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USS Drum (SS-228)
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Feb 24, 2020 09:54:13   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
MT native wrote:
Very nice series. Iā€™m too claustrophobic for that kind of work. One has to respect those that served.


Thank you Dennis! Every sub tour for me involves a few head bumps. I don't think I would have made it in the silent service.

Reply
Feb 24, 2020 09:54:19   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
Screamin Scott wrote:
Nice images Paul.... The only sub I've ever been on was the USS Torsk, which is berthed in Baltimore's Harbor...


Thank you and good tip, Scott! Of all the times I been to the Inner Harbor, the tour of their sub has never been considered.

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Feb 24, 2020 09:54:22   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
Thank you John, Architect1776, Steven, Bill, diclam, Bob, sr71, Scott, Richard, Dennis, Chris, bob, Ado! I did two tours of the Drum after spending most of the morning on the Alabama. I finished the B&W roll and swapped cameras and came back with the digital body. These subs are amazing for tours since only the mess and a few of the officer quarters are blocked off by plexiglas. Most everything else you can touch, flip, turn, including on the Drum, climb up into the conning tower. A highly recommended tour.

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Feb 24, 2020 10:08:53   #
TriX Loc: Raleigh, NC
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
Thank you Chris! You and Scott are digging into my frustrations. I worked in Annapolis for a few years with the state government and have family in Baltimore proper. The submarine there in the harbor has gone under my radar for all these years. I have been on the Clamagore in Charleston, and a few others. The Drum is in excellent shape with access to all the nooks and crannies of the sub.


Looks like the Drum is in better shape than the Clamagore on the outside which needs work, although the Clamagore is nice inside. I was comparing your photos to the ones I took on the Clamagore last year, and I am jealous! Your photos of specific details are just excellent - I learned some things looking at yours - thanks!

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Feb 24, 2020 11:39:29   #
Rab-Eye Loc: Indiana
 
jaymatt wrote:
Nice work with the detail shots, Paul!


šŸ‘šŸ»šŸ‘šŸ»šŸ‘šŸ»

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Feb 24, 2020 11:58:26   #
SpyderJan Loc: New Smyrna Beach. FL
 
This is an excellent set Paul. The boat seems too be very well maintained. Thank you so much for the great and detailed narrative also. šŸ‘šŸ‘

Reply
Feb 24, 2020 12:21:04   #
Paul Best. Loc: California desert
 
Great shots Paul, Your photos nudged my memory bank. I spent 3 years aboard the U.S.S. Sea Cat (SS399) based in Key West, Florida. The Sea Cat was on it's fifth war patrol when the war ended and was present at the Japanese surrender ceremony. Sadly, the Sea Cat was made into razor blades after decommissioning. There is truly so much history in these old boats that everyone of them should be saved. Paul Best

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Feb 24, 2020 14:19:32   #
Rob48 Loc: Portland, ME
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
The USS Drum (SS-228) is a retired WWII Gato-class submarine, now preserved as a museum ship in Mobile Bay, Alabama.

Battleship Memorial Park
Mobile, AL
Nov 2019

USS Drum by Paul Sager, on Flickr


Drum was laid down on 11 September 1940 at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine. She was launched on 12 May 1941. The boat was commissioned on 1 November 1941. Drum was the twelfth of the Gato class but was the first completed and the first to enter combat in World War II. She is the oldest of her class still in existence.

USS Drum


The Gato class was the first mass-production U.S. submarine class of World War II. Together with their near-sisters the Balao and Tench classes, their design formed the majority of the United States Navy's World War II submarine fleet. Gato's name comes from a species of small catshark. Like most other U.S. Navy submarines of the period, boats of the Gato class were given the names of marine creatures.

A drum is a large bottom-dwelling fish found off the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf coasts. The fish is known for making a drumming or croaking noise by using muscles associated with its air bladder. The submarine's emblem of the octopus banging the drum was created by Walt Disney.

USS Drum


The Drum made 13 war patrols in WWII, 9 of which were deemed "successful". Every submariner onboard for each "successful" patrol earned his submarine combat insignia pin or else earned another star for their submarine combat insignia pin. She earned 12 battle stars for her service in WWII.

USS Drum


Images shared in this post come mostly from the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS with an EOS 5DIII captured in RAW. The B&W images use the same lens (or the EF 50mm f/1.8) and Kodak Tri-X 400 in an EOS 1v. The digital images and scanned JPEGs were further processed in Lightroom 6.

The Gatos were slow divers when compared to contemporary German and British designs, but that was mostly because the Gatos were significantly larger boats. Sufficient fuel bunkerage to provide the range necessary for 75-day patrols from Hawaii to Japan and back could be obtained with only a large boat. The Gato-class of boats had numerous crew comforts including air conditioning, refrigerated storage for food, generous fresh water distilling units, clothes washers, and bunks for nearly every crew member; these were luxuries virtually unheard of in other navies.

