of the following V 5 and V 6 resulted from an evolving strategic concept that increasingly emphasized the possibility of a naval war with Japan in the far western Pacific This factor and the implications of the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty suggested the need for long range submarine cruisers or strategic scouts as well as long range minelayers for which long endurance not high speed was most important The design was possibly influenced by the German U cruisers of the Type U 139 and Type U 151 U boat classes although V 4 V 5 and V 6 were all larger than these V 4 and her near sisters V 5 Narwhal and V 6 Nautilus were initially designed with larger and more powerful MAN designed diesel engines than the Busch Sulzer engines that propelled earlier V boats which were failures The specially built engines failed to produce their design power and some developed dangerous crankcase explosions V 4 was ultimately completed with smaller MAN diesels of 1 400 hp 1 000 kW compared with 2 350 hp 1 750 kW for V 5 and V 6 The smaller diesels were required to allow sufficient space for mine storage The engine specifications as built were two BuEng manufactured MAN designed direct drive 6 cylinder 4 cycle main diesel engines 1 400 hp 1 000 kW each 3 5 A BuEng MAN 6 cylinder 4 cycle auxiliary diesel engine of 450 hp 340 kW driving a Ridgway 6 300 kW 400 hp 6 electric generator 3 5 was provided for charging batteries or for additional diesel electric propulsion power A more successful propulsion improvement in V 4 was the replacement of earlier submarines pairs of 60 cell batteries with a pair of 120 cell batteries thus doubling the available voltage to the electric motors when submerged This battery configuration would be standard until the GUPPY program following World War II V 4 and her sisters were slow in diving and when submerged were unwieldy and slower than designed They also presented an excellent target for surface ship sonar and had a large turning radius For the first time in U S submarine construction the Portsmouth Navy Yard utilized welding during the assembly process Led by Navy welding expert James W Owens welding was used in non critical areas such as the superstructure piping brackets and support framing V 4 ended up being built to a mixed method construction with both the inner and outer hulls still riveted Owens was eager to expand the use of welding in ship construction and its use on V 4 was entirely successful All subsequent submarines built for the USN used welding to some extent with the method adopted in whole in 1936 12 Designed primarily as a minelayer and built at a cost of US 6 150 000 9 V 4 was the first and only such specialized type ever built by the United States She had four torpedo tubes forward and two minelaying tubes aft At the time of construction V 4 was the largest submarine ever built in the U S and was the largest in U S Navy service for 30 years 9 Her minelaying arrangements were highly ingenious but extremely complicated 9 filling two aft compartments 9 A compensating tube ran down the center of the two spaces to make up for the lost weight as mines were laid as well as to store eight additional mines 9 The other mines were racked in three groups around this tube two in the fore compartment one aft 9 with a hydraulically driven rotating cage between them 9 Mines were moved by hydraulic worm shafts the aft racks connecting directly to the launch tubes 9 which had vertically sliding hydraulic doors 9 rather than the usual hinged ones of torpedo tubes Each launch tube was normally loaded with four mines 9 and a water round mines WRM tube flooded to compensate as they were laid then pumped into the compensating tube 13 Eight mines could be laid in 10 minutes 14 Interwar period editFollowing commissioning V 4 served with Submarine Division 12 based at Newport Rhode Island She proved perennially underpowered but engine replacement was postponed by war 9 and her MAN diesels were a constant source of trouble 15 In January February 1929 V 4 underwent a series of trials off Provincetown Massachusetts On a trial dive during this period she submerged to a depth of 318 ft 97 m This mark was the greatest depth an American submarine had reached up to that time On 26 February 1929 V 4 was assigned to Submarine Division 20 SubDiv 20 and arrived at San Diego California on 23 March From there she participated in battle exercises and made cruises along the West Coast In 1931 the V 4 was heavily featured in Seas Beneath an American action film directed by John Ford The V 4 was repainted to appear as a World War I German submarine the fictional U 172 V 4 was renamed Argonaut on 19 February 1931 and redesignated SM 1 submarine minelayer on 1 July On 30 June 1932 she arrived at Pearl Harbor where she was assigned to SubDiv 7 She carried out minelaying operations patrol duty and other routine work In October 1934 and again in May 1939 Argonaut took part in joint Army Navy exercises in the Hawaiian operating area Argonaut became the flagship of Submarine Squadron 4 SubRon 4 The submarine returned to the