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USS Capelin
USS Capelin
from Wikipedia

History
United States
NameCapelin
BuilderPortsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine[1]
Laid down14 September 1942[1]
Launched20 January 1943[1]
Commissioned4 June 1943[1]
FateMissing north of Sulawesi after 2 December 1943[2]
General characteristics
Class & typeBalao-class diesel-electric submarine[2]
Displacement
  • 1,526 tons (1550 t) surfaced[2]
  • 2,414 tons (2453 t) submerged[2]
Length311 ft 9 in (95.02 m)[2]
Beam27 ft 3 in (8.31 m)[2]
Draft16 ft 10 in (5.13 m) maximum[2]
Propulsion
Speed
  • 20.25 knots (37 km/h) surfaced[6]
  • 8.75 knots (16 km/h) submerged[6]
Range11,000 nm (20,000 km) surfaced at 10 knots (19 km/h)[6]
Endurance
  • 48 hours at 2 knots (4 km/h) submerged[6]
  • 75 days on patrol
Test depth400 ft (120 m)[6]
Complement10 officers, 70–71 enlisted[6]
Armament

USS Capelin (SS-289), a Balao-class submarine, was the only ship of the United States Navy to be named for the capelin, a small fish of the smelt family. She is credited with having sunk 3,127 gross register tons of shipping on her single war patrol.

Construction and commissioning

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Capelin′s keel was laid down by Portsmouth Naval Shipyard at Kittery, Maine. She was launched on 20 January 1943, sponsored by Mrs. I. C. Bogart, and commissioned on 4 June 1943.

Service history

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View of Capelin's bow and conning tower

Capelin sailed from New London, Connecticut, on 3 September 1943, bound for Brisbane, Australia, and duty with Submarine Force, Southwest Pacific. Her first war patrol, conducted in the Molucca Sea, Flores Sea, and Banda Sea between 30 October and 15 November, found her sinking a 3127-ton Japanese cargo ship on 11 November off Ambon Island.

Capelin returned to Darwin, Australia, with a defective conning tower hatch mechanism, excessively noisy bow planes, and a defective radar tube. These flaws were corrected, and Capelin put out on her second war patrol 17 November 1943, in the Molucca Sea and Celebes Sea, and she was to pay particular attention to Kaoe Bay, Morotai Strait, Davao Gulf, and trade routes in the vicinity of Siaoe Island, Sangi Island, Talaud Islands and Sarangani Island. She was to leave her area at dark 6 December.

Disappearance and aftermath

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Sailor Peter Grabnickas[7] reading The Stray Lamb (1929) by Thorne Smith in his pinup-decorated bunk aboard USS Capelin (SS-289) at Naval Submarine Base New London in Groton, Connecticut.

The submarine Bonefish (SS-223) reported sighting an American submarine on 2 December 1943 in the area assigned to Capelin at that time. The unidentified submarine quickly dived, probably after sighting Bonefish. Bonefish sent a message via sonar giving Commander Marshall's nickname, "Steam". The other submarine returned an acknowledgement.[8] Following this, Capelin was never heard from again. The U.S. Navy broke radio silence on 9 December 1943 in an attempt to contact Capelin, but without success.

Japanese records studied after the war listed an attack by the minelayer Wakataka on a supposed United States submarine on 23 November 1943 off Kaoe Bay, Halmahera, Indonesia, with the Japanese ship noting the attack produced oily black water columns that contained wood and cork splinters and that later a raft was found. This is the only reported attack in the appropriate area at that time, and it occurred nine days before Bonefish's apparent contact with Capelin. Also, Japanese minefields are now known to have been placed in various positions along the north coast of Celebes (now known as Sulawesi) in Capelin's patrol area, and she may have been lost to a naval mine. Gone without a trace with the loss of her entire crew, Capelin remains on the list of ships lost without a known cause.

