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The United States Navy Memorial

Navy Memorial Honoring the Men & Women of the Sea Services

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Triton

Ship Designation: 
SS-201
Date Lost: 
Monday, March 15, 1943
Lost at Sea
As was common with the majority of submarine losses, the exact details of Triton’s loss are not known. ... On her final patrol, she was operating in the vicinity of Rabaul. She reported sinking two AKs in a convoy on March 7, 1943 and eight hours later, reported hits on two more. On March 11, she reported that she was still chasing the remains of the convoy. On March 13, Triton was warned that three destroyers were operating in her area, possibly on antisubmarine operations. The warning was acknowledged but nothing further was heard from the submarine or her crew of 74. ... Postwar analysis of Japanese records indicates that an attack by the three destroyers on March 15, almost certainly was the cause of her loss. Trigger (SS-237), operating about 10 miles from Triton’s position, heard a sustained depth charge attack in that direction at the time cited in the Japanese reports.

Lost At Sea Log

Number of sailors in this log: 73

Namesort ascending Service Branch
MOMM 2c Donald Wycoff USN
QM 2c Ferguson White USN
MOMM 1c William Ward USN
SM 2c George Visnich USN
Lt(jg) Hugh Vanroosen USN
EM 2c Raymond Trowbridge USN
EM 1c Thomas Thompson USN
Lt Vernon Sorensen USN
MM 3c Laurence Shepherd USN
F 2c John Shannon USN
CMOMM Edwin Severance USN
F 2c Leonard Schneider USN
TM 1c Harry Schlabecker USN
Sea 1c Burnel Ross USN
RM1 (SS) Charles Poyneer USN
MOMM2 (SS) John Petrun USN
F2 Willie Peeler USN
LT Edward Parks USN
RM3 (SS) Robert Page USN
TM 1c Roy Ottersen USN

Pages

Prepared by: J.P. O’Hara, CDR, USN (Ret.)