USS Drum


The crew was 83 men, 75 enlisted personnel with eight officers. Without the AC, the heat of 83 men and the engines would quickly raise the boat's internal temperature above 100F. High humidity generated by tropical waters condenses quickly and begins dripping into equipment, eventually causing electrical shorts and fires. Air conditioning, acting mostly as a dehumidifier, virtually eliminates this problem and greatly increases mechanical and electrical reliability. It proved to be a key factor in the success of these boats during World War II.

USS Drum


77 of these boats were commissioned from November 1941 (Drum) through April 1944 (Croaker). All of the Gatos (with one exception, Dorado) would eventually fight in the Pacific Theater of Operations. Twenty of the 52 US submarines lost in World War II were of this class.

Their principal weapon was the steam-powered Mark 14 torpedo in the early war years, with the electric Mark 18 torpedo supplementing the Mark 14 in late 1943. The Drum had 10 torpedo tubes, six at the bow (facing forward) and four tubes at the stern (facing the rearwards). This allowed the boat captain to attack in two directions without having to turn around the boat to face the enemy. Drum carried 24 torpedoes when fully armed.

USS Drum


During World War II, the U.S. Navy's submarine service suffered the highest casualty percentage of all the American armed forces, losing one in five submariners. Some 16,000 submariners served during the war, of whom 375 officers and 3,131 enlisted men were killed. During the war, submarines of the United States Navy were responsible for 55% of Japan's merchant marine losses. The war against shipping is now considered the single most decisive factor in the collapse of the Japanese economy during the war.

USS Drum


Drum was decommissioned on 16 February 1946 and on 18 March 1947, began service at Washington, D.C., to members of the Naval Reserve in the Potomac River Naval Command, which continued through 1967. She was in the inactive Fleet at Norfolk, Virginia from 1967 to 1969. Drum was donated to the USS Alabama Battleship Commission on 14 April 1969. She was towed to Battleship Alabama Memorial Park in Mobile, Alabama arriving on 18 May 1969. Drum was dedicated and opened to the public on 4 July 1969.

USS Drum


Drum was moored in the waters behind Alabama, until she was substantially damaged by the storm surge of Hurricane Georges in 1998. As a result, she was moved on shore. Most funding to maintain the submarine comes from a community of American Submarine Vets.

USS Drum


These images are sized to fill your wide-screen display. Try using <F11> to maximize your browser window for the full effect. If the images overshoot your display, such as a laptop, just click on the image or the URL link and they'll resize to your screen from the host Flickr site. You can click a bit further into the image details on the Flickr page, if desired. EXIF data is available from the host Flickr pages as well. On the Flickr site, use your <L>key for Large and the <F11> for the full-screen.
The USS i Drum /i (SS-228) is a retired WWII i ... (show quote)



Outstanding photo narrative, Paul; National Geographic worthy.

Reply
Feb 25, 2020 06:06:35   #
Don, the 2nd son Loc: Crowded Florida
 
Rob48 wrote:
Outstanding photo narrative, Paul; National Geographic worthy.


I couldn't say it better (than Rob48). Mobile Bay is on my bucket list for sure, hope I can take my grandson along.

Reply
Feb 25, 2020 06:18:32   #
queencitysanta Loc: Charlotte, North Carolina
 
Paul,

Thank you for the wonderful shots and history lesson.

Reply
Feb 25, 2020 06:20:09   #
Plieku69 Loc: The Gopher State, south end
 
I enjoyed this. I toured the Drum in 1972 and tried taking pictures with my Petri. Most didn't turn out to well.
I was amazed by the incredible amount of polished brass and copper inside the boat. Keeping that polished must be a nightmarish experience.
Ken

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Feb 25, 2020 06:36:51   #
trackmag
 
Well done in photos and narrative.

I served on the staff of the Commander of the U.S. Atlantic Submarine Force from 1968 through 1970. Interesting time. Some of these boats were still around. I was there when the Scorpion was lost and wrote a book about the boat and its crew. Days of the SSN and SSBN. Lots of interesting men.

Proud to have served. Sometimes wish I had done more than four years. Have no regrets but I will always wonder what if.

Thanks for doing this. I always enjoy your posts.

Reply
Feb 25, 2020 07:07:39   #
junglejim1949 Loc: Sacramento,CA
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
The USS Drum (SS-228) is a retired WWII Gato-class submarine, now preserved as a museum ship in Mobile Bay, Alabama.

Battleship Memorial Park
Mobile, AL
Nov 2019

USS Drum by Paul Sager, on Flickr


Drum was laid down on 11 September 1940 at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine. She was launched on 12 May 1941. The boat was commissioned on 1 November 1941. Drum was the twelfth of the Gato class but was the first completed and the first to enter combat in World War II. She is the oldest of her class still in existence.

