USS Sirago (SS-485)
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Sirago, with special winter watch set.
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Career | ||
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Ordered: | ||
Laid down: | 4 January 1945 | |
Launched: | 13 May 1945 | |
Commissioned: | 13 August 1945 | |
Decommissioned: | 1 June 1972 | |
Fate: | sold for scrap | |
Stricken: | 1 June 1972 | |
General characteristics | ||
Displacement: | 1835 tons surfaced, 2400 tons submerged | |
Length: | 311 feet 8 inches | |
Beam: | 27 feet 4 inches | |
Draft: | 17 feet | |
Propulsion: | ||
Speed: | 20 knots surfaced, 9 knots submerged | |
Range: | ||
Complement: | 84 officers and men | |
Armament: | one five-inch gun, one 40 mm cannon, ten 21 inch torpedo tubes | |
Motto: |
USS Sirago (SS-485), a Tench-class submarine, was the only ship of the United States Navy to be named for sirago, a small fresh water tropical fish. Her keel was laid down on 4 January 1945 at the Portsmouth Navy Yard in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. She was launched on 13 May 1945 sponsored by Mrs. L. Mendel Rivers, and commissioned on 13 August 1945 with Commander F. J. Harlfinger, II, in command.
Commissioned at the end of World War II, Sirago conducted her shakedown cruise off the East Coast and in the Caribbean Sea during the fall of 1945. After shakedown, she joined Submarine Squadron (SubRon) 8 at New London, Connecticut, and, in January 1946, she proceeded to Provincetown, Massachusetts, where she participated in the destruction of two German submarines. On returning to New London, Sirago commenced duties which included training services for the Submarine School and for the fleet's destroyer force; experimental exercises to evaluate new techniques and equipment; type training; and fleet exercises which took her from Davis Strait into the Caribbean. In December 1948, she entered the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard for a Greater Underwater Propulsive Power Program (GUPPY) conversion; and, on 25 July 1949, she left the yard for Norfolk, Virginia, where, as a modernized high speed attack submarine, she joined SubRon 6.
Attached to SubRon 6 for the next twenty-two years, Sirago’s primary mission was antisubmarine warfare. Secondary missions included antishipping warfare, intelligence gathering, and the provision of services for research and development studies. Those duties, during the 1950s, continued to see her operating primarily in the western Atlantic as she participated in exercises with others of her ASW group; in fleet exercises; in joint Canadian-United States exercises, and in NATO exercises, which took her into the eastern Atlantic Ocean and North Sea areas. During the 1950s, she also deployed to the Mediterranean Sea where she operated as a unit of the Sixth Fleet from September to November 1951 and from September to December 1954.
In October 1962, Sirago entered the Norfolk Naval Shipyard for another extensive overhaul which included the installation of a fiberglass superstructure and sail and, in the spring of 1963, she resumed operations with her ASW group, Task Group "ALFA." That fall, she deployed to the Middle East for CENTO exercise "MIDLINK VI"; but, during the remainder of the 1960s and into the 1970s, her operations were similar to those of the 1950s.
On 1 July 1971, Sirago was reassigned to SubRon 12 at Key West, Florida; but, less than four months later, on 15 October, she was ordered back to Norfolk where she rejoined SubRon 6. She remained in that squadron until decommissioned on 1 June 1972. Struck from the Naval Vessel Register on the same day, she was turned over to the Naval Ships Systems Command and sold for scrapping to the Jacobson Metal Company of Chesapeake, Virginia, on 2 May 1973.
[edit] References
This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.
Tench-class submarine |
Tench | Thornback | Tigrone | Tirante | Trutta (ex-Tomtate) | Toro | Torsk | Quillback (ex-Trembler) | Trumpetfish | Tusk | Turbot | Ulua | Unicorn | Vendace | Walrus | Whitefish | Whiting | Wolffish | Corsair | Unicorn | Walrus | Argonaut | Runner | Conger | Cutlass | Diablo | Medregal | Requin | Irex | Sea Leopard | Odax | Sirago | Pomodon | Remora | Sarda | Spinax | Volador | Pompano | Grayling | Needlefish | Sculpin | Wahoo | Wahoo | Amberjack | Grampus | Pickerel | Grenadier | Dorado | Comber | Sea Panther | Tiburon |
List of submarines of the United States Navy List of submarine classes of the United States Navy |