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USS Catfish (SS-339)

Career USN Jack
Ordered:
Laid down: 1 January 1944
Launched: 19 November 1944
Commissioned: 19 March 1945
Decommissioned: 1 July 1971
Struck: 1 July 1971
Fate: sold to Argentina (1971)
Commissioned Santa Fe: 1971
Decommissioned:
Fate: sunk (1982)
General Characteristics
Displacement,
  Surfaced:
  Submerged:

1,526 tons (1550 t),
2,424 tons (2460 t)
Length: 311.8 ft (95.0 m)
Beam: 27.3 ft (8.3 m)
Draft: 15.3 ft (4.6 m)
Depth limit: 400 ft (120 m)
Speed,
  Surfaced:
  Submerged:

20.25 knots (37 km/h)
  8.75 knots (16 km/h)
Propulsion: four 5400-hp diesel engines
four 2740-hp (2.0 MW) electric motors,
two propellers
Submerged Endurance: 48 hours at 2 knots
Patrol Endurance: 75 days
Range: 11,000 nmi. (20,000 km)
  surfaced at 10 knots
Complement: 66 officers and enlisted
Armament: ten 21" torpedo tubes,
  (six forward, four aft),
  24 torpedoes,
one 5"/25 deck gun,
four machine guns
Motto:

USS Catfish (SS-339), a Balao-class submarine, was a ship of the United States Navy named for the catfish, any of various species having catlike teeth, barbels around the mouth, including the common bullhead.

Catfish (SS-339) was launched 19 November 1944 by Electric Boat Co., Groton, Conn.; sponsored by Mrs. J. J. Crowley; and commissioned 19 March 1945, Lieutenant Commander W. A. Overton, USNR, in command.

Catfish sailed from New London 4 May 1945 for Pearl Harbor, arriving 29 June. After training and the installation of new equipment, she proceeded to Guam for special training, then departed 8 August for her first war patrol, a special mission to locate a minefield off Kyushu. When the cease-fire order was given 15 August, she was ordered to the Yellow Sea for surface patrol and lifeguard duty. She returned to Guam 4 September, thence to the West Coast, arriving at Seattle 29 September.

Based at San Diego, Catfish operated locally on the west coast and made two cruises to the Far East during which she conducted simulated war patrols and provided services to the 7th Fleet.

Catfish was extensively modernized in a GUPPY II conversion (August 1948–May 1949), giving her greater submerged speed and endurance. She was on another Far Eastern cruise when war broke out in Korea in which area she made a reconnaissance patrol in support of the United Nations forces. Catfish returned to the "States" 20 October 1950 and was based at San Diego.

After that the submarine carried out training exercises with Naval Reservists off the west coast, operated with Canadian forces in joint antisubmarine warfare exercises, and made several cruises to the Far East.

ARA Santa Fe

Catfish was decommissioned, struck from the Naval Register, and sold to Argentina, 1 July 1971, where she was renamed ARA Santa Fe. In 1982, during the Falklands War Santa Fe was hit by British forces. Deemed too costly to economically repair as a war prize she was sunk in Grytviken Sound, South Georgia.


Catfish received one battle star for World War II service.

References

External links

Last updated: 06-04-2005 04:19:22
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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