USS Drum


The Gato class was the first mass-production U.S. submarine class of World War II. Together with their near-sisters the Balao and Tench classes, their design formed the majority of the United States Navy's World War II submarine fleet. Gato's name comes from a species of small catshark. Like most other U.S. Navy submarines of the period, boats of the Gato class were given the names of marine creatures.

A drum is a large bottom-dwelling fish found off the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf coasts. The fish is known for making a drumming or croaking noise by using muscles associated with its air bladder. The submarine's emblem of the octopus banging the drum was created by Walt Disney.

USS Drum


The Drum made 13 war patrols in WWII, 9 of which were deemed "successful". Every submariner onboard for each "successful" patrol earned his submarine combat insignia pin or else earned another star for their submarine combat insignia pin. She earned 12 battle stars for her service in WWII.

USS Drum


Images shared in this post come mostly from the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS with an EOS 5DIII captured in RAW. The B&W images use the same lens (or the EF 50mm f/1.8) and Kodak Tri-X 400 in an EOS 1v. The digital images and scanned JPEGs were further processed in Lightroom 6.

The Gatos were slow divers when compared to contemporary German and British designs, but that was mostly because the Gatos were significantly larger boats. Sufficient fuel bunkerage to provide the range necessary for 75-day patrols from Hawaii to Japan and back could be obtained with only a large boat. The Gato-class of boats had numerous crew comforts including air conditioning, refrigerated storage for food, generous fresh water distilling units, clothes washers, and bunks for nearly every crew member; these were luxuries virtually unheard of in other navies.

USS Drum


The crew was 83 men, 75 enlisted personnel with eight officers. Without the AC, the heat of 83 men and the engines would quickly raise the boat's internal temperature above 100F. High humidity generated by tropical waters condenses quickly and begins dripping into equipment, eventually causing electrical shorts and fires. Air conditioning, acting mostly as a dehumidifier, virtually eliminates this problem and greatly increases mechanical and electrical reliability. It proved to be a key factor in the success of these boats during World War II.

USS Drum


77 of these boats were commissioned from November 1941 (Drum) through April 1944 (Croaker). All of the Gatos (with one exception, Dorado) would eventually fight in the Pacific Theater of Operations. Twenty of the 52 US submarines lost in World War II were of this class.

Their principal weapon was the steam-powered Mark 14 torpedo in the early war years, with the electric Mark 18 torpedo supplementing the Mark 14 in late 1943. The Drum had 10 torpedo tubes, six at the bow (facing forward) and four tubes at the stern (facing the rearwards). This allowed the boat captain to attack in two directions without having to turn around the boat to face the enemy. Drum carried 24 torpedoes when fully armed.

USS Drum


During World War II, the U.S. Navy's submarine service suffered the highest casualty percentage of all the American armed forces, losing one in five submariners. Some 16,000 submariners served during the war, of whom 375 officers and 3,131 enlisted men were killed. During the war, submarines of the United States Navy were responsible for 55% of Japan's merchant marine losses. The war against shipping is now considered the single most decisive factor in the collapse of the Japanese economy during the war.

USS Drum


Drum was decommissioned on 16 February 1946 and on 18 March 1947, began service at Washington, D.C., to members of the Naval Reserve in the Potomac River Naval Command, which continued through 1967. She was in the inactive Fleet at Norfolk, Virginia from 1967 to 1969. Drum was donated to the USS Alabama Battleship Commission on 14 April 1969. She was towed to Battleship Alabama Memorial Park in Mobile, Alabama arriving on 18 May 1969. Drum was dedicated and opened to the public on 4 July 1969.

USS Drum


Drum was moored in the waters behind Alabama, until she was substantially damaged by the storm surge of Hurricane Georges in 1998. As a result, she was moved on shore. Most funding to maintain the submarine comes from a community of American Submarine Vets.

USS Drum


These images are sized to fill your wide-screen display. Try using <F11> to maximize your browser window for the full effect. If the images overshoot your display, such as a laptop, just click on the image or the URL link and they'll resize to your screen from the host Flickr site. You can click a bit further into the image details on the Flickr page, if desired. EXIF data is available from the host Flickr pages as well. On the Flickr site, use your <L>key for Large and the <F11> for the full-screen.
The USS i Drum /i (SS-228) is a retired WWII i ... (show quote)


Nice tour Paul. The detail of the gauges etc. are wonderful

Reply
Feb 25, 2020 07:21:44   #
nimbushopper Loc: Tampa, FL
 
Outstanding coverage Paul!

Reply
Feb 25, 2020 08:05:41   #
Collhar Loc: New York City.
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
The USS Drum (SS-228) is a retired WWII Gato-class submarine, now preserved as a museum ship in Mobile Bay, Alabama.

