Other TopicsUSS Argonaut SS-475
The USS Argonaut SS-475 was Tench-class submarine, and the second to bear the Argonaut name. Launched on October 1, 1944 and commissioned on January 15, 1945, her service in World War II was short in comparison to other vessels which were launched much earlier in the war, but she remained in service after the close of the war and had an active career until the 1970s. The USS Argonaut SS-475 was awarded one battle star for her service during World War II.
The USS Archer-Fish during World War II
After shakedown in Portsmouth and Narragansett Bay, the USS Argonaut returned briefly to Portsmouth before departing on April 14, bound for Key West in Florida. After participating in tests for light aircraft, and training exercises with the Fleet Sound School, she departed Florida on May 13 for Pearl Harbor. Arriving on June 11 via the Panama Canal, the USS Argonaut then spent two weeks undergoing repairs and taking part in further training exercises, before commencing her first and only patrol of the war on June 28, 1945.
After stopping to refuel at Saipan on July 10, the USS Argonaut journeyed to the Formosa Straight, where she patrolled in that area, as well as in the East China and Yellow Seas, searching for enemy ships. On July 16 she performed an unexpected rescue after spotting and picking up a downed aviator. She saw little contact with Japanese vessels, and her first and only combat action during World War II came on August 12, when she spotted a 25-ton Japanese junk. After attacking and sinking the vessel, the remainder of the patrol was uneventful. The USS Argonaut's sole patrol of the war ended at Guam on August 21, six days after the Japanese had surrendered.
After the War
Unlike most other Navy vessels which served in World War II, the USS Argonaut SS-475 was more active after the war than during it.
After the Japanese capitulation, the USS Argonaut departed Guam on September 1, and traveled via Pearl Harbor and the Panama Canal to New York, in Tompkinsville. After briefly stopping in New York, she traveled to Kittery, Maine, where she was scheduled to undergo an overhaul. In early 1946, she was assigned to the Atlantic Fleet, and was based in Panama. Later in the year she became part of SubRon2 and shifted her base to New London in Connecticut.
Over the next several years, the USS Argonaut underwent several equipment upgrades and conversions. In July 1952, she underwent conversion at Philadelphia Naval Shipyard, receiving a snorkel system and streamlined conning tower which markedly improved her underwater endurance. Operating out of New London until July 1955, she was then reassigned to Norfolk Virginia, to become part of SubRon6. After this reassignment, she was equipped with a Regulus I nuclear missile, and was converted into a guided-missile submarine. In 1958 she was transferred to operate out of San Juan in Puerto Rico, where she was engaged mainly in missile operations until making a return to Norfolk, Virginia in 1959. Her missile equipment was removed during a 1960 overhaul, after which she resumed her support of antisubmarine warfare training operations, based in Norfolk.
In October 1962, the USS Argonaut spent some time carrying out duties in connection with the naval quarantine of Cuba, before undergoing a routine overhaul at Norfolk Naval Shipyard. On August 19, in service with the Sixth Fleet, she was bound for the Mediterranean. During her deployment she visited many different ports in Gibraltar, Crete, Greece, Turkey, France, and Italy before returning to her home port in December.
Until December 1965, the USS Argonaut continued with a pattern of operating along the east coast, combined with periods of deployment to the Mediterranean. Following a June 1966 overhaul at Norfolk Naval Shipyard, she spent the remainder of the year providing her services for a New London submarine training school.
Early in 1967, she participated in Operation Springboard in the Caribbean, before returning to Norfolk at the end of February to prepare for a Mediterranean and North Atlantic cruise. Sailing on May 26, she stopped at ports in Norway, Germany, Scotland, Spain, Italy, and Malta before returning home on September 20.
After an overhaul at the beginning of 1968, the USS Argonaut traveled briefly to Florida before arriving back at Norfolk and preparing for deactivation. She was decommissioned and removed from the Naval Register on December 2, 1968. Subsequently she was sold to Canada where she served in the Royal Canadian Navy as the Rainbow until December 31, 1974.
Many United States Navy vessels contained large amounts of asbestos, as the substance was once used extensively as an insulator and fire-proofing material. Many people who served onboard these vessels, or were involved in building, repairing, or outfitting them, have subsequently developed asbestos-related diseases due to asbestos exposure. If you've developed an asbestos-related disease as a result of involvement with Navy vessels, contact us for information about your legal options.
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