fbpx
Wikipedia

USS S-31

USS S-31 (SS-136) was a first-group (S-1 or "Holland") S-class submarine of the United States Navy.

USS S-31, probably off San Diego, California, sometime between 1943 and 1945.
History
United States
NameUSS S-31
BuilderUnion Iron Works, San Francisco, California
Laid down13 April 1918
Launched28 December 1918
Sponsored byMrs. George A. Walker
Commissioned11 May 1922
Decommissioned4 October 1922
Recommissioned8 March 1923
Decommissioned7 December 1937
Recommissioned18 September 1940
Decommissioned19 October 1945
Stricken1 November 1945
Fate
  • Sold May 1946
  • Scrapped July 1947
General characteristics
Class and typeS-class submarine
Displacement
  • 854 long tons (868 t) surfaced
  • 1,062 long tons (1,079 t) submerged
Length219 ft 3 in (66.83 m)
Beam20 ft 8 in (6.30 m)
Draft15 ft 11 in (4.85 m)
Speed
  • 14.5 knots (16.7 mph; 26.9 km/h) surfaced
  • 11 knots (13 mph; 20 km/h) submerged
Complement42 officers and men
Armament
Service record
Operations: World War II
Victories: 1 battle star

Construction and commissioning edit

S-31′s keel was laid down on 13 April 1918 by the Union Iron Works in San Francisco, California. She was launched on 28 December 1918, sponsored by Mrs. George A. Walker, and commissioned on 11 May 1922.

Service history edit

1922–1941 edit

Commissioned as improved engines were being developed for her class, S-31 was ordered to New London, Connecticut, toward the end of the summer of 1922 for alterations to her main propulsion machinery by the prime contractor, the Electric Boat Company. Decommissioned at New London on 4 October 1922, she remained in the company's yards through the winter and was recommissioned on 8 March 1923. In April 1923 she moved south and conducted exercises in the Caribbean Sea, then transited the Panama Canal to return to California. She remained on the United States West Coast through 1924, conducting exercises off the coast of California with her division, Submarine Division 16. She took part in exercises in the Aleutian Islands during June and July 1923 and then moved to the Panama Canal area and the Caribbean for Fleet Problems during the winter of 1924.

In 1925, Submarine Division 16 was transferred to the United States Asiatic Fleet, and S-31 departed San Francisco in April 1925, bound for the Philippine Islands. On 12 July 1925 she arrived at Cavite, Luzon. For the next seven years, she conducted patrols and exercises in the Philippines during the fall and winter months and deployed to the China coast for spring and summer operations. The operations off China primarily involved individual, division, and fleet training exercises.

In September 1930, S-31, while engaged in a full-power run off China between Qingdao and Qinhuangdao, surfaced amidst wreckage in heavy seas in the Gulf of Zhili and sighted a Chinese junk which had collided with a steamer. The junk's cargo of lumber had torn loose, endangering S-31 and hindering her efforts to rescue the junk's seven survivors. S-31 made an approach from the windward side, and as the wind pushed her past the stern of the wrecked junk, she took five men off it. S-31′s crew threw lines to the two remaining survivors, and they were hauled aboard S-31 as the rough seas propelled loose wreckage toward her hull. She then cleared the area and proceeded to Qinhuangdao to rejoin her division in exercises.

On 2 May 1932, S-31 completed her tour in the Asiatic Fleet and departed Manila bound for Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, wher she was based with her division until 1937. In February 1933, she took the role of the fictional World War I submarine USS AL-14 for the submarine movie Hell Below. The movie depicted her as sinking an Austro-Hungarian Navy minelayer portrayed by the decommissioned destroyer USS Moody (DD-277)), though the movie studio actually sank Moody using carefully placed demolition charges.

Designated for inactivation, S-31 cleared Pearl Harbor on 14 June 1937 and arrived at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on 27 August 1937. On 7 December 1937, she was decommissioned and berthed in Philadelphia at League Island.

Recommissioned at Philadelphia on 18 September 1940 and assigned to Submarine Division 52, S-31 operated from New London until December 1940, then moved south to the Panama Canal Zone. At the end of the spring of 1941, she returned to New London and subsequently performed submarine warfare and antisubmarine warfare training exercises along the New England coast. In November 1941, she returned to Philadelphia and underwent an overhaul.

