Lost Subs - USS Trigger (SS-237)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Compiled July 2, 2008, by David Barth.
USS Trigger (SS-237) was a Gato-class submarine, the first ship of the United States Navy to be named for the
triggerfish, any of numerous deep-bodied fishes of warm seas having an anterior dorsal fin with two or three stout
erectile spines.
Trigger's keel was laid down on 1 February 1941 at Mare Island, California, by the Mare Island Navy Yard. She was
launched on 22 October 1941 sponsored by Mrs. Walter N. Vernou and commissioned on 30 January 1942 with Lieutenant
Commander Jack H. Lewis (Class of 1927) in command.
The submarine sailed for Hawaii on 22 May and reached Pearl Harbor the following week. She sortied for Midway Island
with Task Group 7.2 (TG 7.2) on 29 May in anticipation of a Japanese attack on that island. Her station during the
ensuing Battle of Midway was northeast of Midway Island, and she remained there without contacting any enemy
shipping until she was ordered back to Pearl Harbor on 9 June.
First patrol: June-August 1942
On 26 June, Trigger got underway for the Aleutian Islands to patrol an area west of Cape Wrangell, Attu Island. She
encountered six destroyers, three freighters and a patrol boat, attacking none, before calling at Dutch Harbor on 8
August en route back to Hawaii.
Second patrol: September-November 1942
Trigger's second war patrol, conducted from 23 September to 8 November with Commander Roy S. Benson (Class of 1929)
in command, took her to Japanese Home Waters. In the early morning hours of 5 October, the submarine sighted smoke
on the horizon and headed for it. A vessel soon appeared, coming toward the submarine. As the target approached, the
submarine identified it as a small ship. Trigger then surfaced and manned her machine guns. However, when the
submarine neared the target, she learned that the Japanese ship was larger than she had at first appeared to be.
Enemy shells soon began exploding close to Trigger, and the 4000-ton ship turned and came on fast in an attempt to
ram. The submarine barely avoided a collision as she submerged for an attack. Trigger fired two torpedoes and heard
one hit. She then surfaced and gave chase, only to have the target again open fire. The submarine missed with three
more torpedoes and then discontinued the pursuit.
Before dawn on the morning of 17 October, Trigger made a surface attack on a freighter off the Bungo Suido. She fired
two spreads of torpedoes which sank Holland Maru with her guns still firing. That night, a destroyer came out of Bungo
Suido and dropped a string of depth charges near the submarine. Trigger fired three torpedoes "down the throat" at the
onrushing destroyer and, one minute later, observed an explosion so powerful it threw enough flame and water into the
air to obscure the target. When the air cleared, the enemy ship was still intact, suggesting Trigger's first torpedo
may have exploded prematurely, detonating the next two by its turbulence. The submarine fired one more torpedo as the
enemy disappeared, but failed to score a hit.
Near midnight of 20 October, Trigger fired a spread of four torpedoes from very close range, 900 yards (820 m), in a
surface attack on a 10,000-ton tanker. Two torpedoes hit the enemy ship as it turned in an attempt to ram. The
submarine went to 100 feet (30 m) to evade a counterattack and heard a heavy explosion as either gasoline,
magazines, or boilers blew up. She then came up to periscope level but found nothing in sight. (This sinking was
not confirmed by JANAC postwar.) Four days later, Trigger attacked a large enemy tanker in ballast. A spread of
three torpedoes produced three observed hits, one near the target's stern. The screws of the enemy ship stopped,
and she began emitting heavy white smoke aft. She soon got underway again. Trigger fired her last torpedo at the
ship as it was moving off and missed. That night, she surfaced and began her homeward voyage.
Third patrol: December 1942-January 1943
From 3 December 1942 to 22 January 1943, the submarine conducted a combined minelaying and offensive patrol in
waters surrounding the Japanese home islands. On 20 December, she began planting a minefield off Inubo Saki,
Honshu. Trigger planted the northern half of the field and was working on the southern part when a cargo ship
passed her, heading into the newly-laid mines. Five minutes later, a violent explosion rocked the freighter
which sank as an escort circled her. The submarine later heard another explosion from the direction of the
minefield and, when she surfaced the next day, found the field was covered by smoke.
