Lost Subs - USS Escolar (SS-294)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Compiled July 2, 2008, by David Barth.
USS Escolar (SS-294), a Balao-class submarine, was the only ship of the United States Navy to be named for the
escolar, a predatory fish of the open ocean related to the mackerels and tunnies. Her keel was laid down by Cramp
Shipbuilding Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She was launched on 18 April 1943 sponsored by Mrs. J. Bilisoly
Hudgins. She was transferred to Boston Navy Yard after launch and thence to Portsmouth Naval Shipyard prior to her
commissioning on 2 June 1944 with Commander W. J. Millican in command.
Escolar had her final training for combat at Pearl Harbor, from which she put out for her first war patrol 18
September 1944. After topping off fuel at Midway Island, she joined Croaker (SS-246) and Perch (SS-313) for a
coordinated wolf pack patrol in the Yellow Sea. Commander Millican led this coordinated attack group, which was
designated "Millican's Marauders."
On 30 September, when Escolar was estimated to be about north of the Bonin Islands, a listening post received a partial
message from her:
THIS FROM ESCOLAR X ATTACKED WITH DECK GUN BOAT SIMILAR TO EX-ITALIAN PETER GEORGE FIVE OTYI
Escolar was then forced to break off the transmission and the engagement with the gunboat.
No further transmissions were received by bases from Escolar, but Perch and Croaker recorded intra-ship communications
with her until 17 October, when Perch received a routine message from Escolar giving her position and course. She was
never heard from again.
Had Escolar ended her patrol on the scheduled date, she would have arrived at Midway Island about 13 November 1944. All
attempts to contact Escolar failed and she was reported on 27 November 1944 as presumed lost.
Information supplied by the Japanese on anti-submarine attacks gives no clue as to the cause of her loss, but the
Yellow Sea area is thought to have been mined. Her course as transmitted to Perch does not cross any known Japanese
mine fields, but positions of mines laid before April 1945 are not precisely known. However, the most likely
explanation for her end remains that she detonated a mine.