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The first Stingray (Submarine No. 13), was a C-class submarine in commission from 1909 to 1919 that was renamed USS C-2 in 1911 and served during World War I. The second USS Stingray (SS-186) was a Salmon-class submarine in commission from 1938 to 1945 that served during World War II.
SS-1 Holland: Unique submarine SS-2 Plunger / A-1: Lead boat of a class of 7 SS-3 Adder / A-2: SS-4 Grampus / A-3: SS-5 Moccasin / A-4: SS-6 Pike / A-5: SS-7 Porpoise / A-6: SS-8 Shark / A-7: SS-9 Octopus / C-1: Lead boat of a class of 5 SS-10 Viper / B-1: Lead boat of a class of 3 SS-11 Cuttlefish / B-2: SS-12 Tarantula / B-3: SS-13 Stingray ...
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Stingray spent her eleventh war patrol on lifeguard station for air strikes on Guam. On 11 June the submarine rescued a downed Navy aviator and the following day pulled two more airmen from the water. On 13 June, Stingray received word that a Navy airman was down approximately 500 yards (460 m) offshore. With shells exploding on either side of ...
USS Pampanito (SS-383/AGSS-383), a Balao-class submarine, is a United States Navy ship, the third named for the pompano fish. She completed six war patrols from 1944 to 1945 and served as a United States Naval Reserve training ship from 1960 to 1971.
Initially assigned to experimental Submarine Division (SubDiv) Zero, then to SubDiv 4, S-50 was based at New London, Connecticut, and, until mid-June, conducted trials in the Block Island area.
The first boat in name sequence, USS S-1 (SS-105), was commissioned in 1920 and the last numerically, USS S-51 (SS-162), in 1922. Severe production difficulties encountered by one of the contractors threw the production sequence into disarray and the last of the class actually commissioned was USS S-47 (SS-158) in September, 1925.
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