List of submarines of the United States Navy
This is a list of submarines of the United States Navy, listed by hull number and by name.
Hull number | Name | Notes |
---|---|---|
Turtle | World's first combat submersible. Deployed in 1775. Failed mission to destroy HMS Eagle. Continental Army project. | |
Alligator | Experimental submarine built in 1862. Never operationally deployed. Foundered in bad weather in 1863. First submarine of the United States Navy. | |
Intelligent Whale | Experimental submarine built in 1863, acquired by the US Navy in 1869 and abandoned in 1873. | |
DSV-0 | Trieste | First submarine which reached the Challenger Deep by Swiss Jacques Piccard and US Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh in 1960. |
DSV-1 | Trieste II | Formerly X-1 |
DSV-2 | Alvin | |
DSV-3 | Turtle | |
DSV-4 | Sea Cliff | |
DSV-5 | Nemo | |
NR-1 | NR-1 | Nuclear powered research submarine. |
SSK-1 | Barracuda | Re-designated as SST-3. |
SSK-2 | Bass | |
SSK-3 | Bonita | |
SF-1 | AA-1/T-1 | Also SS-52 |
SF-2 | AA-2/T-2 | Also SS-60 |
SF-3 | AA-3/T-3 | Also SS-61 |
SF-4 | V-1 | Also SS-163 |
SF-5 | V-2 | Also SS-164 |
SF-6 | V-3 | Also SS-165 |
SF-7 | V-4 | Also SS-166 |
SM-1 | Argonaut | Also SS-166 |
SS-1 | Holland | |
SS-2 | Plunger/A-1 | |
SS-3 | Adder/A-2 | |
SS-4 | Grampus/A-3 | |
SS-5 | Moccasin/A-4 | |
SS-6 | Pike/A-5 | |
SS-7 | Porpoise/A-6 | |
SS-8 | Shark/A-7 | |
SS-9 | Octopus/C-1 | |
SS-10 | Viper/B-1 | |
SS-11 | Cuttlefish/B-2 | |
SS-12 | Tarantula/B-3 | |
SS-13 | Stingray/C-2 | |
SS-14 | Tarpon/C-3 | |
SS-15 | Bonita/C-4 | |
SS-16 | Snapper/C-5 | |
SS-17 | Narwhal/D-1 | |
SS-18 | Grayling/D-2 | |
SS-19 | Salmon/D-3 | |
SS-19½ | Seal/G-1 | |
SS-20 | Carp/F-1 | Lost in collision on 17 Dec 1917. |
SS-21 | Barracuda/F-2 | |
SSN-21 | Seawolf | Lead boat of a class of three. Commissioned 1997 |
SS-22 | Pickerel/F-3 | |
SSN-22 | Connecticut | 2nd of three Seawolf-class. Commissioned 1998 |
SS-23 | F-4 | Foundered and lost on 25 Mar 1915. Raised but not repaired. First US submarine to be lost. |
SSN-23 | Jimmy Carter | 3rd of three Seawolf-class. Commissioned 2005 |
SS-24 | E-1 | |
SS-25 | E-2 | |
SS-26 | G-4 | |
SS-27 | G-2 | Sank at moorings 30 July 1919, drowned 3 crew |
SS-28 | Seawolf/H-1 | Grounded 12 Mar 1920. Lost during salvage operations 24 Mar 1920. |
SS-29 | Nautilus/H-2 | |
SS-30 | Garfish/H-3 | |
SS-31 | G-3 | |
SS-32 | K-1 | |
SS-33 | K-2 | |
SS-34 | K-3 | |
SS-35 | K-4 | |
SS-36 | K-5 | |
SS-37 | K-6 | |
SS-38 | K-7 | |
SS-39 | K-8 | |
SS-40 | L-1 | |
SS-41 | L-2 | |
SS-42 | L-3 | |
SS-43 | L-4 | |
SS-44 | L-5 | |
SS-45 | L-6 | |
SS-46 | L-7 | |
SS-47 | M-1 | |
SS-48 | L-8 | |
SS-49 | L-9 | |
SS-50 | L-10 | |
SS-51 | L-11 | |
SS-52 | AA-1/T-1 | Also SF-1 |
SS-53 | N-1 | |
SS-54 | N-2 | |
SS-55 | N-3 | |
SS-56 | N-4 | |
SS-57 | N-5 | |
SS-58 | N-6 | |
SS-59 | N-7 | |
SS-60 | AA-2/T-2 | Also SF-2 |
