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USS S-3 (SS-107)

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USS S-3 (SS-107)
Career Image:US Naval Jack 48 stars.svg
Ordered:
Laid down: 29 August 1917
Launched: 21 December 1918
Commissioned: 30 January 1919
Decommissioned: 24 March 1931
Fate: scrapped
Stricken: 25 January 1937
General characteristics
Displacement: 876 tons surfaced, 1092 tons submerged
Length: 231 feet
Beam: 21 feet 10 inches
Draft: 13 feet 1 inch
Propulsion:
Speed: 15 knots surfaced, 11 knots submerged
Range:
Complement: 38 officer and men
Armament: one four-inch gun, four 21 inch torpedo tubes
Motto:

USS S-3 (SS-107) was the prototype of the "Government-type" S-class submarines of the United States Navy. (S-1 (SS-105) was the "Holland-type" prototype and S-2 (SS-106) was the "Lake-type".) Her keel was laid down on 29 August 1917 by the Portsmouth Navy Yard. She was launched on 21 December 1918 sponsored by Mrs. William L. Hill, and commissioned on 30 January 1919 with Commander John W. Lewis in command.

Following outfitting and trials, S-3 began her career with training operations along the New England coast operating out of Portsmouth and New London, Connecticut. In 1920, she twice visited Havana, Cuba, first in January, and again in December.

In July of 1921, she was attached to SubDiv 12 which, along with SubDiv 18, was to rendezvous off Portsmouth for the longest voyage on record, at that time, for American submarines. The two divisions were assigned to the Asiatic Fleet as SubFlot 3 at the Cavite Naval Station in the Philippine Islands. They sailed via the Panama Canal to Pearl Harbor where S-3 was detached and reassigned to operate on the West Coast from Mare Island, California. The two divisions continued on and successfully completed the voyage, arriving at Cavite on 1 December.

S-3 departed Pearl Harbor on 9 November and sailed to the West Coast where she operated until mid-July 1923. On 17 July, she took departure from San Francisco Bay to retransit the Panama Canal en route to New London.

Reaching New London on 5 September, she was attached to SubDiv 2, Atlantic Fleet, and assigned experimental duty at the Submarine School at New London, assuming the duties of S-1 (SS-105), flagship of SubDiv 2, which was conducting special experiments with aircraft. During the remainder of 1923 and the years following, into 1927, she ranged the East Coast conducting training operations and evaluating new techniques in submarine development.

In July of 1927, S-3 and S-1 formed SubDiv 4 and began a schedule which included operational cruises to the Panama Canal Zone in the spring months of 1928, 1929, and 1930. The remaining months of those years were spent in operations along the New England coast.

Early in 1931, S-3 was ordered to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for inactivation. She was decommissioned there on 24 March and laid up. She was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 25 January 1937 and subsequently scrapped.

[edit] References

This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.

S-class submarine
Prototypes: S-1 (Holland design) - S-2 (Lake design) - S-3 (Government design)
Government (S-3) Group: S-4 - S-5 - S-6 - S-7 - S-8 - S-9 - S-10 - S-11 - S-12 - S-13 - S-14 - S-15 - S-16
Holland (S-1) Group: S-17 - S-18 - S-19 - S-20 - S-21 - S-22 - S-23 - S-24 - S-25 - S-26 - S-27 - S-28 - S-29 - S-30 - S-31 - S-32 - S-33 - S-34 - S-35 - S-36 - S-37 - S-38 - S-39 - S-40 - S-41
Third (S-42) Group: S-42 - S-43 - S-44 - S-45 - S-46 - S-47
Fourth (S-48) Group: S-48 - S-49 - S-50 - S-51
List of submarines of the United States Navy
List of submarine classes of the United States Navy
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