Tigrone SS-419

 

Tigrone

(SS-419: dp. 1,679 (surf.), 2,416 (subm.); 1. 311'8"b. 27'3"; dr. 16'6"; s. 20.25 k. (surf.), 8.75 k.(subm.); cpl. 81, a. 10 21" tt., 1 5", 1 40mm., 120mm., 2 .50-car. mg.; cl. Balao)

Tigrone (SS-419) was laid down on 8 May 1944 by the Portsmouth (N.H.) Navy Yard, launched on 20 July 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Charles F. Grisham, and commissioned on 26 October 1944, Comdr. Hiram Cassedy in command.

Tigrone completed fitting out in mid-November and conducted training out of Portsmouth and New London before departing the Submarine Base at New London on the last day of 1944. After 10 days of training at the Fleet Sound School, the new submarine got underway on 16 January. Steaming via the Canal Zone, she paused for a week of training off Panama, then set her course for Hawaii, conducting extensive practice approach exercises with Riverside (APA-102) en route. On 16 February, she arrived at Pearl Harbor to prepare for her first war patrol.

On 9 March, she departed Oahu and steamed westward, arriving at Guam on the 19th. After a three-day pause to repair a main engine, she got underway on the 21st in company with Bullhead (SS-332) and Blackfish (SS-221), members of a combined attack group, led by her own commanding officer, Comdr. Hiram Cassedy. Joined by Seahorse (SS-304), the submarines set their course for the South China Sea where they formed a scouting line in hopes of intercepting Japanese shipping

Seahorse was mistakenly strafed and bombed by a "friendly" but over anxious B-24 on the 24th. Tigrone's first brush with the enemy came on the 29th in the South China Sea when she dove to avoid an enemy "Oscar" and, at 60 feet, felt the jolt of a small explosion over the forward battery compartment, apparently the concussion of a small bomb dropped by the enemy plane. The new submarine emerged from this encounter without damage and continued her patrol of the sea lanes off the China coast.

In the days that followed, she made an unsuccessful attempt to intercept a convoy spotted by American planes. Then, on 3 April, she began lifeguard duties off the eastern shore of Hainan. On the 5th, Tigrone again managed to evade a bomb dropped by a high flying Japanese plane. On the 8th, she assumed a lifeguard station off Kuannan and began steering five mile legs to maintain her station, when the ship's commanding officer noted a wake which he took to be one of the ship's own. Two minutes later, the appearance of a torpedo 500 yards away on the port bow gave startling proof that the wake was that of an enemy submarine. As Tigrone swung left, the torpedo passed her abeam, less than 60 yards away. She then submerged and rigged for silent running, remaining below for over two hours.

On the 9th, she took up a lifeguard station off Mofu Point and continued patrols off Hainan until the 16th when she departed the area late in the day. She bombarded Pratas Reef with 6 inch gunfire on the 16th and joined Rock (SS-274) three days later to fire on targets including towns and docks on Batan Island. She ended her first war patrol at Guam on 24 April 1945.

After refitting by Apollo (AS-26), Tigrone departed Apra Harbor on 19 May, took on torpedoes at Saipan the same day, and on the 20th got underway for her assigned area. On the 25th, she sighted Sofu Gan Island and Tori Shima before taking up her lifeguard station south of Honshu and west of the Nanpo Shoto. That same day, she rescued a downed flier from the 19th Fighter Command, Iwo Jima.

Early on the morning of the 27th, Tigrone engaged a Japanese lugger which countered the submarine's 5-inch and 40-millimeter fire with machinegun fire. As Tigrone turned away from the raking fire of the lugger, heavy seas washed over her main deck, knocking three of the submarine's crewmen against the gun and injuring them. Despite intermittent heavy rain, Tigrone finished off the lugger with 5-inch fire. The final and telling round caught the lugger dead center, set it afire, and stopped it dead in the water. High seas made boarding a hazardous proposition, so the battered enemy vessel was left to burn, and Tigrone returned to her lifeguard station.

Early on the afternoon of 28 May, the submarine rendezvoused with a Navy bomber which had signalled its distress. The plane ditched 500 yards from Tigrone, and the submarine's crew quickly rescued five survivors from the water. In the next two days, Tigrone proved her skill as a lifeguard ship as she responded to frequent calls for aid and rescued 23 men from the Philippine Sea. On the afternoon of the 24th, Tigrone answered a call for assistance from a severely damaged "Catalina" seaplane which had nosed into a wave on takeoff from a rescue operation. Quickly arriving on the scene, the submarine took on board 16 survivors, the crew and twice-rescued passengers of the disabled seaplane.

Soon the submarine was searching again-this time for survivors of other downed aircraft who had been reported by circling planes to be floating on rafts in Tigrone's lifeguard area. Night fell before the submarine located the rafts, but, early on the 30th, she surfaced and, despite 30-foot waves, resumed the search. Friendly aircraft aided her efforts, and Tigrone's persistence was rewarded when she at last located seven Army aviators afloat on a raft. These tenacious survivors had been washed overboard several times during the night but had climbed back each time. The heavy seas made rescue difficult and time-consuming, but finally the exhausted aviators were brought safely on board the submarine. Tigrone jauntily sent out the message, "Tigrone has saved the air force and is now returning to Iwo Jima with 28 rescued zoomies," and noted that she had set a new record for lifeguard proficiency.