On 22 December, Trigger sighted a ship approaching from Uraga and made a surface attack. A spread of three
torpedoes produced one hit forward of the bridge, and the target started to settle by the bow. The submarine
fired one more torpedo into the ship and, when last seen, Teifuku Maru was awash forward with her screws nearly
out of the water. On 31 December 1942, she attacked a cargo ship loaded with planes. Trigger fired three
torpedoes from extremely close range, 700 yards (640 m), and watched two hit. The target began to list to
starboard and was down by the bow. Sound reported a heavy secondary explosion. The submarine came up to
periscope level and saw the freighter with her stern high out of the water and a destroyer approaching.
She went deep and when she next came up for a look, there was nothing to be seen. (The sinking was not
confirmed by JANAC postwar.)
On 10 January 1943, a Japanese destroyer approached Trigger, and the submarine fired three torpedoes from
1600 yards (1460 m). One hit under the well deck and folded the destroyer's forecastle up at a 45-degree
angle, and another hit the target's stern. Soon, the Minekaze-class destroyer Okikaze sank on an even
keel.
Fourth patrol: February-April 1943
Trigger stood out of Midway Island on 13 February to patrol off the Palau Islands. Two weeks later, she
fired four torpedoes at a freighter, but the target managed to steer between them. Heavy air cover
prevented a second attack. On 4 March, the submarine attacked a freighter in a rain squall, but all
three of her torpedoes missed. On 15 March, Trigger sighted a convoy steaming in two columns. There were
two freighters in the right hand column and three in the left with an escort on the outboard bow of each.
She worked her way between the two columns and fired three torpedoes at each of the leading ships. She hit
the lead freighter in the left hand column twice but missed her target on the right because it unexpectedly
changed course. Trigger then fired three more torpedoes at the right lead ship at just 700 yards (640 m)
and observed two hits before the escorts forced her to go deep. When she surfaced again, there was nothing
to be seen. Trigger was later officially credited with having sunk Momoha Maru, a 3103-ton cargo ship.
That night, the submarine fired six torpedoes at a ship that was being towed by a smaller freighter. Five
of the torpedoes missed, and the sixth made a circular run and passed over the submarine's engine room. A
shaken crew broke off the attack.
On 20 March, the submarine fired three torpedoes at the lead ship in a convoy of four cargomen. One hit
caused the target to list ten degrees to port and stop, but it soon got underway and rejoined the convoy.
Trigger terminated the patrol at the Submarine Base, Pearl Harbor, on 6 April.
Fifth patrol: April-June 1943
Between 30 April and 22 June, the submarine made a patrol which returned her to Japanese home waters. Directed
by Ultra from Pearl Harbor, Trigger lay athwart the projected track of Admiral Koga returning from Truk. Koga's
task force came in sight the morning of 22 May, but zigged away, out of range, "a bitter disappointment". On
28 May, Trigger contacted two freighters off Iro Saki and launched three torpedoes at the larger. One hit its
target aft. When last seen, the ship was down by the stern. The next day, the submarine fired a spread of three
torpedoes at a small cargo ship. Two missed and the third exploded prematurely. She then launched a fourth which
apparently hit but failed to explode.
On 1 June, the submarine was searching for Japanese shipping off Sagami Nada when she sighted two columns of
smoke. She closed the range toward a firing position, made out two cargo ships, and fired a spread of three
torpedoes at each target. Hit in her stern, the lead ship, Noborikawa Maru, sank immediately. The second ship
saw the torpedo wakes, turned and passed between them. Trigger then fired a torpedo at the oncoming ship; but,
if the torpedo reached the target, it failed to explode.
Again alerted by Ultra, on 10 June (her last day on station), Trigger sighted an aircraft carrier protected by
two destroyers. She closed and sent six torpedoes streaking onward against Koga's flagship from only 1200 yards
(1100 m). The submarine heard four explosions as she went deep to avoid the escorts which kept her down for
several hours. Yet two missed ahead, and one failed to explode. The damaged Hiyo limped into Tokyo Bay and
was out of action for almost a year. Lockwood, who knew Hiyo's fate, was furious. Had the torpedoes functioned
correctly, Benson would have claimed her. The next day, Trigger began her return voyage to Pearl Harbor. Just
after her triumphant return, the Mark XIV torpedo's defective magnetic exploder was ordered
deactivated.
