USS S-7 (SS-112)
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| |
| Career | Image:US Naval Jack 48 stars.svg |
|---|---|
| Ordered: | |
| Laid down: | 29 January 1918 |
| Launched: | 5 February 1920 |
| Commissioned: | 1 July 1920 |
| Decommissioned: | 3 April 1931 |
| Fate: | |
| 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 inches |
| Propulsion: | |
| Speed: | 15 knots surfaced, 11 knots submerged |
| Range: | |
| Complement: | 38 officers and men |
| Armament: | one four-inch gun, four 21 inch torpedo tubes |
| Motto: | |
USS S-7 (SS-112) was a second-group (S-3 or "Government") S-class submarine of the United States Navy. Her keel was laid down on 29 January 1918 by the Portsmouth Navy Yard. She was launched on 5 February 1920 sponsored by Mrs. Henry L. Wyman, and commissioned on 1 July 1920 with Lieutenant Commander Sherwood Picking in command.
S-7 sailed from New London, Connecticut, on 18 November 1920 to rendezvous with S-boats of SubDiv 18 and her own division, SubDiv 12, off New Hampshire. They proceeded via the Panama Canal to Hawaii, arriving at Pearl Harbor on 15 April 1921. Departing Pearl Harbor on 3 November, they reached Cavite, Luzon, Philippine Islands, on 1 December. This was the longest cruise on record, at that time, for American submarines.
S-7 remained in the Philippines over the next three years except for annual spring visits to Shanghai, Chefoo, Chinwangtao, Amoy, Tsingtao, and Woosung, China. She finally departed Cavite on 29 October 1924 for Mare Island, California, arriving there on 30 December.
S-7 remained at Mare Island through 1925 and operated along the West Coast in 1926, mainly at San Francisco, California, San Pedro, California, and San Diego, California. Sailing from San Francisco on 17 February 1927, she operated in the Panama Canal area from March into April, arrived at New London on 3 May, and spent the rest of the year operating along the New England coast. S-7 served in the Panama Canal area from February into April 1928, from January into April 1929, and from January into March 1930, with the remainder of those years in the northeast.
Departing New London on 22 October 1930, S-7 was decommissioned at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on 3 April 1931, and was struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 25 January 1937.
[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 |