Battleship Memorial Park
Mobile, AL
Nov 2019

USS Drum by Paul Sager, on Flickr


Drum was laid down on 11 September 1940 at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Kittery, Maine. She was launched on 12 May 1941. The boat was commissioned on 1 November 1941. Drum was the twelfth of the Gato class but was the first completed and the first to enter combat in World War II. She is the oldest of her class still in existence.

USS Drum


The Gato class was the first mass-production U.S. submarine class of World War II. Together with their near-sisters the Balao and Tench classes, their design formed the majority of the United States Navy's World War II submarine fleet. Gato's name comes from a species of small catshark. Like most other U.S. Navy submarines of the period, boats of the Gato class were given the names of marine creatures.

A drum is a large bottom-dwelling fish found off the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf coasts. The fish is known for making a drumming or croaking noise by using muscles associated with its air bladder. The submarine's emblem of the octopus banging the drum was created by Walt Disney.

USS Drum


The Drum made 13 war patrols in WWII, 9 of which were deemed "successful". Every submariner onboard for each "successful" patrol earned his submarine combat insignia pin or else earned another star for their submarine combat insignia pin. She earned 12 battle stars for her service in WWII.

USS Drum


Images shared in this post come mostly from the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS with an EOS 5DIII captured in RAW. The B&W images use the same lens (or the EF 50mm f/1.8) and Kodak Tri-X 400 in an EOS 1v. The digital images and scanned JPEGs were further processed in Lightroom 6.

The Gatos were slow divers when compared to contemporary German and British designs, but that was mostly because the Gatos were significantly larger boats. Sufficient fuel bunkerage to provide the range necessary for 75-day patrols from Hawaii to Japan and back could be obtained with only a large boat. The Gato-class of boats had numerous crew comforts including air conditioning, refrigerated storage for food, generous fresh water distilling units, clothes washers, and bunks for nearly every crew member; these were luxuries virtually unheard of in other navies.

USS Drum


The crew was 83 men, 75 enlisted personnel with eight officers. Without the AC, the heat of 83 men and the engines would quickly raise the boat's internal temperature above 100F. High humidity generated by tropical waters condenses quickly and begins dripping into equipment, eventually causing electrical shorts and fires. Air conditioning, acting mostly as a dehumidifier, virtually eliminates this problem and greatly increases mechanical and electrical reliability. It proved to be a key factor in the success of these boats during World War II.

USS Drum


77 of these boats were commissioned from November 1941 (Drum) through April 1944 (Croaker). All of the Gatos (with one exception, Dorado) would eventually fight in the Pacific Theater of Operations. Twenty of the 52 US submarines lost in World War II were of this class.

Their principal weapon was the steam-powered Mark 14 torpedo in the early war years, with the electric Mark 18 torpedo supplementing the Mark 14 in late 1943. The Drum had 10 torpedo tubes, six at the bow (facing forward) and four tubes at the stern (facing the rearwards). This allowed the boat captain to attack in two directions without having to turn around the boat to face the enemy. Drum carried 24 torpedoes when fully armed.

USS Drum


During World War II, the U.S. Navy's submarine service suffered the highest casualty percentage of all the American armed forces, losing one in five submariners. Some 16,000 submariners served during the war, of whom 375 officers and 3,131 enlisted men were killed. During the war, submarines of the United States Navy were responsible for 55% of Japan's merchant marine losses. The war against shipping is now considered the single most decisive factor in the collapse of the Japanese economy during the war.

USS Drum


Drum was decommissioned on 16 February 1946 and on 18 March 1947, began service at Washington, D.C., to members of the Naval Reserve in the Potomac River Naval Command, which continued through 1967. She was in the inactive Fleet at Norfolk, Virginia from 1967 to 1969. Drum was donated to the USS Alabama Battleship Commission on 14 April 1969. She was towed to Battleship Alabama Memorial Park in Mobile, Alabama arriving on 18 May 1969. Drum was dedicated and opened to the public on 4 July 1969.

USS Drum


Drum was moored in the waters behind Alabama, until she was substantially damaged by the storm surge of Hurricane Georges in 1998. As a result, she was moved on shore. Most funding to maintain the submarine comes from a community of American Submarine Vets.

USS Drum


These images are sized to fill your wide-screen display. Try using <F11> to maximize your browser window for the full effect. If the images overshoot your display, such as a laptop, just click on the image or the URL link and they'll resize to your screen from the host Flickr site. You can click a bit further into the image details on the Flickr page, if desired. EXIF data is available from the host Flickr pages as well. On the Flickr site, use your <L>key for Large and the <F11> for the full-screen.
The USS i Drum /i (SS-228) is a retired WWII i ... (show quote)


Thank you. Excellent pictures. I can't imagine what it must have been like to serve on one of those submarines. The close quarters the various odors and of course...fear.

Reply
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