United States O-class submarine explained

The United States Navy's sixteen O-class coastal patrol submarines were built during World War I and served the USN from 1918 through the end of World War II.

Description

Following the design trend of the day, these boats were scaled up versions of the preceding L-class, reversing the fiscally created shrinkage in size of the N-class.[1] The O-class were about 80 tons larger than the L-class, with greater power and endurance for wider ranging patrols. Due to the American entry into World War I the O-class were built much more rapidly than previous classes, and were all commissioned in 1918. O-1 through O-10 were designed by Electric Boat (EB), O-11 through O-16 were designed by the Lake Torpedo Boat Company and differed considerably from the EB design. All had the same military characteristics and performance and thus were considered by the Navy to be the same class. The EB design boats had a spindle shaped hull with an axially mounted rudder and twin lateral mounted propeller shafts. The bow diving planes controlled depth with the stern diving planes (mounted laterally behind the propellers) controlling the boat's angle while submerged. The Lake design also had a spindle shaped hull, but the rudder was ventrally mounted under the flat shovel-shaped stern with the propeller shafts also exiting the hull ventrally.[2]

The EB design retained the semi-hemispherical rotating bow cap that covered the four 18-inch diameter torpedo tubes. Although a common features on the EB design, this would prove to be the last of the EB designs with the cap.[3] The Lake design used individual muzzle doors with hydro-dynamic shutters to seal the tubes, a feature that would become standard on all later USN submarines.[4] These boats were big enough to have a semi-retractable 3-inch/23-caliber gun on the deck forward of the conning tower fairwater. This gun partially retracted into a vertical watertight cylinder that penetrated the pressure hull into the forward battery compartment (EB design), or the control room (Lake design). When retracted the circular gun shield formed the top of the cylinder with only the barrel of the gun protruding above deck.[5]

The Lake design retained Simon Lake's trademark amidships diving planes, theoretically used to enable zero-angle (a.k.a. even-keel) diving. This was a marked contrast to the angled-diving technique used by the EB design boats. Zero-angle diving proved to be unworkable and Lake used it here for the last time. His design for the follow-on R-class boats would abandon the method in favor of the EB angle-diving arrangement.[6]

Unusually, the Navy obtained a legal license to build two of the EB design boats at government owned Navy Yards: O-1 by Portsmouth Navy Yard, Kittery, Maine, and O-2 by Puget Sound Navy Yard, Bremerton, Washington. O-3 through O-10 of the EB design were built by Fore River Shipyard, Quincy, Massachusetts. O-11 through O-13 were Lake design built by the Lake Torpedo Boat Company of Bridgeport, Connecticut. Once again desirous of having submarines built at a west coast yard, the Navy got Lake to build the O-14 through O-16 at a sub-contractor named California Shipbuilding (formerly Craig Shipbuilding), Long Beach, California.[7] [8] CALSHIP suffered from numerous management and production issues and all three boats assigned to them had to be towed up the coast to the Mare Island Navy Yard north of San Francisco in Vallejo, California for completion.[9]

Service

The class originally operated in the anti-submarine role off the United States's East Coast. Two of the boats, and, mistakenly came under fire from a British merchantman in the Atlantic on 24 July 1918. The steamer scored six hits on O-4s conning tower fairwater and pressure hull before her identity was discovered. O-4 suffered minor damage caused by shell splinters. The to formed part of the twenty-strong submarine force that left Newport, Rhode Island on 2 November 1918 for the Azores, but the task force was recalled after the Armistice was signed nine days later.

The Lake design boats (O-11 through O-16), built by the Lake Torpedo Boat Company and Craig Shipbuilding, suffered from electrical, structural, and mechanical problems. was immediately sent to the Philadelphia Navy Yard for a five-month overhaul. In October 1918, sank the patrol boat in a collision while she (O-13) was submerged.[10] also underwent a refit but was sent into reserve soon after before she went into service at Coco Solo in the Panama Canal Zone. This also involved another overhaul. also underwent a refit soon after commissioning and later suffered a fire in her conning tower in December 1919. All six of the Lake design boats were decommissioned in July 1924, with five being scrapped in July 1930 under the terms of the London Naval Treaty. However, the decommissioned was leased back to Simon Lake for use in an Arctic expedition by Sir Hubert Wilkins. Disarmed, she was rebuilt with specialized Arctic exploration equipment and renamed Nautilus. After the conclusion of the expedition she was scuttled in a Norwegian fjord in November 1931 to keep within the provisions of the lease agreement, as the Navy no longer wanted her but didn't want the boat to fall into foreign hands.[11]

