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U.S.S. SEA ROBIN
(SS-407)BOBBIN ROBIN
Click to view crew list
USS SEA ROBIN (SS-407) - a Balao class submarine
In Commission 1944 to 1970SS-407 Deployments - Major Events
Add a SS-407 Shellback Initiation | Add a SS-407 Deployment - Major Event | ||||
Month | Year | to | Month | Year | Deployment / Event |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
MAR | 1944 | - | Keel Date: 1 MAR 1944 at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard Kittery ME | ||
MAY | 1944 | - | Launch Date: 25 MAY 1944 | ||
AUG | 1944 | - | Commissioned: 7 AUG 1944 | ||
JAN | 1970 | - | MAR | 1970 | Caribbean |
OCT | 1970 | - | Decommissioned: 1 OCT 1970 |
SS-407 General Specifications
Class: Balao class submarine
Complement: 10 Officers and 70 Enlisted
Displacement: 1830 tons
Length: 307 feet 7 inches
Beam: 27 feet 4 inches
Draft: 17feet
Range: 17 000 Nautical Miles
Final Disposition: Sold for scrap 3 June 1971
USS SEA ROBIN (SS-407)
Sea Robin (SS-407) was laid down by the
Portsmouth (N.H.) Navy Yard on 1 March 1944; launched on 25
May 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Homer Ambrose, wife of Capt. Ambrose, the Navy
Yard's Production Superintendent; and commissioned on 7 August 1944, Lt.
Comdr. Paul C. Stimson in command.
After shakedown off Portsmouth, N.H., and New London,
Conn., Sea Robin transited the Panama Canal on 12
October 1944 following an incident with a Scandinavian merchant ship
which, mistaking the submarine for a German U-boat, frantically scattered shells
in the general direction of the surfaced "enemy." Fortunately,
Sea Robin was out of range and escaped without damage.
After spending six days at Pearl Harbor, Sea Robin sailed
for Luzon Strait and her first war patrol where, on 6 January 1945, she
torpedoed and sank her initial victim of the war, the 5,000-ton Japanese tanker
Tarakan Maru. Except for dodging floating
mines, the remainder of the submarine's first patrol was uneventful; and
she returned to port at Fremantle, Western Australia, on 29 January.
Sea Robin's second patrol proved to be her
most productive of the war. On 3 March, while patrolling north of Surabaja
in the Java Sea, the boat evaded a Japanese escort ship and torpedoed
the cargo ship, Suiten Maru. After
several unsuccessful attempts to rescue survivors, the submarine finally
hauled three prisoners of war on board and continued her patrol. Two days later, Sea
Robin contacted a troop-laden convoy of two cargo ships, a converted
gunboat, and several escorts. The gunboat Manyo Maru was the first to be
sent to the bottom, the victim of three torpedo hits. After evading
the suddenly active escort vessels, the submarine commenced an end around
and, several hours later, was again in firing position. Shoyu Maru, the
first of the two cargo vessels, was zigzagging radically but was
unable to avoid the three torpedoes that Sea Robin fired at
her. She took one hit below her bridge and settled quickly by the bow. Sea
Robin then fired a spread of three torpedoes at the remaining cargo
ship, but the target zigged and they missed. On the second attempt,
the ship was not so fortunate. After watching the target completely
reverse course, the submarine fired three more torpedoes at a range of 900 yards
with one hit amidships that broke Nagaru Maru in half and sent her
rapidly to the bottom. Sea Robin now began to pay
the price for her success. For 24 hours, she was pursued by the escorts and
accompanying aircraft; but made good her escape and arrived at Subic Bay, Philippines,
on 15 March to replenish her depleted torpedo store.
Departing Subic Bay on 19 March, Sea Robin set course
for the South China Sea in the area of the island of
Hainan where, on the 23d, she rescued a downed airman. On 30 March, the
submarine found herself in the middle of a group of six Japanese destroyers.
Midway between two of them, she fired three torpedoes at the
first, but a quick turn of the ship caused them to pass
harmlessly across the bow. The second destroyer swerved 90° and began to
bear down on Sea Robin. After 20 minutes of depth charging, the submarine extricated
herself and, with Hainan a scant 10 miles away, again attacked, but a spread
of six torpedoes failed to find a target, and the submarine resumed patrol.
On 8 April, Sea Robin sank two small Japanese fishing
vessels, taking three prisoners of war and, on the following
day, took on board 10 more Japanese, survivors of a foundering trawler
that had been worked over by Allied aircraft. The submarine terminated
her second patrol at Pearl Harbor on 29 April.