Sixth patrol: September 1943
On 1 September, after a yard overhaul, Trigger (now in the charge of Commander Robert Edson "Dusty" Dornin
{Class of 1935}) was ready to begin her sixth war patrol. It took her into the East China Sea, off the China
coast, north of Formosa. On 17 September, she made two hits on a Japanese freighter, one aft and one on the
bow, but both torpedoes proved to be duds. The next day, she again contacted the same ship and fired four
torpedoes at her. One struck Yowa Maru, and the 6435-ton cargo ship slid beneath the waves.
21 September was Trigger's best day. She was patrolling some 30 miles (48 km) north of the Hoka Sho light
when she sighted a convoy of three tankers and three freighters protected by Japanese planes. The submarine
attacked the tankers first, firing three torpedoes at the leader and three at the second. One hit aft was
seen on the lead tanker, and flames shot over 500 feet (152 m) into the air. Her crew, dressed in whites,
could be seen running forward to escape the fire. One torpedo hit the second tanker amidships, and it broke
in half beneath the stack and sank immediately. Trigger turned and fired three stern tubes at the third tanker.
This target swung toward the submarine, and all three torpedoes missed. Trigger then fired another torpedo
which hit the ship's starboard side. When the submarine went deep, her commanding officer slipped and fell
into the periscope well as the quartermaster was lowering it. He supported himself on his elbows, and the
quartermaster heard his shouts in time to prevent a serious accident. Sonar reported two more explosions
before the submarine came up to periscope depth to resume the attack. Trigger fired two bow torpedoes at
the third freighter in the column and scored two hits on the target which went down by the bow. The submarine
then made two more attacks on the freighter, but all of her torpedoes either missed or were duds. During the
three and one-half hours of action, Trigger sank two tankers, Shiriya and Shoyo Maru, and a freighter, Argun
Maru, for a total of 20,660 tons of enemy shipping. The submarine returned to Midway Island on 30 September
to be refitted and rearmed.
Seventh patrol: October-December 1943
The East China Sea and Yellow Sea were Trigger's objective for her seventh patrol. She stood out of Midway
Island on 22 October and proceeded to her patrol area. At 22:00 on 1 November, she sighted a convoy that was
steaming in two columns. When a ship in the nearer column overlapped one in the more distant group, she fired
a spread of three torpedoes at them. One torpedo struck the nearer freighter in her bow and one hit the farther
ship amidships. The submarine saw the nearer ship go down by the bow, before she herself was forced to go
deep where she was severely depth-charged by two escorts.
In the early morning of 2 November, Trigger fired three torpedoes at a freighter and scored one hit. At
0050, she attacked the ship again with a spread of another three. Two of them hit forward, and Yawata Maru
went down, bow first, in a vertical plunge. Two hours and 25 minutes later, Trigger fired three torpedoes at
a 7148-ton transport. All torpedoes hit the ship, and Delagoa Maru disintegrated. On 5 November, the submarine
attacked a convoy of three cargo ships protected by one destroyer and two planes. Trigger fired three bow tubes
at the second ship in the convoy and one bow tube at the third before she went deep to avoid the escort which
dropped 20 depth charges. Thinking she was clear, the submarine came to periscope depth and was greeted by five
near bomb misses.
On 13 November, Trigger made a submerged approach on a convoy of nine merchantmen and four escorts. After the
Japanese ships zigged, the submarine found herself between two columns of ships—with empty bow tubes. She
emptied her stern tubes at the last and biggest ship, believed to be a transport, from a pointblank range,
800yd (730 m). The target, which carried a large deck cargo, took one hit aft and one under her stack. The
submarine went deep, received a short depth charge attack, and came up to periscope depth to learn that her
target had gone down. On 21 November, Trigger sighted a cargoman and closed to 2000 yards (1800 m) before
firing four torpedoes. Two hits started the victim down by the bow as the submarine's crew took turns at the
periscope to watch Eizan Maru sink. More than a fortnight later, the submarine arrived at Pearl Harbor on 8
December 1943.