The EB design boats served well although was rammed by a cargo ship and sunk near the Panama Canal on 28 October 1923 with the loss of three crew members. All nine of the surviving EB design boats were decommissioned into reserve status in 1931. The harsh economics of the Great Depression prevented proper pre-layup maintenance, and very little if any work was done on the boats during the nine years they laid in reserve at the Philadelphia Navy Yard. Eight of the boats (O-1 had been scrapped in 1938) were refitted and recommissioned in 1941 to serve as training boats based at the Naval Submarine Base New London, Connecticut. The looming war emergency forced the work to be rushed, and many of the eight O-class still needed thorough maintenance after being recommissioned. sank during deep submergence trials in June 1941, likely due to her poor material condition. Thirty-three of her crew were lost.[12]

In 1929-1930 the EB design O-class boats were modified for improved safety in the event of sinking. This was work prompted by the loss of the in 1927. Two marker buoys were added fore and aft. In the event the submarine was stranded on the bottom the buoys could be released to show the submarine's position. A motor room escape hatch was also added, the motor room being the after most compartment. The tapered after dorsal skeg became a step as a result of these modifications.[13]

The 18-inch torpedo tubes of this class forced the Navy to retain the old Mk 7 torpedo, solely for the use by these boats. All other 18-inch torpedoes prior to the 21-inch Mk 8 were discarded before WWII as a cost saving measure.

During World War II, the seven remaining O boats were stationed at the New London Submarine Base and served as training platforms for the Submarine School. The last O-boat, USS O-4, was decommissioned in September 1945. O-4 had served for 27 years and was, at that time, the longest serving submarine in the history of the US Navy.

At least one O-class submarine can be seen briefly in the 1943 movie Crash Dive, filmed at the New London submarine base.

Ships in class

The 16 submarines of the O-class were:

Electric Boat (EB) design

Ship name and Hull no.BuilderLaid DownLaunchedCommissionedDecommissionedFate
(SS-62)Portsmouth Navy Yard26 March 19179 October 19185 November 191811 June 1931Scrapped 1938
(SS-63)Puget Sound Navy Yard27 July 191724 May 191819 October 191826 July 1945Scrapped 1945
(SS-64)Fore River Shipbuilding2 December 191627 September 191713 June 191811 September 1945Scrapped 1946
(SS-65)Fore River Shipbuilding4 December 191620 October 191729 May 191820 September 1945Scrapped 1946
(SS-66)Fore River Shipbuilding8 December 191611 November 19178 June 1918Lost in a collision 28 October 1923; raised and scrapped 1924
(SS-67)Fore River Shipbuilding6 December 191625 November 191712 June 191811 September 1945Scrapped 1946
(SS-68)Fore River Shipbuilding14 February 191716 December 19174 July 19182 July 1945Scrapped 1946
(SS-69)Fore River Shipbuilding27 February 191731 December 191711 July 191811 September 1945Scrapped 1946
(SS-70)Fore River Shipbuilding15 February 191727 January 191827 July 1918Lost on a test dive 20 June 1941; wreckage located in 1997
(SS-71)Fore River Shipbuilding27 February 191721 February 191817 August 191810 September 1945Scrapped 1946

Lake Torpedo Boat Company design

Ship name and Hull no.BuilderLaid DownLaunchedCommissionedDecommissionedFate
(SS-72)Lake Torpedo Boat Company6 March 191629 October 191719 October 191821 June 1924Scrapped 1930
(SS-73)Lake Torpedo Boat Company6 March 191629 September 191718 October 191817 June 1924Civilian Arctic expedition vessel; scuttled 1931
(SS-74)Lake Torpedo Boat Company6 March 191627 December 191727 November 191811 June 1924Scrapped 1930
(SS-75)California Shpbldg, Long Beach, CA6 July 19166 May 19181 October 191817 June 1924Scrapped 1930
(SS-76)California Shpbldg, Long Beach, CA21 September 191612 February 191827 August 191811 June 1924Scrapped 1930
(SS-77)California Shpbldg, Long Beach, CA7 October 19169 February 19181 August 191821 June 1924Scrapped 1930

See also

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. PigBoats.COM O-class page
  2. PigBoats.COM O-class page
  3. Friedman, pp. 121
  4. Friedman, pp. 93
  5. Christley, pp. 33-34
  6. PigBoats.COM O-class page
  7. PigBoats.COM O-class page
  8. Web site: ShipbuildingHistory.com Craig Shipbuilding page . 2015-06-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150502094107/http://www.shipbuildinghistory.com/history/shipyards/2large/inactive/craig.htm . 2015-05-02 . dead .
  9. PigBoats.COM O-class page
  10. http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/o1/o-13.htm USS O-13, Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
  11. https://pigboats.com/index.php?title=Wilkins_Arctic_Submarine_Nautilus PigBoats.COM Wilkins Expedition page
  12. https://pigboats.com/index.php?title=Notable_Submarine_Accidents PigBoats.COM Notable Submarine Accidents page
  13. PigBoats.COM O-class pages