West Coast in April 1941 to participate in fleet tactical exercises World War II editOn 28 November 1941 Argonaut commanded by Stephen G Barchet 16 left Pearl Harbor to patrol around Midway Island with USS Trout as Midway Defense Group 7 2 She was notified by radio of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor when she surfaced a few minutes after sunset on 7 December Argonaut set general quarters two hours later to investigate naval gunfire around Midway While designed as a minelayer and not an attack submarine Argonaut made the first wartime approach on enemy naval forces but poor maneuverability prevented reaching a suitable position for surfaced torpedo launch against the two Japanese destroyers shelling Midway One of the destroyers saw Argonaut as she dived to make a submerged second approach in the bright moonlight but the destroyer was unable to locate the submerged submarine and Argonaut was again unable to maneuver into position to launch torpedoes After being held down all night Argonaut surfaced at dawn to recharge batteries and was unsuccessfully bombed by a United States plane from Midway 17 Argonaut s dehumidifiers were ineffective at preventing condensation which caused electrical fires making various pieces of electrical machinery inoperative Three crewmen were sick with high fevers but President Roosevelt s mention of Argonaut s contribution to the war effort in a radio speech encouraged Barchet to resist the temptation to abort the patrol By trimming the submarine 17 tons heavy the crew was able to reduce diving time to 52 seconds by skillfully coordinated pumping between fore and aft ballast tanks but that time was still considered too slow to avoid hostile aircraft Argonaut successfully rendezvoused with USS Litchfield at 06 00 20 January 1942 so the destroyer could escort her back to Pearl Harbor 17 Conversion to troop transport edit On 22 January 1942 she returned to Pearl Harbor and after a brief stop proceeded to Mare Island Naval Shipyard for major overhaul While there her diesels were replaced with General Motors Winton 12 258Ss totaling 4 800 hp 3 600 kW 14 with hydraulic drive through reduction gears 7 and her minelaying gear was removed to prepare for conversion to a troop transport submarine 9 The auxiliary diesel generator was replaced by a 300 kW 400 hp GM Winton 8 268A and a 150 kW 200 hp GM Winton 4 268A 7 She was also fitted with a Torpedo Data Computer 14 lack of which likely inhibited her ability to score with torpedoes new electronics 14 and two external stern torpedo tubes on the after casing along with two stern deck stowage tubes It appears she was not fitted with bow external torpedo tubes as were Narwhal and Nautilus as photos taken after the refit do not show them 14 18 19 On return to Pearl Harbor the conversion to a troop transport submarine was hastily finished 14 nbsp A Marine Raider injured during the Makin operation is lifted through a hatch on USS Argonaut to be taken ashore at Pearl Harbor 26 August 1942 Argonaut returned to action in the South Pacific in August Admiral Chester W Nimitz assigned Argonaut and Nautilus to transport and land Marine Raiders on Makin Island in the Gilbert Islands for the Makin Raid This move was designed to relieve pressure on American forces that had just landed on Guadalcanal On 8 August the two submarines embarked 120 14 troops of Companies A and B 2nd Raider Battalion and got underway for Makin Conditions during the transit were unpleasant and most of the marines became seasick The convoy arrived off Makin on 16 August and at 03 30 the next day the Marines began landing Their rubber rafts were swamped by the sea and most of the outboard motors drowned The Japanese either forewarned or extraordinarily alert were ready for the Americans arrival Snipers were hidden in the trees and the landing beaches were in front of the Japanese forces instead of behind them as planned However by midnight of 18 August the Japanese garrison of about 85 men was wiped out radio stations fuel and other supplies and installations were destroyed and all but 30 of the troops had been recovered Sinking edit Argonaut arrived back in Pearl Harbor on 26 August Her hull classification symbol was changed from SM 1 to APS 1 transport submarine on 22 September She was never formally designated SS 166 but that hull number was reserved for her and a photo shows she occasionally displayed it 2 18 Her base of operations was transferred to Brisbane Queensland later in the year In December she departed Brisbane under Lieutenant Commander John R Pierce to patrol the hazardous area between New Britain and Bougainville Island south of Bismarck Archipelago On 2 January 1943 Argonaut sank the Japanese gunboat Ebon Maru in the Bismarck Sea 20 On 10 January Argonaut spotted a convoy of five freighters and their escorting destroyers Maikaze Isokaze and Hamakaze returning to Rabaul from Lae By chance a United States Army Air Forces USAAF aircraft which was out of bombs was flying overhead and witnessed Argonaut s attack A crewman on board the plane saw one destroyer hit by a torpedo