Eighth patrol: January-February 1944
Trigger stood out to sea on New Year's Day 1944 to begin her eighth war patrol, this time in the Truk-Guam
shipping lanes. On 27 January, she sighted the conning tower of an Ro-class submarine dead ahead. Trigger
set up to fire a bow shot from 800 yards (730 m). She came to periscope depth and saw the Japanese submarine,
then less than 100 yards (91 m) away, was preparing to attack. Trigger went to 150 feet (50 m), expecting a
torpedo at any minute, but sound heard no torpedo screws. She came up to periscope depth and saw the Japanese
periscope so she decided to make an end around. When Trigger returned to periscope depth, the enemy had
disappeared.
Four days later, she contacted a convoy of three ships accompanied by two Fubuki-class destroyers. The submarine
scored two hits on the coastal minelayer Nasami which disappeared in a cloud of smoke and debris. The nearer
destroyer began closing the range, and Trigger missed it with four aft tubes. She caught up with the convoy
again and fired five torpedoes at the last ship. Two hits produced flames that reached masthead height and
several secondary explosions that marked the end of the 11,933-ton converted submarine tender Yasukuni Maru.
Over three weeks later, the submarine terminated the patrol when she arrived at Pearl Harbor on 23
February.
Ninth patrol: March-May 1944
On 23 March, Trigger (in the able hands of Commander Frederick J. "Fritz" Harlfinger II {Class of 1935}, still
with "Ned" Beach as exec) headed for the Palau Islands on her ninth war patrol. In the early morning of 8 April,
she contacted a convoy of approximately 20 large ships with an estimated 25 escorts and closed to attack. When
she raised her periscope, she saw a destroyer 150 feet (46 m) away firing at the scope and attempting to ram.
The submarine loosed four torpedoes at the convoy and went deep as several more escorts joined the attack. On
her way down, she heard four explosions. Trigger ran at 300 feet (91 m) or more for 17 hours as six escorts
dogged her trail and rained down numerous depth charges. Six exploded extremely close. When the submarine
surfaced, her forward torpedo room was flooded to her deck plates, the hull air induction and most compartments
were in about the same condition. The bow planes, trim pump, sound gear, and both radars were all dead. Her radio
antenna was grounded, and the submarine could not transmit. The crew spent the next four days making repairs "by
use of spares, baling wire, and considerable ingenuity."
Trigger met submarine Tang (SS-306) on 14 April and exchanged information by line gun. The next day, Trigger's
executive officer went on board Tang by a rubber boat, to borrow an air compressor part and to make plans for a
coordinated search and attack. On 18 April, Tang's executive officer delivered spare parts for the air compressor
to Trigger, and she continued on patrol.
Shortly before midnight on 26 April, the submarine contacted a convoy of six ships off the eastern Palau Islands.
She fired six torpedoes, from 2,400 yards (2,200 m), at four ships that were closely bunched and overlapping.
Four hits were seen and heard from a big explosion on each ship. Suddenly, a terrific explosion blew up one of
the closer ships. One of the more distant ships stood straight up on her bow and then sank immediately. At six
minutes after midnight, Trigger fired three torpedoes at a group of ships and heard one timed explosion. At
0157, she fired four torpedoes at a damaged cargo ship and two at an escort. The cargo ship received two more
hits. Five minutes later, the submarine fired three stern tubes at a group of three escorts, and the middle one
disappeared in a cloud of smoke. During the attack, Trigger sank the 11,739-ton passenger-cargo ship Miike Maru
and heavily damaged the destroyer escort Kasado, the 9467-ton cargo ship Hawaii Maru, and the 8811-ton cargo
ship Asosan Maru. Trigger returned to Pearl Harbor on 20 May and four days later, headed for the United States
for a major overhaul. She arrived at San Francisco, California, on 31 May and, after overhaul, returned to
Hawaii on 11 September.
Tenth patrol: September-November 1944
On 24 September, Trigger got underway to take station off the east coast of Formosa and perform life guard patrol
for bomber strikes due on 12 October. The morning of the strikes, she rescued a pilot from aircraft carrier Bunker
Hill (CV-17) whose burning plane had crash-landed nearby. On 19 October, as the invasion of the Philippines was
about to begin, she contacted a convoy of two Takao-class heavy cruisers, one Nagara-class cruiser, two other
light cruisers, and several destroyers with air cover. Trigger had no chance to fire but reported the contact.