SS-61 | AA-3/T-3 | Also SF-3 |
SS-62 | O-1 | |
SS-63 | O-2 | Recommissioned in 1941, Oldest US sub to serve in WWII, one of only eight subs that served in both WWI and WWII |
SS-64 | O-3 | served in both WWI and WWII |
SS-65 | O-4 | served in both WWI and WWII |
SS-66 | O-5 | Lost in collision 28 Oct 1923. |
SS-67 | O-6 | served in both WWI and WWII |
SS-68 | O-7 | served in both WWI and WWII |
SS-69 | O-8 | served in both WWI and WWII |
SS-70 | O-9 | served in both WWI and WWII, Lost in accident 20 Jun 1941. |
SS-71 | O-10 | served in both WWI and WWII |
SS-72 | O-11 | |
SS-73 | O-12 | Used in 1931 Wilkins arctic expedition and scuttled. |
SS-74 | O-13 | |
SS-75 | O-14 | |
SS-76 | O-15 | |
SS-77 | O-16 | |
SS-78 | R-1 | |
SS-79 | R-2 | Oldest continuously commissioned sub to serve in WWII (1919−1945) |
SS-80 | R-3 | |
SS-81 | R-4 | |
SS-82 | R-5 | |
SS-83 | R-6 | |
SS-84 | R-7 | |
SS-85 | R-8 | |
SS-86 | R-9 | |
SS-87 | R-10 | |
SS-88 | R-11 | |
SS-89 | R-12 | Foundered 12 Jun 1943. |
SS-90 | R-13 | |
SS-91 | R-14 | |
SS-92 | R-15 | |
SS-93 | R-16 | |
SS-94 | R-17 | |
SS-95 | R-18 | |
SS-96 | R-19 | Transferred to Royal Navy 9 March 1942 as HMS P.513, rammed by Royal Canadian Navy minesweeper on 21 June 1942 and sank with all hands. |
SS-97 | R-20 | |
SS-98 | R-21 | |
SS-99 | R-22 | |
SS-100 | R-23 | |
SS-101 | R-24 | |
SS-102 | R-25 | |
SS-103 | R-26 | |
SS-104 | R-27 | |
SS-105 | S-1 | |
SS-106 | S-2 | |
SS-107 | S-3 | |
SS-108 | cancelled | |
SS-109 | S-4 | Lost in accident 17 Dec 1927. |
SS-110 | S-5 | Lost in accident 1 Dec 1920. |
SS-111 | S-6 | |
SS-112 | S-7 | |
SS-113 | S-8 | |
SS-114 | S-9 | |
SS-115 | S-10 | |
SS-116 | S-11 | |
SS-117 | S-12 | |
SS-118 | S-13 | |
SS-119 | S-14 | |
SS-120 | S-15 | |
SS-121 | S-16 | |
SS-122 | S-17 | |
SS-123 | S-18 | |
SS-124 | S-19 | |
SS-125 | S-20 | |
SS-126 | S-21 | |
SS-127 | S-22 | |
SS-128 | S-23 | |
SS-129 | S-24 | |
SS-130 | S-25 | transferred to the Royal Navy 4 November 1941 and renamed as HMS P.551 then transferred to the Polish Navy in exile and renamed ORP Jastrząb. On 2 May 1942 she was attacked in a friendly fire incident by a Royal Navy minesweeper and destroyer and sank with all hands. |
SS-131 | S-26 | Sunk in collision 24 Jan 1942. |
SS-132 | S-27 | Lost by grounding 19 Jun 1942. |
SS-133 | S-28 | Foundered 4 Jul 1944. |
SS-134 | S-29 | |
SS-135 | S-30 | |
SS-136 | S-31 | |
SS-137 | S-32 | |
SS-138 | S-33 | |
SS-139 | S-34 | |
SS-140 | S-35 | |
SS-141 | S-36 | Lost by grounding 20 Jan 1942. |
SS-142 | S-37 | |
SS-143 | S-38 | |
SS-144 | S-39 | Lost by grounding 14 Aug 1942. |
SS-145 | S-40 | |
SS-146 | S-41 | |
SS-147 | H-4 | |
SS-148 | H-5 | |
SS-149 | H-6 | |
SS-150 | H-7 | |
SS-151 | H-8 | |
SS-152 | H-9 | |
SS-153 | S-42 | |
SS-154 | S-43 | |
SS-155 | S-44 | Sunk by Japanese destroyer on 7 Oct 1943. |
SS-156 | S-45 | |
SS-157 | S-46 | |
