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USS Pike SS-173, first all
welded US sub
(1935-United States) from Wikipedia
In response to the Japanese attack upon Pearl Harbor, she put to sea on 8 December, commanded by Lieutenant Commander Willam A. New) to guard sea lanes between Manila and Hong Kong. Sailing from Manila, she moored at Port Darwin, Australia, 24 January 1942. On her third war patrol from 5 February - 28 March, she detected the enemy off the Alor Islands 20 February and 24 February, and off Lombok Strait on the 28th. On her fourth war patrol, she sailed from Fremantle, Australia on 19 April, and patrolled north of the Palau Islands and off Wake Island, before reaching Honolulu on 25 May. From 30 May - 9 June, she patrolled north of Oahu. Overhauled at Mare Island Naval Shipyard, California, she guided bombers to Wake Island in December, and escaped from a severe depth-charging on 14 January 1943 during an attempted attack off Japan. Departing Pearl Harbor on 31 March, she fired torpedoes at targets off Truk from 12 - 14 April, and shelled Satawan Island on the 25th. Getting under way from Pearl Harbor on 22 July, Pike sank 2,022-ton Japanese cargo ship Shoju Maru near Marcus Island 5 August. Sailing from Pearl Harbor on 28 September, she arrived at New London, Connecticut, 3 November. During the remainder of World War II, she trained submarine crews at the Naval Submarine Base New London. Decommissioned on 15 November 1945 at Boston,
Massachusetts, she became a Naval Reserve training ship at Baltimore, Maryland,
in September 1946. Upon completion of this duty, she was stricken from
the Naval Vessel Register on 17 February 1956, and sold for scrapping on
14 January 1957 to A. G. Schoonmaker Co., Inc., New York, N.Y.
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