World War II edit

First two war patrols edit

The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941 brought the United States into World War II. With her overhaul complete, S-31 rejoined her division at New London in January 1942. In February 1942, she headed back to the Panama Canal Zone. After a stop at Bermuda, she arrived at Coco Solo, Panama, in mid-February 1942 and conducted two defensive war patrols in the approaches to the Panama Canal, the first from 10 March to 31 March 1942 and the second from 14 April to 13 May 1942. Toward the end of May 1942, S-31 headed north to San Diego, California, to prepare for duty in the Aleutian Islands.

Third war patrol edit

The Aleutian Islands campaign began on 3 June 1942 with the Battle of Dutch Harbor and the Japanese occupation of Attu and Kiska. By the end of June 1942, S-31 was en route to the Territory of Alaska, and, on 7 July 1942 she departed the submarine base at Dutch Harbor on Amaknak Island off Unalaska in the Aleutians for her first war patrol. Moving west from Unalaska, she reconnoitered the Adak Island area, then shifted north to her patrol area in the Bering Sea just north of the Aleutian chain. On 19 July 1942, she was ordered further west, and, on 30 July 1942, she took station to the east of Kiska to intercept Imperial Japanese Navy ships moving toward an Allied force scheduled to bombard Kiska. The bombardment took place on 7 August 1942. The following evening, S-31 headed back for Dutch Harbor. During her patrol, she had encountered problems common to all S-boats operating in the Aleutians area: loose superstructure plates, the lack of a fathometer and radar, inadequate interior hull insulation, and poor weather for submarine operations. On 10 August 1942, when she was 60 nautical miles (111 km; 69 mi) from Dutch Harbor, a Mark X emergency identification flare exploded, inflicting fatal chest injuries on S-31′s commanding officer, Lieutenant Commander Thomas F. Williamson. The U.S. Navy had ordered discontinuation of the use of the Mark X flare on 13 July 1942, but the order had not reached S-31. The accident underscored for the U.S. Navy the need for pharmacist's mates to serve aboard S-boats and for better communications between Dutch Harbor and ships operating in the northern Pacific Ocean.

Fourth war patrol edit

Inclement weather and sporadic communication, which resulted in two mistaken attacks on S-31 by American aircraft, provided the greatest hazards to S-31 during her fourth patrol, conducted between 26 August and 28 September 1942 in support of the occupation of Adak. For most of the patrol, she was buffeted by turbulent seas, although occasionally she encountered only choppy conditions. On 28 August, a U.S. Navy PBY Catalina flying boat depth-charged her as she crash-dived to 125 feet (38 m) in the Pacific Ocean 30 nautical miles (56 km; 35 mi) southeast of Agattu at 51°53′N 174°27′E / 51.883°N 174.450°E / 51.883; 174.450.[1] On 30 August, poisonous chlorine gas formed when seawater driven by a 40-knot (46 mph; 74 km/h) wind entered her forward battery compartment. S-31′s crew soon detected and eliminated the poisonous gas. On 13 September, two United States Army Air Forces P-38 Lightning fighters — misidentified by S-31′s crew as two Imperial Japanese Navy Mitsubishi A6M Zero (Allied reporting name "Zeke") fightersstrafed her as she crash-dived in the Pacific Ocean 8 nautical miles (15 km; 9.2 mi) south of Adak, just west of Kagalaska Strait at 51°36′N 176°26′W / 51.600°N 176.433°W / 51.600; -176.433.[2]

