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Snook

Ship Designation: 
SS-279
Date Lost: 
Wednesday, May 16, 1945
Unknown, Possibly Sunk by Enemy Submarine

src=/Portals/0/snook

CDR J.F. Walling

Commanding Officer

 

SNOOK (Cdr. J.F. Walling) departed Guam on 25 March 1945 in company with BURRFISH (SS-312) and BANG (SS-385) to carry out a coordinated patrol with Commander Walling commanding the group. They were to patrol Luzon Strait, the south coast of China, and the east coast of Hainan, and to perform lifeguard duties if so directed by dispatch. SNOOK returned to Guam for emergency repairs on 27 March, and departed on 28 March to rejoin her group. The patrol was SNOOK’s ninth.

            In accordance with her orders, weather reports were received daily from SNOOK as she proceeded westward until April 1, when she was told to discontinue making them. On the same date, SNOOK was directed to proceed westward to join a coordinated attack group under Commander Cassedy in TIGRONE. BANG and BURRFISH had already been assigned lifeguard stations and were not available for the attack group as originally planned.

            Although the last message received from SNOOK by shore bases was on 1 April, TIGRONE was in contact with her until 8 April, at which time SNOOK’s position was 18-40N, 111-39E. On April 9, TIGRONE was unable to raise her by radio, nor was she ever able to afterwards. TIGRONE being unable to raise her may be explained by the fact that on 10 April SNOOK was directed to move eastward towards Luzon Strait, and on 12 April she was ordered to lifeguard duty for British carrier based airstrikes. Her position for this duty was in the vicinity of Sakeshima Gunto, about 200 miles east of northern Formosa. No acknowledgement of these orders was required. On 20 April the Commander of a British carrier task force reported that he had a plane down in SNOOK’s vicinity, but could not contact her by radio. SNOOK was ordered to search the area and to acknowledge these orders. When she failed to make a transmission, BANG was sent to make the search and to rendezvous with SNOOK. Although BANG arrived on the scene and rescued three aviators, she saw nothing of SNOOK. When SNOOK had not appeared or been heard from by 16 May, she was reported as presumed lost on her ninth patrol.

            Japanese antisubmarine attack reports available at this time give no indication of an attack which might have been on SNOOK. There were mines in the vicinity of Sakeshima Gunto, but SNOOK had information on these which had been gained from captured enemy documents. It is improbable that she would have gone into the minefields unless intentionally to rescue a downed aviator. She was not asked to penetrate any minefield in effecting any rescue.

            A number of enemy submarine contacts were reported in the vicinity of SNOOK’s lifeguard station during the period in which her loss occurred. During April and May 1945, five Japanese submarines were sunk in the Nansei Shoto chain. The circumstances surrounding SNOOK’s loss suggest the possibility that one of these lost submarines may have torpedoed her while she was surfaced during her lifeguarding duties and it was not reported. It is known that such tactics were suggested to Japanese submarine commanders by their superiors.

            No attacks had been reported by SNOOK prior to her loss on this patrol. She was, however, responsible for sinking 22 enemy ships, totaling 123,600 tons and damaging 10 ships, for 63,200 tons, on her eight patrols prior to her loss. Her first patrol was from mid-April to the latter part of May 1943, along the China coast from Formosa to the Empire. She sank four freighters, a patrol craft, a sampan, and a trawler. In her second patrol, SNOOK covered the East China Sea area. She sank two freighters and damaged two tankers, one of the latter being a very large ship. During her third patrol, SNOOK covered areas in both the Yellow and East China Seas, and sank a transport and a freighter, and damaged a sub chaser. Her fourth patrol was along the Empire trade routes to the south. Here she sank two freighters and damaged three more.

            SNOOK went to the East China Sea for her fifth patrol, and sank four freighters and a freighter-transport, while she damaged a fifth freighter. In the same area on her sixth patrol, SNOOK damaged one freighter. Her seventh patrol was in the Luzon Strait area and the northern South China Sea. She sank three freighters and damaged a fourth freighter and an unidentified vessel. SNOOK patrolled the Kurile region north of Japan on her eighth patrol, but contacted only three ships. Two were Russian and the third could not be attacked.

 

Lost At Sea Log

Number of sailors in this log: 84

Name Service Branchsort ascending
RT2 RUSSELL BAUM USN
EM2 BENEDICT CESARE USN
F1 KENNETH BOLGER USN
RM3 BEN BRANUM USN
MoMM3 NED BROWNING USN
EM3 SYDNEY BROWNSTEIN USN
RT1 ROBERT BURDICK USN
PhM1 LEO BURGER USN
LTJG CLAUDE BUSBY USN
F1 DANFORD BYRON USN
F1 JOHN CAVE USN
MoMM3 R BILLINGSLEY USN
QM1 JAMES CHOATE USN
LTJG E CLARK USN
GM1 DELMER CRAWFORD USN
F1 GEORGE CRAWFORD USN
F1 JAMES CROSS USN
RM1 WILLIAM DOLPH USN
S1 CHARLES ECKENRODE USN
S1 CLARENCE EDMUNDS USN

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