Honors and awards

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
USS Capelin (SS-289) was a of the , the only U.S. ship named for the , a small fish of the smelt family found in northern Atlantic and Pacific waters. Built at the in , she was laid down on 14 September 1942, launched on 20 January 1943 under the sponsorship of Mrs. I. C. Bogart, and commissioned on 4 June 1943 with Lieutenant Commander Elliott E. Marshall in command. Displacing 1,526 tons surfaced, measuring 311 feet 9 inches in length with a beam of 27 feet 3 inches, Capelin was armed with ten 21-inch torpedo tubes, a single , and carried a complement of approximately 80 officers and enlisted men. During , Capelin conducted her shakedown training off , before transiting the and arriving at , , on 13 to prepare for combat operations in the Pacific. She departed Darwin, , on 30 for her first war patrol, assigned to the Molucca, Flores, and Banda Seas, where on 11 November she successfully sank the 3,127-gross register ton Japanese army cargo ship Kunitama Maru northwest of using torpedoes. Returning to Darwin on 16 November 1943 with mechanical issues including a defective hatch and noisy bow planes, she underwent brief repairs before departing again on 17 November for her second patrol in the same operational area. Capelin's last known communication was on 1 December 1943 with USS Bonefish, after which she maintained and failed to respond to a contact signal on 9 December 1943, leading to her presumption of loss with all 76 hands in in the Celebes or Molucca Seas. Possible causes include an inconclusive Japanese report of an attack by the minelayer Wakataka on 23 November off Kaoe Bay, , or an explosion from enemy mines in defensive fields along the north coast of Celebes; however, no definitive has confirmed the circumstances of her sinking. For her brief but successful service, Capelin earned one battle star.

Design and construction

Balao-class features

The Balao-class submarines represented an evolutionary improvement over the preceding Gato-class diesel-electric fleet submarines, incorporating enhancements in hull strength and operational endurance to meet the demands of extended Pacific Theater patrols during World War II. Designed primarily for anti-shipping warfare, these submarines featured a robust pressure hull constructed from high-tensile steel (HTS), allowing for a greater test depth of 400 feet compared to the Gato-class's 300 feet, which reduced vulnerability to depth charges and enabled more aggressive tactical maneuvers. The class's streamlined conning tower and fairwater design further improved diving times and hydrodynamic efficiency, contributing to better stealth and survivability in combat zones. In terms of physical specifications, Balao-class submarines displaced 1,526 tons when surfaced and 2,414 tons when submerged, with an overall length of 311 feet 9 inches, a beam of 27 feet 3 inches, and a draft of 16 feet 10 inches maximum. Propulsion was provided by four General Motors Model 16-248 V16 diesel engines delivering 5,400 horsepower for surfaced operations, coupled with four high-speed General Electric electric motors producing 2,740 horsepower when submerged, driving twin propellers via reduction gears and supported by two 126-cell Sargo batteries for underwater endurance. This configuration enabled a maximum surfaced speed of 20.25 knots and a submerged speed of 8.75 knots, with a strategic range of 11,000 nautical miles at 10 knots on the surface— an increase over the Gato-class due to expanded fuel bunkers holding up to 97,140 gallons of diesel. Armament was centered on offensive torpedo capabilities, including ten 21-inch torpedo tubes (six forward and four aft) that could accommodate 24 or Mark 18 torpedoes for engaging enemy vessels at long range. Surface weaponry consisted of a single 4-inch/50-caliber for shore bombardment or anti-ship roles, supplemented by two 20 mm Oerlikon machine guns for antiaircraft defense; wartime modifications often added 40 mm guns and additional .50-caliber machine guns to counter increasing air threats. The standard crew complement was 80 officers and enlisted men, optimized for 75-day patrols with provisions for enhanced habitability, including improved ventilation and berthing arrangements over earlier classes.
SpecificationDetails
Displacement1,526 tons surfaced; 2,414 tons submerged
DimensionsLength: 311 ft 9 in; Beam: 27 ft 3 in; Draft: 16 ft 10 in maximum
Propulsion4 × GM diesels (5,400 hp surfaced); 4 × GE motors (2,740 hp submerged); twin screws
Speed20.25 knots surfaced; 8.75 knots submerged
Range11,000 nautical miles at 10 knots surfaced
Armament10 × 21-in tubes (24 torpedoes); 1 × 4-in/50 gun; 2 × 20 mm AA guns (later additions)
Crew80
These features positioned the Balao-class as a cornerstone of the U.S. Navy's submarine force, with over 120 units built contributing significantly to the Allied victory in the Pacific.