SS-158 | S-47 | |
SS-159 | S-48 | Sank during a builders trial on 7 December 1921. Was raised 2 weeks later and repaired. |
SS-160 | S-49 | Used as a privately owned traveling tourist attraction from 1931 to 1941. |
SS-161 | S-50 | |
SS-162 | S-51 | Lost in collision 25 Sep 1925. |
SS-163 | Barracuda | |
SS-164 | Bass | |
SS-165 | Bonita | |
SS-166 | Argonaut | Never formally held SS-166 classification. Variously designated as V-4, SF-7, SM-1, A-1 and APS-1. Sunk by Japanese destroyers 10 Jan 1943. |
SS-167 | Narwhal | |
SS-168 | Nautilus | |
SS-169 | Dolphin | |
SS-170 | Cachalot | |
SS-171 | Cuttlefish | |
SS-172 | Porpoise | |
SS-173 | Pike | |
SS-174 | Shark | Sunk by Japanese destroyer Feb 11 1942. |
SS-175 | Tarpon | Foundered in deep water, south of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, on 26 August 1957, while under tow to the scrap yard. |
SS-176 | Perch | Scuttled 3 March 1942 after damage from Japanese ships. |
SS-177 | Pickerel | Sunk 3 April 1943 by Japanese ships. |
SS-178 | Permit | |
SS-179 | Plunger | |
SS-180 | Pollack | |
SS-181 | Pompano | Possibly sunk by mine October 1943. |
SS-182 | Salmon | |
SS-183 | Seal | |
SS-184 | Skipjack | Sunk in Operation Crossroads atomic bomb test, 25 July 1946 |
SS-185 | Snapper | |
SS-186 | Stingray | |
SS-187 | Sturgeon | |
SS-188 | Sargo | |
SS-189 | Saury | |
SS-190 | Spearfish | |
SS-191 | Sculpin | Helped locate the sunken Squalus 24 May 1939. Damaged by Japanese destroyer 19 Nov 1943 and scuttled to avoid capture. Captain John P. Cromwell chose to go down with the ship, earning himself the Medal of Honor. |
SS-192 | Squalus/Sailfish | Sunk in accident 23 May 1939. Raised, repaired and re-commissioned as USS Sailfish on 15 May 1940. Sank Japanese aircraft carrier Chuyo 3 Dec 1943 which was carrying survivors of Sculpin(SS-191). |
SS-193 | Swordfish | Sunk by Japanese ships 12 Jan 1945. |
SS-194 | Seadragon | |
SS-195 | Sealion | Destroyed by Japanese aircraft 10 Dec 1941. First US submarine lost in World War II. |
SS-196 | Searaven | |
SS-197 | Seawolf | Accidentally sunk by US Navy destroyer escort 3 Oct 1944. |
SS-198 | Tambor | |
SS-199 | Tautog | Highest scoring US submarine of World War II. |
SS-200 | Thresher | |
SS-201 | Triton | Sunk 15 April 1943 by Japanese destroyers. |
SS-202 | Trout | Lost around 29 Feb 1944, possibly mine. |
SS-203 | Tuna | |
SS-204 | Mackerel | |
SS-205 | Marlin | |
SS-206 | Gar | |
SS-207 | Grampus | Sunk by Japanese destroyers 5 Mar 1943. |
SS-208 | Grayback | Sunk by Japanese aircraft 26 Feb 1944. |
SS-209 | Grayling | Sunk by Japanese freighter 9 Sep 1943. |
SS-210 | Grenadier | Sunk by Japanese aircraft 22 Apr 1943. |
SS-211 | Gudgeon | Probably sunk by Japanese on 18 Apr 1944. |
SS-212 | Gato | |
SS-213 | Greenling | |
SS-214 | Grouper | |
SS-215 | Growler | Sunk by Japanese ships 8 Nov 1944. |
