Submarines & Asbestos

USS Mingo SS-261

The USS Mingo was a States Navy Gato-class submarine who was awarded five Battle Stars for her World War II service. These results were aided by an armament that consisted of 10 x 21-inch torpedo tubes, 24 torpedoes, 1 x 3-inch / 50 caliber deck gun, and four machine guns. She could carry 60 sailors and endure 48 hours at 2 knots when submerged to 300 feet, and 75 patrol days. Her 311 foot long body could reach a top speed of 21 knots per hour while surfaced, and 9 knots if submerged. This was possible due to propulsion comprised of 4 x diesel engines driving electrical generators, 2 x 126-cell batteries, 4 x high-speed electric motors with reduction gears, and two propellers.

Early War Damage

Mingo was laid down in 1942 by the Electric Boat Company and launched the same year. She was commissioned in1943 and began her shakedown off Long Island. After her fitting out, Mingo traveled first to Newport, Rhode Island, to assist with the torpedo station. She then set sail for her maiden voyage to Pearl Harbor through the Panama Canal Zone. Mingo was ready for her first war patrol by June, and immediately struck and damaged three Japanese merchant ships. The voyage ended with a bombing of Sorol Island. USS Mingo embarked on her next mission that fall, when she set sail around the Marshalls; Carolines; and Marianas; while doing so, she fired at, and seriously damaged, a Japanese cruiser.

Success and Sadness

By that time Mingo needed an overhaul, which she received at Mare Island Navy Yard in San Pablo Bay, California. She could not commence operations until February, 1944, when she stood out for the Pacific once again and joined the US 7th Fleet. Her orders were to patrol the South China Sea, and then leave for Brisbane. Once in Australia, directives took her to Manus, in the Admiralty Islands, for additional training in June. After those exercises, USS Mingo sailed to the Philippines; within a month of arriving, she succeeded in sinking the 2,100-ton destroyer Tamanawi. Then sent to perform lifeguard duty around the Philippines and Borneo during the Thirteenth Air Force strikes, she struck and sank four coastal freighters. However, she still excelled as lifeguard, saving a total of 16 B-24 Liberator aviators. (Six were afloat in rubber boats in Makassar Strait and 10 were near Celebes Island.) During this period, Mingo was based at Fremantle, Australia, and her consequent jobs were in vicinities west of Borneo. It was on Christmas Day, 1944, that she attacked a Japanese convoy-sinking the 9,486-ton tanker Manila Maru, and damaging a gunboat escort. It was somewhat symbolic that the Japanese lost the vessel named after the Philippine capital around the same time they lost their hold on the city itself. This coup was repeated with another attack before Mingo required more repairs. Stationed next in the South China Sea, Mingo had the misfortune of losing two men in a hurricane before being told to go to the Gulf of Siam.

Working for the Japanese

Traveling back to Hawaii that August, Mingo heard that the war was over, and she returned to the West Coast. USS Mingo was decommissioned in January, 1947 at Mare Island, and she thus entered the Pacific Reserve Fleet. Eight years later she was re-commissioned and transferred to Japan under the Military Assistance Program. Her new name was Kuroshio, and she served the Japanese Navy until being decommissioned in March of 1966. It was in 1973 that the former USS Mingo was sunk as a target.

Mingo's tragic loss of life was the singular incident of catastrophe in her five-year war contribution, and it seems rather ironic that it was due to inclement weather and not enemy fire. Such a situation proves that disaster could occur, regardless of the crew's training and response to proper protocol. The crew, as well as the rest of the country, must have been deeply saddened that such a horrible fate fell upon those men. Military life was often fraught with such dangers, and surprisingly, decades later, former sailors must still be concerned that they were placed in peril. This time it is from the suspicion that they may have potentially inhaled or swallowed tiny asbestos fibers that could have been inside their submarine. Asbestos was heavily relied upon in the middle of the last century to offer additional protection against heat, flame, fire and electricity in all construction, and was seen as especially useful onboard ships. With its versatility and lightweight composition, asbestos seemed ideal for submarines. But, if its sealant became ripped during repeated jarring, it gave tiny pieces of asbestos the chance to escape into the vessel's air system. Unfortunately, those pieces have remained in people's bodies for up to 40 or 50 years, and their long term irritation has been known to cause serious medical conditions and even malignancies. If any former crew member of the USS Mingo notices unusual physical symptoms, they should contact a physician immediately and then call us for additional information.

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