Building and launch

The keel of USS Capelin (SS-289) was laid down on 14 September 1942 at the in . This construction occurred as part of the U.S. Navy's accelerated wartime shipbuilding initiative, launched in response to the Japanese and America's entry into on 7 December 1941, aimed at rapidly expanding the submarine fleet to counter Imperial Japanese naval dominance in the Pacific. Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, a key facility for submarine production, built over 75 submarines during the war, including multiple Balao-class vessels like Capelin, with the yard achieving a record of launching four submarines in a single day to meet urgent demands. The Balao-class design, an evolution of the earlier Gato class, incorporated streamlined features that enhanced build efficiency, enabling the yard to complete Capelin's hull in approximately four months amid the emergency program. Capelin was launched on 20 January 1943, marking her as the first submarine to slide down the ways at that year, sponsored by Mrs. I. C. Bogart in a ceremony emphasizing the Navy's commitment to swift wartime mobilization.

Commissioning and initial operations

Commissioning details

The USS Capelin (SS-289), a , was formally commissioned into service on 4 June 1943 during a ceremony at the in , sponsored by Mrs. I. C. Bogart. The vessel's name derived from the capelin (Mallotus villosus), a small of the smelt family abundant in North Atlantic and waters, marking her as the only U.S. Navy ship so named. Lieutenant Commander Elliott E. Marshall, USN, took command as the submarine's first , leading a crew of approximately 80 officers and enlisted men in line with the Balao-class standard complement. Immediately after the ceremony, Capelin underwent initial at the shipyard, encompassing the installation of electronics such as and , weapons systems including tubes and deck armament, and provisioning for extended operations; this phase included brief trials in adjacent coastal waters to verify system integration and performance.

Shakedown and transit

Following her commissioning on 4 June 1943, USS Capelin commenced shakedown operations off New London, Connecticut, in late June, with intensive activities continuing through August. These trials included torpedo firing drills at Newport, Rhode Island, beginning 15 July, as well as crash dives and silent running exercises to test the submarine's submerged performance and crew proficiency. Additional gunnery practice and anti-submarine evasion tactics were conducted during exercises in Long Island Sound on 14 August, involving coordination with surface ships such as USS Semmes and USS Mackerel. Under the command of Lieutenant Commander Elliott E. Marshall, these efforts focused on ensuring operational readiness at the Naval Submarine Base New London. On 27 August, Capelin was placed on a marine railway at New London for final adjustments, addressing any minor mechanical concerns identified during the shakedown phase. Training emphasized crew expertise in submerged operations, including dive tests and evasion maneuvers, to prepare for Pacific deployment. Lookouts and officers practiced bridge watches and bearings during these evolutions, as documented in official from the period. Capelin departed New London on 3 September 1943 for transit to the Pacific theater, covering approximately 10,000 nautical miles via the to join Submarine Force, Southwest Pacific, at , . She arrived at , , on 11 September, transited the canal on 15 September, and departed Balboa on 16 September, reaching on 13 October after brief stops. No significant issues were reported during the voyage, though routine checks on systems like periscopes were standard for such transits. Upon arrival, Capelin underwent two days of local training near before proceeding to Darwin on 20 October.

Service history

First war patrol

USS Capelin departed Darwin, Australia, on 30 October 1943 for her first war patrol, assigned to patrol the Molucca, Flores, and Banda Seas in the waters west of . Under the command of Elliott E. Marshall, the navigated the island-choked region, employing and tactics to interdict Japanese shipping lanes while evading enemy patrols. The 17-day patrol highlighted the Balao-class 's extended range capabilities, allowing operations far from base support in challenging tropical waters. On 11 November 1943, approximately 50 nautical miles northwest of at position 03°08'S, 127°30'E, Capelin engaged and sank the Japanese army cargo ship Kunitama Maru (3,127 gross register tons) with torpedoes. Postwar assessments by the Joint Army-Navy Assessment Committee (JANAC) confirmed this as her sole verified sinking, based on analysis of Japanese records. However, wartime reports and evaluations by the Submarine Operations Research Group (SORG) credited Capelin with a second freighter sinking, totaling 7,400 tons, though this additional claim remains debated and unconfirmed in JANAC reviews. Capelin returned to Darwin, Australia, on 16 November 1943 after the abbreviated patrol, where the crew noted effective performance but reported mechanical issues including a defective hatch and noisy bow planes requiring refit. The patrol earned Capelin one battle star for service.

