USS Blenny

Each 5 inch gun had a crew of six; gun captain, first loader, second loader, third loader, pointer and trainer. In the above the trainer is shown seated. Seated opposite, but not visible, is the pointer. Ammuniton was available from the ready locker built into the structure around the conning tower. It was also passed from the magazine (below the crews mess) to the deck by way of the ammunition scuttle. After firing empty casings were deep-sixed.During the period 11 July to 11 August 1945, she sank over 60 small vessels using the 5″ deck guns, 40 mm, 30 & 50 cal. machine guns, 12 ga shotgun, demolition charges, and even diesel oil.

Unofficial logo of the BlennyDesigned and painted on the conning towerby E.R. “Skinny” Cooper

Artificial Reef:
Forty-two officers and crew members of the USS Blenny (SS-324), including her war time skipper, Captain William Hazzard, traveled to Ocean City, MD from all over the country to witness the last dive of their “Sub” on June 7, 1989: she will continue to serve mankind as a reef. The occasion was also an opportunity to renew old friendships and relive memories of experiences shared some forty-five years ago. The Blenny was towed fifteen miles out to sea accompanied by us in chartered boats where she made her last plunge beneath the Atlantic waves. After thousands of successful dives, the gallant lady submerged for the last time, never to surface again. She settled into the sea slowly and proudly, with hardly a dry eye looking on. As a TV commentator said, “It took a Navy Demolition Team to do what the enemy and angry seas could never do: sink the Blenny” Rest in Peace. A most heartfelt thank-you to all the wonderful people of Ocean City and the State of Maryland who gave us the opportunity to experience this nostalgic moment.