On 30 October, she fired four torpedoes at a tanker but missed. She then fired another four from her stern tubes
and heard one hit the target before running up the periscope to watch the other three blow off part of the
stern, but the ship did not sink. Trigger went deep as 78 depth charges were rained down on her within the
next hour, but caused no damage. The damaged 10,021 ton tanker Takane Maru was later sunk by submarines Salmon
(SS-182) and Sterlet (SS-392). The next morning, Trigger received word from Salmon that she had been heavily
damaged by depth charges and was unable to submerge. Trigger rendezvoused with Salmon that night and was joined
by Silversides (SS-236) and Sterlet to escort the damaged submarine to Saipan. They were provided with air cover
from the Mariana Islands and arrived at Tanapag Harbor on 3 November. A week later, Trigger departed with six
other submarines but was ordered to discontinue her patrol on 17 November and returned to Guam.
Eleventh patrol: December 1944-February 1945
On 28 December 1944, Trigger headed for the Bungo Suido-Kii Suido area to begin her 11th war patrol. At 2105 on
3 January 1945, she sighted a light, and radar made a doubtful contact. Thirty minutes later, a torpedo passed
by her starboard side. She reversed course and cleared the area but returned two days later. That day, she
sighted a periscope at 2,000 yards (1,800 m), and realized that instead of hunting, she was being hunted. She
slipped away.
On 29 January, she made radar contact from 23,000 yards (21,000 m) on a large convoy with six escorts and well
covered by aircraft. As she closed, the moon came out bright and clear. An enemy bomber turned and started in as
radar picked up another plane coming in astern at 5,000 yards (4,600 m). The submarine went deep, and the convoy
slowly pulled away. The next day, the ship was ordered to terminate her patrol, and she returned to Guam on 3
February.
Twelfth patrol: March 1945
Trigger (with new skipper Commander David R. Connole) stood out to sea on 11 March to begin her 12th war patrol
and headed for the Nansei Shoto area. On 18 March, she attacked a convoy west of the islands, sinking the cargo
ship Tsukushi Maru No.3 and damaging another. The attack was reported on 20 March, and the submarine was subsequently
ordered to radio as many movements of the convoy as possible to help find a safe passage through a known mined area
of the East China Sea. On 24 March, Trigger was ordered to begin patrolling west of the islands the next day,
outside the 100 fathom curve, and to steer clear of restricted areas. On 26 March, she was ordered to join a wolf
pack called "Earl's Eliminators" and to acknowledge receipt of the message. A weather report came from the
submarine that day but no confirmation of her having received the message. The weather report was Trigger's last
transmission. On 4 April, she was ordered to proceed to Midway Island, but she had not arrived by 1 May and was
reported as presumed lost.
Postwar records indicate she torpedoed and sank the repair ship Odate on 27 March. The next day, Japanese planes
and ships joined in a two-hour attack on a submarine heard by Silversides, Sea Dog (SS-401), Hackleback (SS-295),
and Threadfin (SS-410) in adjacent areas. Threadfin was the only one of these submarines attacked that day, and
she reported hearing many depth charges and several heavy explosions east of her after the attack on her ceased.
Postwar Japanese records showed a Japanese aircraft detected and bombed a submarine on 28 March 1945. Surface
ships were then guided to the spot and delivered an intensive depth charging. After two hours, a large oil
slick appeared.
Trigger was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 11 July 1945.
Trigger was immortalized and eulogized in Beach's 1952 book Submarine!.
Awards
Trigger received 11 battle stars for World War II service and the Presidential Unit Citation for her fifth, sixth,
and seventh war patrols. She is credited with sinking 18 ships (tied for seventh on the list of confirmed sinkings
by number of ships with Seawolf and Rasher), totaling 86,552 tons (seventh on the list of confirmed sinkings by
tonnage), according to the official JANAC accounting postwar.
Presidential Unit Citation
Citation For outstanding performance in combat during her Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh War Patrols against the enemy.
Employing highly daring and hazardous tactics, the USS TRIGGER struck at the enemy with consistent aggressiveness,
seeking out and pursuing her targets with dogged determination regardless of unfavorable attack conditions.
Her exceptionally notable record of severe damage inflicted on hostile shipping and the gallant fighting spirit
of her officers and men reflect great credit upon the United States Naval Service.