Fifth war patrol edit

On her fifth war patrol, conducted from 13 October to 8 November 1942, S-31 operated in the Kuril Islands. She arrived on station on 20 October 1942. On 22 October 1942, she was off Paramushiro at the northern end of the Kurils, and she patrolled the shipping lanes in the Paramushiro-Shumushu area until 24 October 1942. She then headed for Onekotan Strait, and on 25 October 1942 she patrolled in its northeast approaches. On the morning of 26 October 1942, she closed the coast of Paramushiro, and at 08:25 she sighted the Japanese 2,864-gross register ton cargo ship Keizan Maru in Otomae Bay and began an approach. At 09:22, she fired two torpedoes and sank Keizan Maru in the anchorage. At 09:23, S-31 went aground on a reef. She backed off and went ahead. Between 09:28 and 09:55, she grounded several more times at periscope depth. At 10:00, she reached deep water and cleared the area unpursued by Japanese forces. That night, she transited Onekotan Strait through what her crew described as "monstrous seas," and on 27 October 1942 she patrolled along the west coast of Paramushiro. At the beginning of November 1942 she ran low on fuel, and on 2 November she headed for Dutch Harbor, where she arrived on 8 November 1942.

November 1942–March 1943 edit

On 11 November 1942 S-31 got underway from Dutch Harbor bound for San Diego, where she provided training services for the West Coast Sound School from 27 November 1942 to 3 January 1943. A refit followed and was completed in February 1943. Toward the end of February 1943, she moved west to Hawaii. There, her 4-inch (102 mm) deck gun was replaced by a 3-inch (76.2 mm) gun, and she conducted further training exercises.

Sixth and seventh war patrols edit

On 11 March 1943, S-31 got underway from Pearl Harbor to begin her sixth war patrol. From 23 March to 29 March 1943 she reconnoitered Kwajalein Atoll and searched the sea lanes between Kwajalein, Truk Atoll, and Wotje for Japanese shipping. On 29 March 1943, she set a course for New Caledonia. She crossed the equator on 2 April 1943 and arrived at Nouméa on Grande Terre on 9 April 1942. After an eight-day refit, she provided services as a target for destroyer antisubmarine warfare training exercises. From 5 July to 26 July 1943 she interrupted her training schedule for her seventh war patrol, which took her into the southern New Hebrides to transport and support a reconnaissance team that landed on Aneityum and to hunt for an Imperial Japanese Navy submarine reported to be operating in the area. On her return to Nouméa, she resumed training exercises and continued them until 20 August 1943.

Eighth war patrol edit

While in Nouméa, S-31 became the first U.S. Navy submarine to be equipped with a plan position indicator, or PPI. The PPI originally was intended for Admiral William F. Halsey's flagship, the battleship USS South Dakota (BB-57), but crewmen from the S-31 appropriated it for their own use, and it proved remarkably useful during her eighth war patrol.[3] On 22 August 1943, she began her eighth and last war patrol, conducted in the St. George Channel area to intercept Japanese traffic between Rabaul and New Guinea. From her patrol area, she proceeded to Brisbane, Australia. As a result of her increased efficiency using the PPI, the U.S. Navy had production of the PPI expedited for distribution to the rest of its submarine fleet.[4]

December 1944–October 1945 edit

After an overhaul at Brisbane, S-31 returned to the New Caledonia-New Hebrides area in early December 1944. There, she resumed antisubmarine warfare training duties, which she continued until July 1944, when she was ordered to California. She arrived at San Diego in early August 1944 for overhaul, which was completed in November 1944. She then provided submarine and sound training services for United States West Coast training commands. Hostilities ended in mid-August 1945, and in September 1945 S-31 proceeded to San Francisco for inactivation. She was decommissioned on 19 October 1945.

Disposal edit

Struck from the Navy Vessel Register on 1 November 1945, S-31 was sold for scrap in May 1946. Her hulk was delivered to the purchaser, Salco Iron and Metal Company of San Francisco, in December 1946, and she was scrapped in July 1947.

Honors and awards edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Hinman & Campbell, p. 213.
  2. ^ Hinman & Campbell, pp. 213–214.
  3. ^ Malone, Gene. "Fighting World War II In A World War I Submarine". Retrieved 20 October 2022.
  4. ^ Id.

Bibliography edit

  • Hinman, Charles R., and Douglas E. Campbell. The Submarine Has No Friends: Friendly Fire Incidents Involving U.S. Submarines During World War II. Syneca Research Group, Inc., 2019. ISBN 978-0-359-76906-3.

