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・ USS Howard W. Gilmore (AS-16)
・ USS Howarda (SP-144)
・ USS Howell Cobb (1861)
・ USS Howick Hall (ID-1303)
・ USS Howorth (DD-592)
・ USS Howquah (1863)
・ USS Heron (AMS-18)
・ USS Heron (MHC-52)
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・ USS Herreshoff No. 308 (SP-2232)
・ USS Herreshoff No. 309 (SP-1218)
・ USS Herreshoff No. 321 (SP-2235)
・ USS Herreshoff No. 322 (SP-2373)
・ USS Herreshoff No. 323 (SP-2840)
USS Herring (SS-233)
・ USS Herzog
・ USS Herzog (DE-178)
・ USS Hesperia (AKS-13)
・ USS Hetzel (1861)
・ USS Hewell (AG-145)
・ USS Hewitt (DD-966)
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・ USS Heywood L. Edwards (DD-663)
・ USS Hiawatha
・ USS Hiawatha (ID-2892)
・ USS Hiawatha (SP-183)
・ USS Hiawatha (YT-265)
・ USS Hibiscus


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USS Herring (SS-233) : ウィキペディア英語版
USS Herring (SS-233)

, a ''Gato''-class submarine, was the only ship of the United States Navy to be named for the herring, a type of small oily fish found in the temperate, shallow waters of the North Atlantic.
Her keel was laid down 14 July 1941 by the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine. She was launched on 15 January 1942 (sponsored by Mrs. Ray Spear, wife of Rear Admiral Ray Spear, Chief of the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts), and commissioned on 4 May 1942 with Lieutenant Commander Raymond W. Johnson (Class of 1930) in command.
After shakedown, the new submarine was one of five sent to the Mediterranean Sea to take station off the North African coast prior to Operation Torch, the invasion of North Africa. Reaching her position off Casablanca on 5 November 1942, ''Herring'' remained there, spotting but not attacking several targets. On the morning of 8 November as the invasion was launched, the patient sub had her chance, sinking the 5,700 ton cargo ship ''Ville du Havre''. ''Herring'' returned to Rosneath, Scotland, on 25 November and departed for her second war patrol 16 December, but targets were scarce. The fourth war patrol, an antisubmarine sweep in Icelandic waters, and fifth patrol, which took her back to the United States on 26 July 1943, netted ''Herring'' no more kills.
''Herring'' departed New London, Connecticut, for the rich hunting grounds of the Pacific on 9 August 1943. After intensive training at Pearl Harbor, she sailed 15 November 1943 on her sixth war patrol to join the ranks of the American submarines systematically decimating Japanese shipping and destroying the Japanese economy. She scored two kills, the 3,948 ton ''Hakozaki Maru'' on 14 December, and the 6,072 ton ''Nagoya Maru'' to celebrate New Year's Day 1944. ''Herring’''s next patrol was a frustrating one as on 24 March 1944 she stalked a large aircraft carrier but was detected and driven deep before she could attack.
Lieutenant Commander Johnson commanded Herring for five of her first six patrols, with the sole exception being March 1943 when John Corbus was in command. On her seventh and eight patrols she was captained by Lieutenant Commander David Zabriskie, Jr.
''Herring’''s eighth war patrol was to be both her most successful and her last. Topping off at Midway Island on 21 May 1944, ''Herring'' headed for the Kurile Islands patrol area. Ten days later she rendezvoused with . ''Herring'' was never heard from or seen again. However, Japanese records prove that she sank two ships, ''Ishigaki'' and ''Hokuyo Maru'', on the night of 30 – 31 May. ''Ishigaki'' had been responsible for the sinking of on 7 October 1943. ''Herrings exact manner of loss can also be determined from these records. Two more merchant ships, ''Hiburi Maru'' and ''Iwaki Maru'', were sunk while at anchor in Matsuwa Island on the morning of 1 June 1944. In a counter-attack, enemy shore batteries scored two direct hits on the submarine's conning tower and "bubbles covered an area about 5 meters wide, and heavy oil covered an area of approximately 15 miles." On her last patrol, ''Herring'' had sunk four Japanese ships for a total of 13,202 tons. In all she had sunk six ''maru''s totaling 19,959 tons, and a Vichy cargo ship.
''Herring'' received five battle stars for her service in World War II.
==Legacy==
There is a memorial plaque at the Naval Weapons Station in Seal Beach, California.〔(USS Herring (SS 233) - Seal Beach, CA )〕

Memori hering.jpg|Memorial sign for USS-233 Herring

In June 2005, near the site of the sinking was established a memorial sign to the crew of the lost boats, which fought against the Japanese during the Second World War.〔(kurilstour )〕 The event was held in the fourth Kamchatka-Kuril historical and geographical expedition, led by the Russian researcher Evgeny Vereshaga.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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