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USS ''Boarfish'' (SS-327), a ''Balao''-class submarine, was a ship of the United States Navy named for the boarfish, a fish having a projecting hog-like snout. ''Boarfish'' (SS-327) was laid down on 12 August 1943; launched on 21 May 1944 by Electric Boat Co., Groton, Conn., sponsored by Miss Barbara Walsh, daughter of Senator Arthur Walsh of New Jersey; and commissioned on 23 September 1944, Commander Royce L. Gross in command. == World War II == Following shakedown training off the coast of New England, the submarine departed New London, Conn. on 29 October 1944 for Panama. After a week of intensive training in Panamanian waters, ''Boarfish'' transited the Panama Canal on 21 November and set out for Pearl Harbor where she arrived on 2 December. Another three weeks of training in Hawaii followed, and then ''Boarfish'' stood out of Pearl Harbor on 24 December bound for the western Pacific. She refueled and took on provisions at Saipan before embarking upon her first war patrol on 5 January 1945. ''Boarfish'' sailed to the South China Sea to patrol the coast of French Indochina. Early on 21 January, the submarine's radar picked up a small convoy of five or six small ships. ''Boarfish'' closed the convoy three times in three hours, firing 16 torpedoes, all of which apparently passed under the targets. She broke off the attack at daybreak and did not regain contact. On 31 January, the boat made another radar contact on two cargo ships under escort. During ''Boarfish''’s initial approach, an escort sighted the submarine and chased her away. The boat then fired her torpedoes at periscope depth and scored hits on both ships. When ''Boarfish'' submerged to avoid the escorts, she left ''Enki Maru'' (6,968 tons) sinking and ''Taietsu Maru'' (6,890 tons) burning fiercely and beached nearby. Even while avoiding depth charges, ''Boarfish'' tried to close the beach to finish the job. She abandoned the attempt after 36 hours because fire had so ravaged the cargo ship that she seemed unsalvageable. ''Taietsu Maru'' was destroyed completely by American planes of the 14th Air Force later that same day, and ''Boarfish'' received partial credit for the sinking. The submarine ended her first patrol on 15 February when she pulled into Fremantle, Australia, for refit alongside submarine tender . The submarine's second patrol began on 11 March 1945 when she departed Fremantle for a second tour of duty in the South China Sea. Although she encountered and attacked two small convoys, their alert escorts foiled both attacks. ''Boarfish'' successfully carried out two reconnaissance missions along the east coast of French Indochina before ending her patrol in Subic Bay on 21 April. After refit alongside , ''Boarfish'' left Subic Bay on 16 May for the Java Sea. Her first action came when she sighted a small two-masted junk on 27 May. A boarding party searched the junk for arms, contraband, and Japanese, but found nothing, and the junk was allowed to proceed. Two days later, a small convoy of three ships accompanied by two escorts crossed ''Boarfish''’s path. She launched four torpedoes at the lead ship before losing firing position. Her crew heard an explosion; but, when the officer at the conn peered through her periscope, he saw a charging escort instead of a sinking ship. The submarine dived, intending to put of the charted at that location between her and the escort. At , the submarine grounded, knocking off her sound gear and making enough noise to betray her position easily. Eight depth charges followed as ''Boarfish'' tried to free herself. Despite damage to her port propeller, the submarine backed off the seamount and eased up to to escape. The damage sustained in the grounding was severe enough to force an early return to Fremantle, where she arrived on 8 June. After repair and refit alongside , she departed on 5 July for her fourth war patrol. Operating in a coordinated attack group ''Boarfish'', , and covered the Java Sea off Java and the north coast of Bali. They made no surface contacts but encountered a number of enemy planes, one of which depth-bombed ''Boarfish'' on 8 July. On the 29th, ''Boarfish'' performed lifeguard duties during an Allied air strike on Singapore, and she remained off the Malay coast patrolling until 6 August, when she set course for Subic Bay. The submarine pulled alongside for refit on 10 August and was there when the Japanese capitulation was announced. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「USS Boarfish (SS-327)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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