External links edit

  • Kill record: USS S-31

first, group, holland, class, submarine, united, states, navy, probably, diego, california, sometime, between, 1943, 1945, history, united, states, name, builderunion, iron, works, francisco, california, laid, down13, april, 1918, launched28, december, 1918, s. USS S 31 SS 136 was a first group S 1 or Holland S class submarine of the United States Navy USS S 31 probably off San Diego California sometime between 1943 and 1945 History United States NameUSS S 31 BuilderUnion Iron Works San Francisco California Laid down13 April 1918 Launched28 December 1918 Sponsored byMrs George A Walker Commissioned11 May 1922 Decommissioned4 October 1922 Recommissioned8 March 1923 Decommissioned7 December 1937 Recommissioned18 September 1940 Decommissioned19 October 1945 Stricken1 November 1945 FateSold May 1946 Scrapped July 1947 General characteristics Class and typeS class submarine Displacement854 long tons 868 t surfaced 1 062 long tons 1 079 t submerged Length219 ft 3 in 66 83 m Beam20 ft 8 in 6 30 m Draft15 ft 11 in 4 85 m Speed14 5 knots 16 7 mph 26 9 km h surfaced 11 knots 13 mph 20 km h submerged Complement42 officers and men Armament1 4 in 102 mm 50 deck gun 4 21 inch 533 mm torpedo tubes Service record Operations World War IIVictories 1 battle star Contents 1 Construction and commissioning 2 Service history 2 1 1922 1941 2 2 World War II 2 2 1 First two war patrols 2 2 2 Third war patrol 2 2 3 Fourth war patrol 2 2 4 Fifth war patrol 2 2 5 November 1942 March 1943 2 2 6 Sixth and seventh war patrols 2 2 7 Eighth war patrol 2 2 8 December 1944 October 1945 3 Disposal 4 Honors and awards 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksConstruction and commissioning editS 31 s keel was laid down on 13 April 1918 by the Union Iron Works in San Francisco California She was launched on 28 December 1918 sponsored by Mrs George A Walker and commissioned on 11 May 1922 Service history edit1922 1941 edit Commissioned as improved engines were being developed for her class S 31 was ordered to New London Connecticut toward the end of the summer of 1922 for alterations to her main propulsion machinery by the prime contractor the Electric Boat Company Decommissioned at New London on 4 October 1922 she remained in the company s yards through the winter and was recommissioned on 8 March 1923 In April 1923 she moved south and conducted exercises in the Caribbean Sea then transited the Panama Canal to return to California She remained on the United States West Coast through 1924 conducting exercises off the coast of California with her division Submarine Division 16 She took part in exercises in the Aleutian Islands during June and July 1923 and then moved to the Panama Canal area and the Caribbean for Fleet Problems during the winter of 1924 In 1925 Submarine Division 16 was transferred to the United States Asiatic Fleet and S 31 departed San Francisco in April 1925 bound for the Philippine Islands On 12 July 1925 she arrived at Cavite Luzon For the next seven years she conducted patrols and exercises in the Philippines during the fall and winter months and deployed to the China coast for spring and summer operations The operations off China primarily involved individual division and fleet training exercises In September 1930 S 31 while engaged in a full power run off China between Qingdao and Qinhuangdao surfaced amidst wreckage in heavy seas in the Gulf of Zhili and sighted a Chinese junk which had collided with a steamer The junk s cargo of lumber had torn loose endangering S 31 and hindering her efforts to rescue the junk s seven survivors S 31 made an approach from the windward side and as the wind pushed her past the stern of the wrecked junk she took five men off it S 31 s crew threw lines to the two remaining survivors and they were hauled aboard S 31 as the rough seas propelled loose wreckage toward her hull She then cleared the area and proceeded to Qinhuangdao to rejoin her division in exercises On 2 May 1932 S 31 completed her tour in the Asiatic Fleet and departed Manila bound for Pearl Harbor Hawaii wher she was based with her division until 1937 In February 1933 she took the role of the fictional World War I submarine USS AL 14 for the submarine movie Hell Below The movie depicted her as sinking an Austro Hungarian Navy minelayer portrayed by the decommissioned destroyer USS Moody DD 277 though the movie studio actually sank Moody using carefully placed demolition charges Designated for inactivation