Preparations for second patrol

Following her first war patrol, during which JANAC confirmed the sinking of one Japanese freighter (3,127 tons), with wartime claims of a second (totaling 7,400 tons) remaining unconfirmed, USS Capelin returned to Darwin, Australia, on 16 November 1943 for a brief refit period lasting until her departure two days later. The short turnaround allowed for essential repairs, including correction of a defective conning tower hatch mechanism, noisy bow planes, and a faulty radar tube, alongside engine maintenance to ensure operational readiness. These fixes addressed issues identified during the patrol, enabling the submarine to reload torpedoes and store provisions without delay. The crew underwent minor rotations during this interval, maintaining a full complement of 76 men, including six officers, under the command of Elliott E. Marshall. briefings focused on updated Japanese shipping patterns, drawing from recent Allied to refine targeting strategies. The successes of the first had boosted , fostering confidence as the crew prepared for renewed operations. Patrol orders assigned Capelin to the Molucca and Celebes Seas, with specific emphasis on interdicting convoys and trade routes in Kaoe Bay, Morotai Strait, Davao Gulf, and areas near the Siaoe, Sangi, Talaud, and Sarangani Islands. She was directed to avoid known mining fields while prioritizing high-value merchant targets, with instructions to depart the area at dark on 6 December 1943 for return to base. Provisions included 24 torpedoes reloaded aboard, sufficient fuel for an 11,000-mile range, and updated charts of Japanese-held waters to support extended submerged and surfaced operations.

Disappearance

Second patrol operations

USS Capelin departed Darwin, Australia, on 17 for her second war patrol, following a brief refit to address defects identified during the first patrol. Under the command of Elliott E. Marshall, the headed north toward assigned areas in the Netherlands East Indies, specifically the Molucca and Celebes Seas. Her orders emphasized of key Japanese-held locations, including Kaoe Bay on , Morotai Strait, Davao Gulf on , and vital trade routes near the Siaoe, Sangi, Talaud, and Islands. The patrol formed part of the U.S. Navy's expanding blockade against Japanese supply lines in the Southwest Pacific, aimed at disrupting merchant shipping that sustained Imperial forces with oil, rubber, and other critical resources from the . During the transit, Capelin navigated through waters heavily infested with Japanese defensive minefields, particularly along the northern coast of Celebes (now ), requiring cautious submerged approaches to avoid detection and hazards. Adhering to protocols, the submarine conducted initial without reporting contacts, focusing on positioning for potential intercepts of coastal convoys and small vessels supporting Japanese garrisons. Operations were complicated by the onset of the northeast monsoon season in , which brought persistent heavy rainfall, strong winds, and swells that reduced surface visibility and increased the risk of involuntary dives in turbulent conditions. These environmental factors, combined with the strategic imperative to evade Japanese antisubmarine s, limited Capelin's early activities to stealthy transits and sweeps for targets, as the reached her primary zones by late .

Last known activities

Capelin's last confirmed radio communication occurred on 23 November 1943, when she transmitted a routine position report indicating her operations in the assigned patrol area, with no distress signals issued. This report placed her active in the region, consistent with her second war patrol route targeting Japanese shipping lanes north of . On 2 December 1943, the USS reported a sighting of an unidentified U.S. at approximately 1°14'N, 123°50'E, in 's assigned patrol sector north of . made tentative contact via underwater telephone at 1753 hours, confirming the vessel as friendly before it submerged, likely upon detecting the approaching ; this encounter is widely attributed to , as no other U.S. submarines were operating in the vicinity. The position aligns with an estimated location in the , roughly 100 miles north of on 's northern coast. Japanese records document an attack by the Wakataka on an unidentified submarine on 23 November 1943 off Kaoe Bay, , at 1°34'N, 123°07'E. Wakataka, in coordination with , dropped depth charges after detecting the contact, observing subsequent debris including oily water, wood fragments, cork splinters, and a that washed ashore later; the attack was aborted due to weak evidence of a confirmed hit, but the timing and location suggest a possible encounter with . No further communications from Capelin were received after this period, despite a U.S. radio query on 9 December 1943.

