Lost Subs - USS Grayback (SS-208)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Compiled July 2, 2008, by David Barth.
USS Grayback (SS-208), a Tambor-class submarine, was the first ship of the United States Navy to be named for the
lake herring.
Her keel was laid down by the Electric Boat Company in Groton, Connecticut. She was launched on 31 January 1941
sponsored by Mrs. Wilson Brown, wife of Rear Admiral Wilson Brown, Superintendent of the United States Naval Academy,
and commissioned on 30 June 1941 with Lieutenant Willard A. Saunders in command.
Attached to the Atlantic Fleet Grayback conducted her shakedown cruise in Long Island Sound out of Newport, New London,
and New York City. In company with Grampus (SS-207) she departed New London, Connecticut, on 8 September for patrol duty
in the Caribbean Sea and Chesapeake Bay; then arrived Portsmouth, New Hampshire, on 30 November for overhaul. With the
United States's entry into the war, Grayback sailed for Pearl Harbor on 8 February.
First patrol
Grayback's first war patrol from 15 February to 10 April took her along the coast of Saipan and Guam. There she
participated in a deadly four-day game of hide-and-seek with an enemy submarine; the enemy I-boat fired two torpedoes
at Grayback on the morning of 22 February, then continued to trail her across the Pacific. Grayback spotted the enemy
conning tower a couple of times, and the Japanese ship broached once; but the Grayback could not get into position to
attack. After four nerve-wracking days, Grayback shook the other sub and continued on patrol. First blood for her
came on 17 March as she sank a 3291-ton cargo ship off Port Lloyd.
Grayback's second war patrol met with a dearth of targets although she even took the unusual and risky measure of
patrolling surfaced during the day. On 22 June she arrived at Fremantle, Australia, which was to remain her home
base for most of the war. Her third and fourth war patrols, in the South China Sea and St. George's Passage were
equally frustrating as Grayback was hampered by bright moonlight, shallow and treacherous water, and enemy patrol
craft. Despite these hazards, she damaged several freighters and also got in a shot at another Japanese submarine.
However, the very presence of Grayback and her sister ships in these waters—the threat they presented to shipping and
the number of enemy escorts they tied up—was an important factor in the successful conclusion of the Guadalcanal
campaign, America's first offensive campaign in the Pacific war.
Fifth patrol
The fifth war patrol began as Grayback sailed from Australia on 7 December 1942. Only a week out of port, Pharmacist's
Mate Harry B. Roby was called upon to perform an emergency appendectomy, the second to be done on a patrolling submarine.
With Grayback running silent and steady a hundred feet beneath the surface, the untutored Roby successfully removed the
infected appendix, and his patient was back standing watch by the end of the patrol. Then 20 December, Grayback enjoyed
"a Jap appetizer for Christmas dinner," as she battle surfaced to sink four landing barges with her deck guns. Four days
later she was again fired on by an enemy submarine but maneuvered to avoid the torpedoes. On 3 January 1943 she gained
her revenge by sending to the bottom I-18, one of the 25 Japanese submarines chalked up by the Pacific
submarines.
On 5 January Grayback served as beacon ship for the bombardment of Munda Bay and also indulged in some hair-raising
rescue work. Lying off Munda early in the morning of 5 January, she received word that six survivors of a crashed B-25
Mitchell bomber were holed up on the island. Grayback sent ashore two men, then submerged at dawn to avoid enemy
aircraft. The submariners located the downed aviators, three of whom were injured, and hid out with them in the jungle.
As night fell, Grayback surfaced offshore and by coded light signals directed the small boat "home safe" with the
rescued aviators. For this episode skipper Edward C. Stephan received the Navy Cross.
Grayback continued on patrol, torpedoing and damaging several Japanese ships. On 17 January she attacked a destroyer
escorting a large maru, hoping to disable the escort and then sink the freighter with her deck guns. However, the
destroyer evaded the torpedoes and dropped 19 depth charges on Grayback. One blew a gasket on a manhole cover, and the
submarine, leaking seriously, was ordered back to Brisbane where she arrived 23 February.