Sea Robin's third and final war patrol was
conducted in the Yellow and East China seas. After sinking a small patrol
craft on 9 July and taking one prisoner, Sea Robin torpedoed
and sank the cargo shin, Sakishima Maru, on 10 July. Shortly thereafter,
while attempting to sink a large sampan, the submarine was caught on the
surface by a Japanese plane. Although the pilot did not drop
his bombs on the first pass, thus giving Sea Robin a chance
to dive, he dropped two close aboard on the second. Although it was
not discovered until the end of the patrol, the submarine's bow tubes
were severely damaged causing numerous tornedo misses throughout
the remainder of the patrol. With the exception of several trawlers sunk
in surface attacks, the remainder of the patrol was unproductive.
When the war ended on 15 August, Sea Robin was moored
at Midway Island. After a one-day stop at Pearl Harbor, the boat headed for
home, transiting the Panama Canal on 20 September and arriving at
Galves-ton, Tex., four days later.
Peacetime assignment brought Sea Robin to
Submarine Squadron (SubRon) 6 based at Balboa, Canal Zone. On
15 May 1947, the submarine commenced a one and one-half month simulated
war patrol in which she circumnavigated the South American continent and
became the first submarine to round Cape Horn. The year 1948 was spent
in fleet training exercises in the Balboa and Key West areas.
Following overhaul at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard, Sea
Robin was reassigned to SubRon 8 based at New London, Conn.,
arriving on 20 August 1949. On 23, February 1950, the submarine departed New London for
participation in exercise Portex, a joint Army-Navy-Air Force exercise
in the Caribbean, returning on 23, March. From September through
November, she was engaged in her first tour of duty with the 6th Fleet in the
Mediterranean.
In 1951, Sea Robin was
converted to a Guppy IA submarine, following which she returned to New London for
local operations. In January and February 1952, the submarine participated
in exercise Micowex in the North Atlantic testing cold weather gear and
procedures under the supervision of the Naval Research Laboratory,
New London, followed by a return to warmer waters and participation in exercise
Pacex in the Caribbean. For the next two years, Sea Robin was
engaged in local fleet and training operations in the New
London area.
On 30 August 1954, Sea Robin set sail for a six-week
northern training cruise which stretched across the Arctic
Circle and included stops at Glasgow, Scotland; and Belfast, Northern
Ireland. On 4 January 1955, the submarine departed for six weeks in the
Caribbean participating in operation Springboard and, in September,
took part in NATO exercise "New Broom IV," visiting
St. John, New Brunswick, en route home to New London, where she operated
locally for the remainder of the year.
After engaging in special operations in late 1956 and early
1957, Sea Robin resumed normal duties in the New
London area until entering the Portsmouth (N.H.) Naval Shipyard on 24 July
1957 for a two-month overhaul. Upon return to New London, she engaged in
fleet exercises in the Atlantic and Caribbean until 28 March 1958 when
she set sail for a three and one-half month tour of duty with the 6th Fleet
in the Mediterranean. For the next five years, with time out for
regularly scheduled overhaul periods, Sea Robin operated in Atlantic
and Caribbean waters, engaging in fleet antisubmarine warfare exercises and
providing services to the United States Naval Submarine School.
In September of 1964, Sea Robin participated in exercise
Master Stroke with United States, Canadian, and British forces
followed by local operations in the New London area where she
remained through 1965. The year 1966 was spent in participation with operation
Springboard forces in the Caribbean providing services to naval air
squadrons and surface units followed by training and ASW exercises in the New London
area.
On 22 May 1967, Sea Robin put to sea in company with Tusk
(SS-426), Sablefish (SS-303), and Sea Owl (SS-405)
for a two-month tour of northern European Dorts stopping at Portsmouth,
England; Cherbourg, France; Londonderry, Northern Ireland; and various Scandinavian
ports. From 2 October through 1 February 1968, Sea Robin underwent
overhaul at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard and upon completion resumed
normal duties in the Atlantic and Caribbean. On 1 December
1969, the submarine was transferred to SubRon 2, also based at New
London.
Highlights of 1970 were participation in operation Springboard
in January and February and NATO exercise Steel Ring in April
and May. On 4 August, the submarine made her 12,920th and final dive. On 1
October 1970, Sea Robin was decommissioned and struck
from the Navy list. She was sold for scrap on 3 June 1971 to the North
American Smelting Co., Wilmington, Del.
Sea Robin received three battle stars for
World War II service.
[Note: The above USS SEA ROBIN (SS-407) history may, or may not, contain text provided by crew members of the USS SEA ROBIN (SS-407), or by other non-crew members, and text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]