USS Skipjack (SS-184) off Provincetown, Massachusetts during sea trials, 14 May 1938
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History | |
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United States | |
Name | Skipjack |
Builder | Electric Boat Company, Groton, Connecticut[1] |
Laid down | 22 July 1936[1] |
Launched | 23 October 1937[1] |
Commissioned | 30 June 1938[1] |
Decommissioned | 28 August 1946[1] |
Stricken | 13 September 1948[2] |
Fate | Sunk in Operation Crossroads atomic bomb test, 25 July 1946; raised 2 September 1946; sunk as a target off southern California, 11 August 1948[1][2] |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Salmon-class composite diesel-hydraulic and diesel-electric submarine[2] |
Displacement | |
Length | 308 ft 0 in (93.88 m)[3] |
Beam | 26 ft 1+1⁄4 in (7.957 m)[3] |
Draft | 15 ft 8 in (4.78 m)[3] |
Propulsion |
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Speed | |
Range | 11,000 nautical miles (20,000 km) at 10 knots (19 km/h)[3] |
Endurance | 48 hours at 2 knots (3.7 km/h) submerged[3] |
Test depth | 250 ft (76 m)[3] |
Complement | 5 officers, 54 enlisted[3] |
Armament |
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USS Skipjack (SS-184), was a Salmon-class submarine, the second ship of the United States Navy to be named after the skipjack tuna. She earned multiple battle stars during World War II and then was sunk, remarkably, by an atomic bomb during post-World War II testing in Operation Crossroads. Among the most "thoroughly sunk" ships, she was refloated and then sunk a second time as a target ship two years later.