Demolition and sinking

on the bottom

History of the USS Blenny SS-324Blenny: Any of numerous small, elongated, and often scaleless fishes living along rocky shores.(SS-324: dp. 1,525 (surf.), 2,415 (subm.); l. 311’9″; b. 27’3″; dr. 15’3″; s. 20.25 k. (surf.), 8.75 k. (subm.); cpl. 81; a. 10 21″ tt., 1 5″, 1 40mm., 1 20mm., 2 .50-cal. mg.; cl. Balao)Blenny (SS-324) was laid down on 8 July 1943 at Groton, Conn., by the Electric Boat Co.; launched on 9 April 1944; sponsored by Miss Florence B. King; and commissioned at New London, Conn., on 27 July 1944, Lt. Comdr. W. H. Hazzard in command.Following training at New London and at Newport, R.I., the submarine got underway for Key West, Fla., on 29 August. She arrived at her destination on 5 September and trained at the Fleet Sound School located there. From there, she headed for the Panama Canal, transiting it on the 19th. The warship departed Balboa on 28 September and arrived at Oahu on 15 October. At Pearl Harbor, she began preparations for her first war patrol.On 10 November, Blenny stood out of Pearl Harbor bound for waters off the coast of Luzon. She made a fuel stop at Saipan on 22 November and, the following day, departed for her assigned patrol area. On 1 December, she fired a single torpedo at a Japanese escort vessel but missed. The enemy retaliated with a severe, but unsuccessful, depth-charge attack. Five days later, the submarine escaped unscathed from another close call when a low- flying enemy plane dropped two bombs which near-missed Blenny. That same day, 14 December, the submarine claimed her first two successes. In the morning, she made a surface gun attack on a 300- ton sea truck and sank it. Late that night, the submarine sank the 800-ton Coast Defense Vessel No. 28 with torpedoes in a surface attack. On the 23d, Blenny claimed to have torpedoed and sank a 10,000-ton transport which, after the war was identified as the 4,156-ton cargoman, Kenzui Maru. Her parting shot of that patrol came on the 27th when she fired torpedoes at an unidentified freighter and claimed to have damaged her. Japanese records, however, do not substantiate the claim. Blenny set course for Fremantle, Australia on 31 December 1944 and arrived there on 13 January 1945 to begin refit.Blenny embarked upon her second war patrol on 5 February. This time her patrol area was located off the coast of Indochina. On 20 February, she made an unsuccessful submerged attack on a convoy escorted by two destroyers. The attack did not succeed, though, and the submarine suffered through a series of depth-charge attacks from the convoy’s escorts. Those, however, also proved unsuccessful. On the night of 26 February, she encountered the 10,238-ton tanker Amato Maru and sank her with a spread of torpedoes. Though she also claimed to have damaged two similar ships, a postwar check of Japanese records failed to corroborate that claim. Two days later, the submarine received orders to put into Subic Bay to reload torpedoes and arrived there on 2 March. She returned to her patrol area on the 4th. After 16 days on patrol, she had her most successful day of the war on 20 March when she sank three enemy ships in one 24-hour period–the 500-ton cargoman Yamakuni Maru, the 834-ton Nanahin Maru No. 21, and the 1,039-ton cargo ship Hosen Maru. After receiving two rescued aircrewmen from Blueback (SS-326) on 25 March, she set a course for Subic Bay and a refit.She completed that in-port period on 16 Apri1 and put to sea for a patrol off Indochina and in the Java Sea. Her tour off the Indochinese coast came as a result of the need for lifeguard submarines to be on station to rescue ditched Army aircrews. She sighted no targets during that phase of the cruise and returned to Subic Bay on 16 May to take on additional fuel. On the 18th, Blenny returned to sea and shaped a course for the Java Sea. On 25 May, she encountered a small subchaser close inshore. Her approach had to be made in relatively shallow water; therefore, Blenny flooded down and backed awash toward the shore and her target while a sailor on the fantail took depth soundings with a lead line. She fired torpedoes from her stern tubes and claimed to have sunk the subchaser. However, since she estimated the enemy warship to be of only 170 tons displacement and the postwar survey counted only vessels of 500 tons or more, that claim is impossible to verify. Be that as it may, the submarine scored a corroborated kill five days later when, after sinking a small lugger with gunfire, she encountered the 520-ton cargoman Hokoku Maru and sank her in a daylight attack. On 5 June, Blenny departed the Java area and set a course for Fremantle, Australia. She arrived at her destination four days later and commenced refit in preparation for her fourth and final patrol of the war.Blenny embarked upon her final war patrol on 5 July 1945. Departing Fremantle, she shaped a course for her patrol area in the Java Sea and north from there to the eastern coast of Malaya. Although her entire bag for the patrol consisted of small fry, she got an impressive number of them. She started out on 11 July by sinking a sea truck by gunfire. Five days later, she attacked a converted gunboat and claimed to have sunk it with torpedoes, though postwar accountings do not verify the sinking. She then engaged the small vessel that had been steaming in company with the gunboat, but her gunfire failed to damage her much because of extreme range and Blenny’s inability to close. For the remainder of the patrol, she encountered only sampans, junks, and the like, sinking many after ascertaining their nationality and seeing to the safety of their crews. On 3 August, the submarine rescued a boarding party from a sampan which Cod (SS-224) had been forced to abandon upon the approach of an enemy plane two days previously. On the 7th, she had her own brief scrape with Japanese air power when a plane dropped a small bomb. He missed, and Blenny dove to evade. Four days later, she left her patrol area and shaped a course for Subic Bay.Blenny arrived in Subic Bay on 14 August. The following day, hostilities ceased. The submarine completed refit and departed Subic Bay on 31 August. She arrived at Guam on 5 September and began a series of training exercises. She remained in the Marianas until 12 January 1946 when she got underway for the United States. The warship made a two-day stop at Pearl Harbor before arriving in San Diego on the 3Oth. She stayed there for two months before shifting to San Francisco on 30 March. During the summer, she operated along the west coast. On 2 August, the submarine departed San Diego and headed–via Pearl Harbor–for the Far East. She arrived at Subic Bay late in the month and remained there until 2 September at which time she got underway for Tsingtao. Blenny served in Chinese waters–at Tsingtao and Shanghai–until late October. After operations in Japanese waters which lasted until 3 November, she set a course home.She returned to San Diego late in the month and remained there until mid-February 1947. On the 17th, Blenny stood out of San Diego, bound for Pearl Harbor. She arrived in Oahu on 10 March and stayed until the 18th when she headed back to San Diego. She arrived at her destination on 8 April and operated along the California coast through the end of July. On the 30 July, the submarine stood out of San Diego on a reserve training cruise to the Pacific Northwest during which she visited ports in Washington and British Columbia. She resumed operations along the California coast late in August. That employment continued, with periodic cruises to the Pacific Northwest, until early July 1950. During that month, she made a round-trip voyage to Pearl Harbor and back to San Diego, returning to her home port early in August. She resumed west coast operations once more and continued so employed into the spring of 1952.On 30 April 1952, she got underway, via Pearl Harbor, for the Far East. Blenny arrived in Yokosuka, Japan, on 24 May. While in the Far East, the submarine conducted routine 7th Fleet operations and made a 35-day reconnaissance war patrol ln the Korean war zone. She departed Yokosuka to return home on 18 October. Saillng via Chichi Jima in the Volcano Islands and Pearl Harbor, she arrived back in San Diego early in November. She conducted west coast operations until reassigned to the Atlantic Fleet in the spring of 1954. On 11 May, she stood out of San Diego and shaped a course for the Panama Canal. She transited the canal on 24 May and headed for New London, Conn., where she reported on 9 June.Blenny remained active for another decade and a half. Throughout the remainder of her career, the submarine operated from the New London base. Initially, her operations took her as far south as the British West Indies and as far north as the coast of Newfoundland. Her primary mission was the development of attack submarine tactics and of antisubmarine warfare tactics. However, she also test-fired new types of torpedoes. That routine continued until the early 1960’s when she began making periodic deployments to the Mediterranean for duty with the 6th Fleet. Blenny alternated between tours of duty with the 6th Fleet and extended assignments in the western Atlantic where she conducted test and evaluation operations and took part in antisubmarine training.Sometime In 1969, she was redesignated an auxiliary submarine AGSS-324; and, in September, she was placed in commission, in reserve. Two months later, Blenny went out of commission for good, and she was berthed initially at Philadelphia. Her name was struck from the Navy list on 15 August 1973. Subsequently moved to Portsmouth., Va., she remained there until 3 July 1979 at which time she was moved to the naval station at Norfolk for a period of temporary duty. In 1984, it was planned to use the submarine for an exercise target, but that apparently never happened. Instead, in 1987, a decision was made to donate her to Maryland for use as an artificial reef.Blenny earned four battle stars for World War II service.