S 31 cleared Pearl Harbor on 14 June 1937 and arrived at Philadelphia Pennsylvania on 27 August 1937 On 7 December 1937 she was decommissioned and berthed in Philadelphia at League Island Recommissioned at Philadelphia on 18 September 1940 and assigned to Submarine Division 52 S 31 operated from New London until December 1940 then moved south to the Panama Canal Zone At the end of the spring of 1941 she returned to New London and subsequently performed submarine warfare and antisubmarine warfare training exercises along the New England coast In November 1941 she returned to Philadelphia and underwent an overhaul World War II edit First two war patrols edit The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941 brought the United States into World War II With her overhaul complete S 31 rejoined her division at New London in January 1942 In February 1942 she headed back to the Panama Canal Zone After a stop at Bermuda she arrived at Coco Solo Panama in mid February 1942 and conducted two defensive war patrols in the approaches to the Panama Canal the first from 10 March to 31 March 1942 and the second from 14 April to 13 May 1942 Toward the end of May 1942 S 31 headed north to San Diego California to prepare for duty in the Aleutian Islands Third war patrol edit The Aleutian Islands campaign began on 3 June 1942 with the Battle of Dutch Harbor and the Japanese occupation of Attu and Kiska By the end of June 1942 S 31 was en route to the Territory of Alaska and on 7 July 1942 she departed the submarine base at Dutch Harbor on Amaknak Island off Unalaska in the Aleutians for her first war patrol Moving west from Unalaska she reconnoitered the Adak Island area then shifted north to her patrol area in the Bering Sea just north of the Aleutian chain On 19 July 1942 she was ordered further west and on 30 July 1942 she took station to the east of Kiska to intercept Imperial Japanese Navy ships moving toward an Allied force scheduled to bombard Kiska The bombardment took place on 7 August 1942 The following evening S 31 headed back for Dutch Harbor During her patrol she had encountered problems common to all S boats operating in the Aleutians area loose superstructure plates the lack of a fathometer and radar inadequate interior hull insulation and poor weather for submarine operations On 10 August 1942 when she was 60 nautical miles 111 km 69 mi from Dutch Harbor a Mark X emergency identification flare exploded inflicting fatal chest injuries on S 31 s commanding officer Lieutenant Commander Thomas F Williamson The U S Navy had ordered discontinuation of the use of the Mark X flare on 13 July 1942 but the order had not reached S 31 The accident underscored for the U S Navy the need for pharmacist s mates to serve aboard S boats and for better communications between Dutch Harbor and ships operating in the northern Pacific Ocean Fourth war patrol edit Inclement weather and sporadic communication which resulted in two mistaken attacks on S 31 by American aircraft provided the greatest hazards to S 31 during her fourth patrol conducted between 26 August and 28 September 1942 in support of the occupation of Adak For most of the patrol she was buffeted by turbulent seas although occasionally she encountered only choppy conditions On 28 August a U S Navy PBY Catalina flying boat depth charged her as she crash dived to 125 feet 38 m in the Pacific Ocean 30 nautical miles 56 km 35 mi southeast of Agattu at 51 53 N 174 27 E 51 883 N 174 450 E 51 883 174 450 1 On 30 August poisonous chlorine gas formed when seawater driven by a 40 knot 46 mph 74 km h wind entered her forward battery compartment S 31 s crew soon detected and eliminated the poisonous gas On 13 September two United States Army Air Forces P 38 Lightning fighters misidentified by S 31 s crew as two Imperial Japanese Navy Mitsubishi A6M Zero Allied reporting name Zeke fighters strafed her as she crash dived in the Pacific Ocean 8 nautical miles 15 km 9 2 mi south of Adak just west of Kagalaska Strait at 51 36 N 176 26 W 51 600 N 176 433 W 51 600 176 433 2 Fifth war patrol edit On her fifth war patrol conducted from 13 October to 8 November 1942 S 31 operated in the Kuril Islands She arrived on station on 20 October 1942 On 22 October 1942 she was off Paramushiro at the northern end of the Kurils and she patrolled the shipping lanes in the Paramushiro Shumushu area until 24 October 1942 She then headed for Onekotan Strait and on 25 October 1942 she patrolled in its northeast approaches On the