and the destroyers promptly counterattacking Argonaut s bow suddenly broke the water at an unusual angle It was apparent that a depth charge had severely damaged the submarine The destroyers continued circling Argonaut pumping shells into her she slipped below the waves and was never heard from again 14 One hundred and two officers and men went down with her the worst loss of life for an American submarine in wartime 21 Her name was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 26 February nbsp The ship s bell of USS Argonaut lost in combat in 1943 still serves in the Submarine Memorial Chapel at Pearl Harbor Japanese reports made available at the end of the war recorded a depth charge attack followed by gunfire at which time they destroyed the top of the sub On the basis of the report given by the USAAF flier who witnessed the attack in which Argonaut sank she was credited with damaging a Japanese destroyer on her last patrol Postwar the JANAC accounting gave her none Since none of the histories of the three escorting destroyers reports damage on 10 January 1943 the destroyer hit may have been a premature explosion 22 23 24 Before her crew left for their third war patrol they donated Argonaut s bell Nearly 20 months after her loss the Submarine Memorial Chapel was built and dedicated on the Submarine Base in Pearl Harbor The bell hanging in her steeple comes from Argonaut and still rings today for services Awards edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp American Defense Service Medal with FLEET clasp Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal with two battle stars World War II Victory MedalSee also editHMS M3 British minelaying submarine of same period References edit a b c d Friedman Norman 1995 U S Submarines Through 1945 An Illustrated Design History Annapolis Maryland United States Naval Institute pp 285 304 ISBN 1 55750 263 3 a b c d e Bauer K Jack Roberts Stephen S 1991 Register of Ships of the U S Navy 1775 1990 Major Combatants Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press pp 266 267 ISBN 0 313 26202 0 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u U S Submarines Through 1945 pp 305 311 Alden John D Commander USN retired The Fleet Submarine in the U S Navy Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press 1979 p 211 a b c d U S Submarines Through 1945 pp 259 a b c d Alden p 211 a b c d Friedman p 176 Lenon H T American Submarines New York Doubleday 1973 p 31 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Alden p 28 Alden p 28 Lenton p 31 says 696 tons Photo of Argonaut at NavSource org with 166 on the conning tower Johnston David No More Heads or Tails pp 52 56 57 Alden pp 28 29 a b c d e f g h Alden p 29 Blair Clay Jr Silent Victory Philadelphia Lippincott 1975 Rear Admiral Barchet fleetsubmarine com November 2015 Archived from the original on 20 October 2020 Retrieved 6 January 2020 a b O Kane Richard H 1996 Not Just Practice Naval History 10 6 United States Naval Institute 21 23 a b PigBoats COM V Class Submarines Page 2 Argonaut V 4 pigboats com Retrieved 15 April 2019 NavSource org USS Argonaut SM 1 WW2 photos Archived from the original on 26 April 2014 Retrieved 15 April 2019 The Official Chronology of the U S Navy in World War II 1943 www ibiblio org Retrieved 15 April 2019 On Eternal Patrol USS Argonaut APS 1 SS 166 On Eternal Patrol Retrieved 18 November 2014 Long Lancers www combinedfleet com Retrieved 15 April 2019 Long Lancers www combinedfleet com Retrieved 15 April 2019 Long Lancers www combinedfleet com Retrieved 15 April 2019 This article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entry can be found here Schlesman Bruce and Roberts Stephen S Register of Ships of the U S Navy 1775 1990 Major Combatants Greenwood Press 1991 ISBN 0 313 26202 0 Lenton H T American Submarines Navies of the Second World War Doubleday 1973 ISBN 0 38504 761 4 Silverstone Paul H U S Warships of World War II Ian Allan 1965 ISBN 0 87021 773 9 Campbell John Naval Weapons of World War Two Naval Institute Press 1985 ISBN 0 87021 459 4 Whitman Edward C The Navy s Variegated V Class Out of One Many Undersea Warfare Fall 2003 Issue 20 https web archive org web 20140322093118 http www fleetsubmarine com sublist html Gardiner Robert and Chesneau Roger Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 Conway Maritime Press 1980 ISBN 0 83170 303 2 Friedman Norman US Submarines through 1945 An Illustrated Design History Naval Institute Press Annapolis 1995 ISBN 1 55750 263 3 Johnston David No More Heads or Tails The Adoption of Welding in U S Navy Submarines The Submarine Review June 2020 pp 46 64 Navsource org USS Argonaut SM 1 photo page Pigboats com V 4 page DiGiulian Tony Navweaps com 6 53 caliber gunExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to USS Argonaut SS 166 On Eternal Patrol USS Argonaut 5 40 14 S 153 54 56 E 5 67056 S 153 91556 E 5 67056 153 91556 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USS Argonaut SM 1 amp oldid 1222321646, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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