Search efforts

Following Capelin's last known position in the area during her second war patrol, the U.S. Navy initiated contact attempts when no routine reports were received from the . On 9 , a radio signal was transmitted from the USS Holland in Darwin, Australia, to Capelin for a scheduled , but no acknowledgment or response was obtained. In response to the silence, search operations were promptly organized, including the dispatch of scout planes and nearby submarines to patrol key areas such as the Celebes Sea and Morotai Strait beginning in mid-December 1943. The USS Bonefish (SS-223), operating in the vicinity, had reported a sighting of an unidentified U.S. submarine on 2 December 1943 at approximately 1°14'N, 123°50'E—within Capelin's assigned sector—and attempted tentative contact via underwater telephone; this encounter is widely attributed to Capelin, as no other U.S. submarines were operating in the area at the time. These efforts were directed by the Commander, Submarine Force, Southwest Pacific (ComSubSowespac), under the Seventh Fleet and headquartered in , , which also monitored Japanese radio intercepts for any claims of sinking American submarines in the ; one such report from 23 November 1943 described an inconclusive attack on a submarine off Kaoe Bay, , but it yielded no definitive evidence linking to . With no contact established and Capelin failing to arrive at her scheduled refit port by 6 December 1943, she was presumed lost with all 76 hands in December 1943. The Navy officially announced her loss in Communiqué No. 510 on 18 March 1944.

Aftermath and legacy

Investigations and theories

Postwar analyses conducted by the U.S. Navy, including reviews of Japanese records, have confirmed no definitive cause for the loss of USS Capelin, with the submarine's wreck remaining unlocated as of 2025. The Joint Army-Navy Assessment Committee (JANAC) and subsequent studies, such as those compiled in the Naval History and Heritage Command's submarine losses reports, emphasized the lack of conclusive evidence from wartime logs or debris, attributing the disappearance to operational hazards in a high-risk area without pinpointing a single event. These assessments drew on declassified Japanese naval documents and Allied patrol reports but highlighted inconsistencies in enemy claims of successful engagements. The primary theory posits that Capelin struck a in the extensive Japanese minefields along the north coast of Celebes (now ) in the , likely during early December 1943 while transiting to or from her patrol objectives; this is considered the most probable cause by the due to the density of known mine placements in her assigned area. A second leading hypothesis involves mechanical failure, particularly of the forward hatch mechanism or the excessively noisy bow planes, which had malfunctioned during her first patrol and were only partially repaired before departure; such issues could have led to flooding or loss of control during a dive in rough seas. The third major theory centers on an attack by the Japanese minelayer Wakataka on 23 November 1943 off Kaoe Bay, , where Japanese records describe an antisubmarine action against a suspected U.S. using depth charges in coordination with , though the engagement was reported as inconclusive with no confirmed sinking. Alternative speculations include a attack by a Japanese patrol boat or an undetected aerial assault, but postwar scrutiny of logs reveals no verified submarine kill matching Capelin's profile, timeline, or location during that period. Key gaps in knowledge persist due to incomplete Japanese operational records, the absence of survivor accounts from either side, and the wreck remaining unidentified amid challenging deep-water terrain in the Celebes and Molucca Seas. These unresolved elements underscore the broader mysteries of losses in the Southwest Pacific theater.

Awards and memorials

The USS Capelin was awarded one battle star for her participation in the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign during , recognizing her service in 1943 operations in the region; postwar assessments by the Joint Army-Navy Assessment Committee confirmed she sank two Japanese freighters totaling 7,400 tons during her first patrol, supporting this award. Although the did not receive the Presidential Unit Citation, her crew members were eligible for individual honors, including posthumous Purple Hearts for those lost in action, in line with policy for personnel missing and presumed dead due to enemy action. The names of Capelin's lost crew are inscribed on the Walls of the Missing at the and Memorial in , , maintained by the as a tribute to American service members who perished in the Pacific theater without recovered remains. In , a state dedicated to Capelin as "New Hampshire's Lost Boat" commemorates the 78 men associated with her loss in the in , including two whose presence aboard remains unverified in official records. The Veterans, Inc. (USSVI) conducts annual Tolling of the Boats ceremonies that honor Capelin among the 52 U.S. submarines lost during , with a bell toll rung for each vessel and her to symbolize eternal remembrance. Capelin is listed among the Navy's lost submarines in records maintained by the (NHHC), serving as a historical reference for the risks faced by submariners in the Pacific campaign. Her story has been highlighted in books on and recent documentaries, such as 2024 online video histories, underscoring her as an emblem of the unresolved mysteries and sacrifices of operations; however, no dedicated museum exhibit exists as of 2025. Commemorations emphasize the leadership of Commander Elliott E. Marshall, who commanded Capelin on her final patrol, with the full roster of 76 confirmed lost crew members documented in NHHC naval records.

References

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