On 1 June, Tigrone put in at Iwo Jima to disembark her passengers and on the next day, despite continuing radar problems, again got underway, returning to her patrol area on the 3d. Plagued by fog and radar malfunctions, Tigrone at last was forced to request lifeguard duty when a persistent loud scraping noise in the vicinity of her starboard shaft rendered normal submarine patrol and attack functions hazardous, if not impossible.

Operating south of Honshu, Tigrone joined the "Lifeguard League" and on the 26th recovered an aviator who had parachuted from his disabled fighter, rescuing him from the water only six minutes from the time his parachute blossomed. During the two days that followed, she took on rescued aviators from other submarines and set her course for Guam on the 28th. She ended her second war patrol on 3 July at Apra Harbor, having rescued a total of 30 aviators on this war patrol.

Following refitting by Proteus (AS-19), Tigrone departed Guam on 31 July and, after the usual stop at Saipan for torpedoes, arrived on lifeguard station. As the submarine approached within 100 miles of Honshu, the news arrived that Russia had declared war on Japan. Patrolling nearer and nearer Honshu as American planes made strikes on Tokyo and other cities of the Japanese homeland, Tigrone encountered increasing numbers of Japanese search planes.

On the 11th, the first reports of Japanese surrender were received, but, for two more days, Tigrone continued her patrols, approaching within 50 miles of the shore of Sagami Wan as she pursued lifeguard duties. On the 13th, with Navy pilots helping to spot targets, she bombarded Mikomoto Island, scoring 11 hits on a radio station and lighthouse tower. The submarine claimed this action as the final bombardment of the war. On the 14th, Tigrone rescued another aviator who had been forced to parachute from his plane and, later in the day, spent an anxious half hour attempting to evade persistent sonar contacts which turned out to be birds.

On the 15th, she received orders to cease all attacks; and, the next day, the official statement of Japan's surrender was published. She patrolled off the east coast of Japan as far north as Sendai and Todo Saki. Then, on the 30th, she rendezvoused with "Benny's Peacemakers" and, on the last day of August, moored in Tokyo Bay. She departed Tokyo on 2 September and made her way via Hawaii and the Canal Zone to New London, arriving there early in October 1945.

Later that month, she visited Washington, D.C., for Navy Day activities and, late in December, reported to the 16th Fleet at Philadelphia for preservation procedures preparatory to inactivation. She was towed to New London and placed out of commission, in reserve, on 30 March 1946.

On 12 April 1948, her designation was changed to SSR, radar picket submarine. In June, she was towed from New London to Portsmouth for conversion. She was recommissioned on 1 November 1948 and, early in 1949, conducted shakedown out of Portsmouth in preparation for her new duties as an Arctic radar picket. That summer, she joined Submarine Division 62 operating out of Norfolk to begin activities evaluating new radar equipment and techniques for long range air defense. She continued in this role until 1957 operating in the Atlantic and Caribbean and completing five Mediterranean deployments with both American and NATO forces. On 1 August 1967, her status was changed to in commission, in reserve, and, on 1 November, she was decommissioned. She was assigned to the Atlantic Reserve Fleet and berthed at Philadelphia.

Redesignated SS-419 on 3 February 1961, she was recommissioned on 10 March 1962 and underwent overhaul and conversion at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard before reporting to New London for refresher training on 22 September. On 15 November, she departed New London for four weeks of shakedown out of Puerto Rico, and, on 14 December, she returned to New London to remain there into the new year. From April through August 1963, she operated in the Mediterranean on deployment with the 6th Fleet. She then returned to New London for local operations and to provide services for the Submarine School. On 1 December 1963, she was redesignated an auxiliary submarine AGSS-419. Early in 1964, she was fitted out with an experimental sonar unit. Through the end of 1964, she operated in conjunction with the Naval Underwater Sound Laboratory and the Submarine School, testing and evaluating the new equipment.

In 1965, she underwent a major eight-month overhaul and modification at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. Her torpedo tubes were removed, two forward compartments thoroughly sound isolated, and a new experimental sonar system, the Brass III, was installed. Operating as a research and development vessel in cooperation with the United States Underwater Sound Laboratory, she began duties which would fill the remaining years of her long career. Assigned primarily to data collection and sonar and acoustic tests in connection with the Brass program, she operated out of New London, conducting underwater systems tests as well as research in sound propagation.

In 1968, she visited British and Norwegian Sea ports spent September through December in antisubmarine warfare exercises; and trained reserves. She continued

her research assignments, joining with HMS Grampu in the early months of 1972 for a joint American British oceanographic operation in the eastern Atlantic She operated occasionally in Caribbean waters, taking part in Operation "Springboard" in 1973 and 1974 While moored at the Submarine Base in New London; on 25 October 1974, Tigrone observed the 30th anniversary of her commissioning. Into 1975, she continued research activities off the east coast, which included a visit to Bermuda in March and operations with air units off Jacksonville and Atlantic City.

On 5 May, she began pre-inactivation procedures and, on 27 June 1975, was decommissioned at the Naval Submarine Base, Groton, Conn. At the time of her decommissioning, Tigrone was the oldest submarine in commission in the United States Navy, as well as the last unit of the submarine force still in operation to have taken part in combat action in World War II. Her name was struck from the Navy list on that same day, and she was sunk as a target on 25 October 1976.

Tigrone received two battle stars for World War II service.