Piranha SS-389

 


(Piranha


(SS-389: dp. 1,526 (surf.), 2,391 (subm.),1. 311'6", b. 27'3";
b. 15'3"; s. 20 k. (surf.), 9 k. (subm.); cpl. 66; a. 1 5",
10 21" tt.; cl. Balao)

Piranha (SS-389) was laid down 21 June 1943 by Portsmouth Navy Yard; launched 27 October 1943; sponsored by Mrs. William S. Farber, wife of Rear Admiral Farber, Assistant Chief of Naval Operations, and commissioned 5 February 1944, Lt. Comdr. Harold E. Ruble in command.

After East Coast training, Piranha departed Key West 3 April 1944 for the Panama Canal and her base, Pearl Harbor, arriving 18 May for final training. With Guardfi~h (SS-217) Thresher (SS-200), and Apogon (SS-308), she made her first war patrol between 14 June and 8 August. The coordinated attack group prowled waters west and north of Luzon,

striking fiereely and with notable success at Japanese convoys. Piranha's victims were Nichiran Maru, sunk 12 July, and Seattle Maru, sunk four days later. Several times attacked by enemy aircraft and dodging surface patrol craft, Piranha returned safely to Majuro.

For the first part of her second patrol, Piranha joined 9 other submarines in offensive reconnaissance covering the 3rd Fleet during the assault on Peleliu, patrolling 30 August to 25 September. When that base, essential for the liberation of the Philippines, had been seized, Piranha'$ group dissolved and she searched for targets westward along the 20th parallel, engaging an enemy patrol craft 9 October. She endured a heavy depth charge attack, but outsmarted the patrol vessel, returning to Pearl Harbor 23 October.

During her third war patrol, again with an attack group besides seeking worthwhile targets in the East China Sea 19 November to 13 January 1945, Piranha served as lifeguard during B-29 strikes on Kyushu. She scored two hits on a merchantman 8 January, only to be driven off by an escort without being able to regain attack position.

Refitted at Guam, Piranha sailed 11 February for her fourth war patrol, a elassie exhibition of submarine versatility. With her attack group she sought targets on the convoy lanes from Luzon to Formosa and Hong Kong. She spent 17 days on lifeguard during airstrikes on Formosa, on 27 February sinking a junk presumably serving as aircraft spotter.

She was foiled by a large fleet of fishing junks from making a rapid approach on a convoy reported leaving Hong Kong 5 March. Daringly resorting to an ancient ruse of naval warfare, she improvised a Japanese naval ensign and ran it up. The deception was successful, and she threaded her way through the fishermen at flank speed, but was unable to locate the convoy.

Piranha bombarded Pratas Island 26 March with 100 5-inch shells. Three times during this patrol, which eoneluded with 10 days off Wake, the submarine successfully maneuvered to avoid hits from attacking aircraft. She returned to Midway to refit 21 April-17 May, then sailed for patrol, lifeguard, and bombardment at Mareus 22-31 May Here she was attacked several times by shore batteries. After refueling at Saipan, Piranha sailed to complete this patrol off Honshu.

With the decimated Japanese merchant marine hugging its own coast, Piranha was frequently frustrated by shallow water and omnipresent escorts in her attacks. Hair-raising encounters with submarine chasers and aircraft were rendered infinitely more dangerous by being fought so close offshore where she had little water depth for maneuver. But her persistence and courage paid off, she heavily damaged a freighter 14 June, sank a coastal tanker an] destroyed a trawler laden with oil drums by gunfire 17 June. Two more trawlers fell to her gun 23 June. Though slightly damaged when their escort retaliated with depth charges, Piranha returned safely to Pearl Harbor 10 July.

Her sixth and last war patrol lasted 14 hours, she had sailed from Pearl Harbor 14 August and was ordered back when hostilities ended the next day. Returning to San Francisco 11 September, Piranha decommissioned at Mare Island 31 May 1946. There she lay in reserve, redesignated AGSS389 on 6 November 1962, until struck from the Naval Register 1 March 1967. Her hull was sold for scrapping, but her conning tower is preserved at the Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz Memorial Naval Museum at Fredericksburg, Tex.

Piranha received 5 battle stars for World War II service.