Everything about Uss Cavalla Ss-244 totally explained
USS Cavalla (SS/SSK/AGSS-244), a
Gato-class submarine, was a ship of the
United States Navy named for the
cavalla, a salt water fish of the
pompano family inhabiting waters off the eastern coast of the Americas from
Cape Cod to
Río de la Plata.
Cavalla was launched
14 November 1943 by
Electric Boat Co.,
Groton, Connecticut; sponsored by Mrs. M. Comstock; and commissioned
29 February 1944, Lieutenant Commander
Herman J. Kossler (Class of 1934) in command.
Departing
New London 11 April 1944,
Cavalla arrived at
Pearl Harbor 9 May for voyage repairs and training. On
31 May 1944 she put to sea, bound for distant, enemy-held waters.
On her maiden patrol
Cavalla,
en route to her station in the eastern
Philippines, made contact with a large
Japanese task force
17 June 1944.
Cavalla tracked the force for several hours, relaying information which contributed to the United States victory scored in the
Battle of the Philippine Sea—the famous "Marianas Turkey Shoot" on
19 June –
20 June 1944. On
19 June she caught the
carrier Shōkaku recovering planes and quickly fired a spread of six torpedoes for three hits, enough to sink
Shōkaku in . After a severe
depth charging by three
destroyers,
Cavalla escaped to continue her patrol. The feat earned her a
Presidential Unit Citation.
Cavalla's second patrol took her to the
Philippine Sea as a member of a
wolfpack operating in support of the invasion of
Peleliu 15 September 1944.
On
25 November 1944 during her third patrol,
Cavalla encountered two Japanese destroyers, and made a surface attack which blew up
Shimotsuki in . The companion destroyer began depth charging while
Cavalla evaded on the surface. Later in the same patrol,
5 January 1945, she made a night surface attack on an enemy convoy, and sank two converted net tenders in .
Cavalla cruised the
South China and
Java Seas on her fourth and fifth war patrols. Targets were few and far between, but she came to the aid of an ally on
21 May 1945. A month out on her fifth patrol, the submarine sighted, damaged by enemy depth charges and unable to submerge or make full speed.
Cavalla stood by the damaged submarine and escorted her on the surface to
Fremantle, arriving
27 May 1945.
Cavalla received the cease-fire order of
15 August while
lifeguarding off Japan on her sixth war patrol. A few minutes later she was bombed by a Japanese plane that apparently hadn't yet received the same information. She joined the fleet units entering
Tokyo Bay 31 August, remained for the signing of the surrender on
2 September, then departed the next day for New London, arriving
6 October 1945. She was placed out of commission in reserve there
16 March 1946.
Recommissioned
10 April 1951,
Cavalla was assigned to
Submarine Squadron 8 and engaged in various fleet exercises in the
Caribbean and off
Nova Scotia. She was placed out of commission
3 September 1952 and entered Electric Boat Co. yard for conversion to a hunter-killer submarine (reclassified
SSK-244,
18 February 1953).
Cavalla was recommissioned
15 July 1953 and assigned to
Submarine Squadron 10. Her new sonar made
Cavalla valuable for experimentation and she was transferred to
Submarine Development Group 2 on
1 January 1954, to evaluate new weapons and equipment, and participate in fleet exercises. She also cruised to European waters several times to take part in
North Atlantic Treaty Organization exercises, and visited
Norfolk, Va., for the
International Naval Review (
11 June –
12 June 1957). On
15 August 1959, her classification reverted to
SS-244.
She was reclassified an Auxiliary Submarine
AGSS-244 in July 1963.
Cavalla was decommissioned, and struck from the
Naval Register,
30 December 1969.
On
January 21,
1971,
Cavalla was transferred to the Texas Submarine Veterans of WWII. She now resides at
Seawolf Park on Pelican Island, just north of
Galveston, Texas.
Cavalla has undergone an extensive restoration process (see photos, below), and is open for self-guided tours.
In addition to the Presidential Unit Citation,
Cavalla received four
battle stars for service in
World War II. Of her six war patrols, the first and third were designated as Successful War Patrols. She is credited with having sunk a total of 34,180 tons of shipping.
Image:Usscavallass-244mess.jpg|The mess of the restored USS Cavalla (SS-244).
Image:Usscavallass-244offquarters.jpg|The cramped officer quarters of Cavalla.
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