On 7 December 1921, the still-uncommissioned submarine conducted a dive off Penfield Reef in Long Island Sound as part of builder's trials. A manhole plate in one of the aft ballast tanks was left unsecured, several aft compartments flooded, and S-48 sank in 80 feet (24 meters) of water.[1] The crew, contractor's personnel, and naval observers brought the bow to the surface and escaped through a torpedo tube to a tug which took them to New York City.[1]
On 20 December 1921, the submarine was raised and taken back to the builder's yard, where repairs were begun. The work was completed ten months later.
Service history
1st commission, 1922–1925
On 14 October 1922, S-48 was accepted by the Navy and commissioned the same day at Bridgeport. S-48 was fitted out at the New York Navy Yard, visited Peekskill, New York for Navy Day, returned to Bridgeport, and at the end of October arrived at her home port, New London, Connecticut. Two weeks later, she was towed to the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine for further yard work and in late January 1923 she returned to New London to commence operations with Submarine Division 4 (SubDiv 4). Through May, she operated in the New London area. Then in early June she moved south for sound exercises and a visit to Washington, DC. At mid-month, she returned to southern New England. In August she proceeded back to Portsmouth for the installation of new crankshafts and a general ship and machinery overhaul.
In mid-January 1924, S-48 departed Portsmouth for New London and continued south to the Caribbean Sea for winter maneuvers. By mid-March 1924, she was back at Portsmouth for another five months of yard work. In early August 1924 she resumed operations in the New London area, and in November 1924, after being transferred to SubDiv 2, she visited Annapolis, Maryland. In December 1924 she returned to Connecticut, and toward the end of January 1925 she headed back to Portsmouth.
On the night of 29 January 1925, S-48 arrived off the New Hampshire coast. At about 18:30, the wind picked up and a heavy snowstorm developed. Visibility was reduced to zero. Soon after 19:34, the S-boat grounded on rocks off Jeffrey Point, pulled herself off, then grounded again in Little Harbor. Messages requesting assistance were dispatched. By midnight, the storm had worsened, seas were coming "clean [sic] over the S-48" and she was rolling – 15 degrees to port, 60 degrees to starboard. Violent rolling lasted for a little over thirty minutes but a heavy list developed. By 03:30 on 30 January, the battery compartment was taking in water and chlorine gas was forming. The storm continued but help arrived at 05:00, and Coast Guardsmen manning lifeboats rescued the crew. After receiving treatment for exposure and gas at Fort Stark, the crew members were transferred to the Portsmouth Navy Yard in Kittery, Maine.
On 1 February 1925, salvage operations began. A week later, the S-boat was freed and towed to the navy yard for repairs. However, the damage was severe and funds were lacking. On 7 July 1925, S-48 was decommissioned. Nearly a year later, on 25 June 1926, repairs and alterations were authorized, and on 3 February 1927 the work began. Three Boston & Maine locomotives, G-Class Switchers numbered 426, 413, & 222 respectively, hauled the submarine into a boathouse at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine, where work on mending her hull could begin.[2] But, again, a shortage of funds stopped the project. In 1928, the repair and modernization was carried out. In hopes of improving habitability and increasing her range, her hull was extended 25½ feet. Her displacement was increased to 1165 tons and her engines were replaced by German M.A.N. types. On 1 December 1928, the work was finally completed. On 8 December 1928, almost four years after her accident, S-48 was recommissioned.
2nd commission, 1929–1935
Assigned to SubDiv 12, she departed Portsmouth on 11 January 1929 and headed south. After operations off southern Florida she returned to New London in March 1929 and, in April 1929 commenced a series of test exercises. A casualty to the main motor, however, forced postponement of the exercises, and S-48 returned to Portsmouth. On 5 June 1929, she resumed the exercises.
On 1 June 1929, S-48 had been reassigned to SubDiv 4, with which she operated through the end of 1929. Then assigned to SubDiv 3, later SubDiv 5, and then Squadron 3, she continued operations off the New England coast, with an interruption for winter maneuvers to the south. During this time, Lieutenant Hyman G. Rickover was assigned to her. He later credited S-48's "faulty, sooty, dangerous and repellent engineering" with inspiring his obsession for high engineering standards.[3] She was transferred to the Panama Canal Zone in 1931. On 1 March, she arrived at Coco Solo, where she operated for four years.
The 1932 Navy-Princeton gravity expedition to the West Indies
In July 1933, S-48 was assigned to the Rotating Reserve and in 1935 she was ordered inactivated. On 20 March 1935, she departed Coco Solo and on 1 June 1935 arrived at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. On 16 September 1935, she was decommissioned and berthed at League Island.
3rd commission, 1940–1945
On 1 September 1939, World War II broke out in Europe. In 1940, S-48 was ordered activated. She was recommissioned on 10 December 1940, but remained at Philadelphia until mid-March 1941. She then moved up to her home port of New London, Connecticut.
As a unit of Submarine Squadron One (SubRon 1), she provided services to submarine and antisubmarine warfare training commands at New London and Portland, Maine, until the end of European hostilities in early May 1945. Overhaul and repairs during that time were frequent and in the summer of 1945, the World War I-design submarine was finally designated for disposal.
Fate
On 21 August 1945, S-48 departed New London for the last time and was decommissioned at Philadelphia on 29 August 1945. On 17 September 1945, her name was struck from the Naval Vessel Register, and on 22 January 1946 her hulk was sold to the North American Smelting Company in Philadelphia for scrapping.
^ ab"Submarine Casualties Booklet". U.S. Naval Submarine School. 1966. Archived from the original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 8 September 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
^Pinsel, Mark I. (1982). 150 Years Of Service On The Seas - A Pictorial History of the U.S. Naval Oceanographic Office from 1830 to 1980. Washington, D.C.: U. S. Government Printing Office. p. 233. Chapter 4-Gravity at Sea