SS-216 | Grunion | Sunk 30 Jul 1942, cause unknown. |
SS-217 | Guardfish | |
SS-218 | Albacore | Best known for sinking Japanese aircraft carrier Taiho with one torpedo. Sunk by mine 7 Nov 1944. |
SS-219 | Amberjack | Sunk by Japanese ships on 16 Feb 1943. |
SS-220 | Barb | Only known sub to launch a land attack on Japan on 12th patrol June 1945. |
SS-221 | Blackfish | |
SS-222 | Bluefish | |
SS-223 | Bonefish | Sunk 18 June 1945 by Japanese vessels |
SS-224 | Cod | Museum ship in Cleveland, OH. |
SS-225 | Cero | |
SS-226 | Corvina | Sunk by Japanese submarine 16 Nov 1943. |
SS-227 | Darter | Grounded on 24 Oct 1944. Destroyed to prevent capture. |
SS-228 | Drum | Currently museum ship in Mobile, AL. |
SS-229 | Flying Fish | |
SS-230 | Finback | |
SS-231 | Haddock | |
SS-232 | Halibut | |
SS-233 | Herring | Sunk 1 June 1944 by shore battery. |
SS-234 | Kingfish | |
SS-235 | Shad | |
SS-236 | Silversides | Top scoring surviving U.S. submarine of WWII. Currently resides in Muskegon, MI at the Great Lakes Naval Memorial & Museum. |
SS-237 | Trigger | Sunk 27 March 1945 by Japanese ships. |
SS-238 | Wahoo | Sunk by Japanese ships and aircraft 11 Oct 1943. |
SS-239 | Whale | |
SS-240 | Angler | |
SS-241 | Bashaw | |
SS-242 | Bluegill | |
SS-243 | Bream | |
SS-244 | Cavalla | Best known for sinking Japanese carrier Shokaku. Museum ship in Galveston, Texas. |
SS-245 | Cobia | Museum ship in Manitiwoc, WI. |
SS-246 | Croaker | Museum ship in Buffalo, NY. |
SS-247 | Dace | |
SS-248 | Dorado | Accidentally sunk by US aircraft 12 Oct 1943. |
SS-249 | Flasher | Credited with over 100,000 tons of Japanese shipping sunk in WWII. |
SS-250 | Flier | Sunk 13 Aug 1944 by mine. 8 Survivors |
SS-251 | Flounder | |
SS-252 | Gabilan | |
SS-253 | Gunnel | |
SS-254 | Gurnard | |
SS-255 | Haddo | |
SS-256 | Hake | |
SS-257 | Harder | Sunk by Japanese ships 24 August 1944. |
SS-258 | Hoe | |
SS-259 | Jack | |
SS-260 | Lapon | |
SS-261 | Mingo | |
SS-262 | Muskallunge | |
SS-263 | Paddle | |
SS-264 | Pargo | |
SS-265 | Peto | |
SS-266 | Pogy | |
SS-267 | Pompon | |
SS-268 | Puffer | |
SS-269 | Rasher | |
SS-270 | Raton | |
SS-271 | Ray | |
SS-272 | Redfin | |
SS-273 | Robalo | Sunk by mine 26 Jul 1944. |
SS-274 | Rock | |
SS-275 | Runner | Missing and presumed lost Jun 1943. |
SS-276 | Sawfish | |
SS-277 | Scamp | Sunk by Japanese ship 6 Nov 1944. |
SS-278 | Scorpion | Probably sunk by mine 1944. |
SS-279 | Snook | Sunk April 1945, cause unknown. |
SS-280 | Steelhead | |
SS-281 | Sunfish | |
SS-282 | Tunny | Converted to Regulus missile submarine |
SS-283 | Tinosa | |
SS-284 | Tullibee | Sunk by own torpedo 24 March 1944. |
SS-285 | Balao | |
SS-286 | Billfish | |
SS-287 | Bowfin | Museum ship, USS Bowfin Submarine Museum & Park, Honolulu, Hawaii |
SS-288 | Cabrilla | |
SS-289 | Capelin | Missing and presumed lost Dec 1943. |