Sixth patrol
On her sixth war patrol from 16 February to 4 April 1943, Grayback again had a run of bad luck and returned
empty-handed from the Bismarck Islands-Solomon Islands area. Her newly installed SJ radar had failed to function;
and although she had taken several shots at marus, none were sunk.
Seventh patrol
The seventh patrol was more successful. Departing Brisbane on 25 April, Grayback intercepted a convoy whose position
had been radioed to her by Albacore (SS-218) on 11 May. In a night surface attack Grayback fired a spread of six
torpedoes at the seven freighters and their three escorts. The three escorts charged and she had to go deep to elude
the attacking enemy. She was credited with the sinking of cargo ship Yodogawa Maru. On 16 May she torpedoed and
seriously damaged a destroyer. The following day Grayback intercepted four marus with one escort and sank freighter
England Maru and damaged two others before she was forced to dive. She arrived Pearl Harbor on 30 May, then proceeded
to San Francisco, California, for a much needed overhaul.
Eighth Patrol
Arriving Pearl Harbor on 12 September 1943, Grayback prepared for her eighth war patrol. Sailing 26 September with Shad
(SS-235), she rendezvoused with Cero (SS-225) at Midway Island to form the first of the Submarine Force's highly
successful wolf packs. The three submarines under Captain "Swede" Momsen in Cero, cruised the China Sea and returned to
base with claims of 38,000 tons sunk and 3300 damaged. Grayback accounted for two ships, a passenger-cargo vessel
torpedoed 14 October and a former light cruiser, Awata Maru, torpedoed after an end-around run on a fast convoy 22
October. Wolf pack tactics came into play 2 October as Grayback closed a convoy already attacked by Shad and
administered the coup de grace to a 9000-ton transport listing from two of Shad's torpedoes. The submarines had now
expended all torpedoes, and on 10 November they returned to Midway.
Ninth patrol
With almost a quarter of her crew untested in battle Grayback departed Pearl Harbor for the East China Sea on 2
December for her ninth war patrol. Within five days of her first contact with Japanese ships, she had expended all
her torpedoes in a brilliant series of attacks which netted four ships for a total of over 10,000 tons. On the night
of 18 December to 19 December Grayback wreaked havoc on a convoy of four freighters and three escorts. She sent
freighter Gyokurei Maru and escort Numakaze to the bottom and damaged several others in surface attack. Two nights
later, 20 December to 21 December, she spotted another convoy of six ships; and, after an end-around run she fired a
spread of nine torpedoes into the heart of the Japanese formation. This first attack sunk one freighter and damaged
another before Grayback dived to elude depth charges. Three hours later she surfaced and sank a second freighter.
After an unsuccessful attack the following night had exhausted her torpedo supply, Grayback headed home. Undaunted by
lack of torpedoes, the submarine battle surfaced 27 December and sank a good-sized fishing boat with deck guns before
reaching Pearl Harbor on 4 January 1944.
Tenth Patrol
Grayback's tenth patrol, her most successful in terms of tonnage sunk, was also to be her last. She sailed from Pearl
Harbor on 28 January 1944, for the East China Sea. On 24 February Grayback radioed that she had sunk two cargo ships
19 February and had damaged two others. On 25 February she transmitted her second and final report. That morning she
had sunk tanker Toshin Maru and severely damaged another. With only two torpedoes remaining, she was ordered home
from patrol. Due to reach Midway on 7 March, Grayback did not arrive. On 30 March ComSubPac listed her as missing
and presumed lost with all hands.
From captured Japanese records the submarine's last few days can be pieced together. Heading home through the East
China Sea, on 27 February Grayback used her last two torpedoes to sink the freighter Ceylon Maru. That same day, a
Japanese carrier-based plane spotted a submarine on the surface in the East China Sea and attacked. According to
Japanese reports the submarine "exploded and sank immediately," but antisubmarine craft were called in to depth-charge
the area, clearly marked by a trail of air bubbles, until at last a heavy oil slick swelled to the surface. Grayback
had ended her last patrol, one which cost the enemy some 21,594 tons of shipping.
Grayback ranked 20th among all submarines in total tonnage sunk with 63,835 tons and 24th in number of ships sunk with
14. The submarine and crew had received two Navy Unit Commendations for their seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth war
patrols.
Grayback received eight battle stars for World War II service.