morning of 26 October 1942 she closed the coast of Paramushiro and at 08 25 she sighted the Japanese 2 864 gross register ton cargo ship Keizan Maru in Otomae Bay and began an approach At 09 22 she fired two torpedoes and sank Keizan Maru in the anchorage At 09 23 S 31 went aground on a reef She backed off and went ahead Between 09 28 and 09 55 she grounded several more times at periscope depth At 10 00 she reached deep water and cleared the area unpursued by Japanese forces That night she transited Onekotan Strait through what her crew described as monstrous seas and on 27 October 1942 she patrolled along the west coast of Paramushiro At the beginning of November 1942 she ran low on fuel and on 2 November she headed for Dutch Harbor where she arrived on 8 November 1942 November 1942 March 1943 edit On 11 November 1942 S 31 got underway from Dutch Harbor bound for San Diego where she provided training services for the West Coast Sound School from 27 November 1942 to 3 January 1943 A refit followed and was completed in February 1943 Toward the end of February 1943 she moved west to Hawaii There her 4 inch 102 mm deck gun was replaced by a 3 inch 76 2 mm gun and she conducted further training exercises Sixth and seventh war patrols edit On 11 March 1943 S 31 got underway from Pearl Harbor to begin her sixth war patrol From 23 March to 29 March 1943 she reconnoitered Kwajalein Atoll and searched the sea lanes between Kwajalein Truk Atoll and Wotje for Japanese shipping On 29 March 1943 she set a course for New Caledonia She crossed the equator on 2 April 1943 and arrived at Noumea on Grande Terre on 9 April 1942 After an eight day refit she provided services as a target for destroyer antisubmarine warfare training exercises From 5 July to 26 July 1943 she interrupted her training schedule for her seventh war patrol which took her into the southern New Hebrides to transport and support a reconnaissance team that landed on Aneityum and to hunt for an Imperial Japanese Navy submarine reported to be operating in the area On her return to Noumea she resumed training exercises and continued them until 20 August 1943 Eighth war patrol edit While in Noumea S 31 became the first U S Navy submarine to be equipped with a plan position indicator or PPI The PPI originally was intended for Admiral William F Halsey s flagship the battleship USS South Dakota BB 57 but crewmen from the S 31 appropriated it for their own use and it proved remarkably useful during her eighth war patrol 3 On 22 August 1943 she began her eighth and last war patrol conducted in the St George Channel area to intercept Japanese traffic between Rabaul and New Guinea From her patrol area she proceeded to Brisbane Australia As a result of her increased efficiency using the PPI the U S Navy had production of the PPI expedited for distribution to the rest of its submarine fleet 4 December 1944 October 1945 edit After an overhaul at Brisbane S 31 returned to the New Caledonia New Hebrides area in early December 1944 There she resumed antisubmarine warfare training duties which she continued until July 1944 when she was ordered to California She arrived at San Diego in early August 1944 for overhaul which was completed in November 1944 She then provided submarine and sound training services for United States West Coast training commands Hostilities ended in mid August 1945 and in September 1945 S 31 proceeded to San Francisco for inactivation She was decommissioned on 19 October 1945 Disposal editStruck from the Navy Vessel Register on 1 November 1945 S 31 was sold for scrap in May 1946 Her hulk was delivered to the purchaser Salco Iron and Metal Company of San Francisco in December 1946 and she was scrapped in July 1947 Honors and awards edit nbsp nbsp Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal with one battle star for World War II serviceReferences editCitations edit Hinman amp Campbell p 213 Hinman amp Campbell pp 213 214 Malone Gene Fighting World War II In A World War I Submarine Retrieved 20 October 2022 Id nbsp This article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entry can be found here Bibliography edit Hinman Charles R and Douglas E Campbell The Submarine Has No Friends Friendly Fire Incidents Involving U S Submarines During World War II Syneca Research Group Inc 2019 ISBN 978 0 359 76906 3 External links editKill record USS S 31 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USS S 31 amp oldid 1218058221, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.