SS-290 | Cisco | Sunk by Japanese ships and aircraft 28 Sep 1943. |
SS-291 | Crevalle | |
SS-292 | Devilfish | |
SS-293 | Dragonet | |
SS-294 | Escolar | Sunk by mine Oct 1944. |
SS-295 | Hackleback | |
SS-296 | Lancetfish | Commissioned 12 Feb 1945. Sunk at pier 15 Mar 1945. Decommissioned 24 Mar 1945. Not repaired. Stricken 9 June 1958. Never went to sea. |
SS-297 | Ling | Museum ship, New Jersey Naval Museum — Hackensack, New Jersey |
SS-298 | Lionfish | Museum ship, Battleship Cove Museum, Fall River, Massachusetts |
SS-299 | Manta | |
SS-300 | Moray | |
SS-301 | Roncador | |
SS-302 | Sabalo | |
SS-303 | Sablefish | |
SS-304 | Seahorse | |
SS-305 | Skate | |
SS-306 | Tang | Second highest scoring US submarine of World War II. Sunk by circular run of own torpedo on 24 Oct 1944. |
SS-307 | Tilefish | |
SS-308 | Apogon | |
SS-309 | Aspro | |
SS-310 | Batfish | Museum ship, War Memorial Park, Muskogee, Oklahoma |
SS-311 | Archerfish | Best known for sinking the Japanese carrier Shinano, in November 1944, |
SS-312 | Burrfish | |
SS-313 | Perch | |
SS-314 | Shark | Lost 24 Oct 1944. |
SS-315 | Sealion | |
SS-316 | Barbel | Sunk 4 Feb 1945 by Japanese aircraft. |
SS-317 | Barbero | Converted to Regulus missile submarine |
SS-318 | Baya | |
SS-319 | Becuna | Museum ship, Independence Seaport Museum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
SS-320 | Bergall | |
SS-321 | Besugo | |
SS-322 | Blackfin | |
SS-323 | Caiman | |
SS-324 | Blenny | |
SS-325 | Blower | |
SS-326 | Blueback | |
SS-327 | Boarfish | |
SS-328 | Charr | |
SS-329 | Chub | |
SS-330 | Brill | |
SS-331 | Bugara | |
SS-332 | Bullhead | Lost 6 Aug 1945. Last U.S. Sub loss of WWII. |
SS-333 | Bumper | |
SS-334 | Cabezon | |
SS-335 | Dentuda | |
SS-336 | Capitaine | |
SS-337 | Carbonero | |
SS-338 | Carp | |
SS-339 | Catfish | |
SS-340 | Entemedor | |
SS-341 | Chivo | |
SS-342 | Chopper | |
SS-343 | Clamagore | Museum ship, Patriots Point Maritime Museum, Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina |
SS-344 | Cobbler | |
SS-345 | Cochino | Lost 26 Aug 1949 by fire and electrical failure. |
SS-346 | Corporal | |
SS-347 | Cubera | |
SS-348 | Cusk | |
SS-349 | Diodon | |
SS-350 | Dogfish | |
SS-351 | Greenfish | |
SS-352 | Halfbeak | |
SS-353 | Dugong | cancelled |
SS-354 | Eel | cancelled |
SS-355 | Espada | cancelled |
SS-356 | Jawfish | cancelled |
SS-357 | Ono | cancelled |
SS-358 | Garlopa | cancelled |
SS-359 | Garrupa | cancelled |
SS-360 | Goldring | cancelled |
SS-361 | Golet | Lost 14 Jun 1944 by Japanese vessels. |
SS-362 | Guavina | |
SS-363 | Guitarro | |
SS-364 | Hammerhead | |
SS-365 | Hardhead | |
SS-366 | Hawkbill | |
SS-367 | Icefish | |
SS-368 | Jallao | |
SS-369 | Kete | Lost Mar 1945, cause unknown. |
SS-370 | Kraken | |
SS-371 | Lagarto | Sunk 4 May 1945 by Japanese ships. |
SS-372 | Lamprey | |
SS-373 | Lizardfish | |
SS-374 | Loggerhead | |
SS-375 | Macabi | |
SS-376 | Mapiro | |
SS-377 | Menhaden | |
SS-378 | Mero | |
SS-379 | Needlefish | cancelled |
SS-380 | Nerka | cancelled |
SS-381 | Sand Lance | |
SS-382 | Picuda | |
SS-383 | Pampanito | Museum ship, S. F. Maritime National Park, San Francisco, California |
SS-384 | Parche | |
SS-385 | Bang | |
SS-386 | Pilotfish | |
SS-387 | Pintado | |
SS-388 | Pipefish | |
SS-389 | Piranha | |
SS-390 | Plaice | |
SS-391 | Pomfret | |
SS-392 | Sterlet | |
SS-393 | Queenfish | |
SS-394 | Razorback | Museum ship, Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum, North Little Rock, Arkansas |
SS-395 | Redfish | |
SS-396 | Ronquil | |
SS-397 | Scabbardfish | |
SS-398 | Segundo | |
SS-399 | Sea Cat | |
SS-400 | Sea Devil | |
SS-401 | Sea Dog | |
SS-402 | Sea Fox | |
SS-403 | Atule | |
SS-404 | Spikefish | |
SS-405 | Sea Owl | Converted to SSK in 1963. |
SS-406 | Sea Poacher | |
SS-407 | Sea Robin | |
SS-408 | Sennet | |
SS-409 | Piper | |
SS-410 | Threadfin | |
SS-411 | Spadefish | |
SS-412 | Trepang | |
SS-413 | Spot | |
SS-414 | Springer | |
SS-415 | Stickleback | Lost 29 May 1958. |
SS-416 | Tiru | |
SS-417 | Tench | Sold to Peru for spare parts, 16 September 1976. |
SS-418 | Thornback | Transferred to Turkey on 1 July 1971. |
SS-419 | Tigrone | Rescued over 30 downed aviators during World War II. Re-designated as SSR-419 in 1948 and as AGSS-419 in 1963. Used to evaluate experimental sonar systems. Last submarine which served in World War II in service in the U.S. Navy. |
SS-420 | Tirante | |
SS-421 | Trutta | Transferred to Turkey on 1 July 1972. |
SS-422 | Toro | |
SS-423 | Torsk | Museum ship, Baltimore Maritime Museum, Baltimore, Maryland |
SS-424 | Quillback | |
SS-425 | Trumpetfish | Transferred to Brazil on 15 October 1973. |
SS-426 | Tusk | Transferred to Republic of China on 18 October 1973. |
SS-427 | Turbot | Launched but not completed |
SS-428 | Ulua | Launched but not completed |
SS-429 | Unicorn | cancelled |
SS-430 | Vendace | cancelled |
SS-431 | Walrus | cancelled |
SS-432 | Whitefish | cancelled |
SS-433 | Whiting | cancelled |
SS-434 | Wolffish | cancelled |
SS-435 | Corsair | |
SS-436 | Unicorn | Launched but not completed. |
SS-437 | Walrus | Launched but not completed. |
438 to 474 | cancelled | |
SS-475 | Argonaut | Transferred to Canada on 2 December 1968. |
SS-476 | Runner | |
SS-477 | Conger | |
SS-478 | Cutlass | Transferred to Republic of China on 15 April 1973. |
SS-479 | Diablo | Transferred to Pakistan on 1 June 1974. |
SS-480 | Medregal | Converted to SSR in Jan 1948. |
SS-481 | Requin | Museum ship, Carnegie Science Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. |
SS-482 | Irex | |
SS-483 | Sea Leopard | Transferred to Brazil on 27 March 1973. |
SS-484 | Odax | Transferred to Brazil on 8 July 1972. |
SS-485 | Sirago | |
SS-486 | Pomodon | |
SS-487 | Remora | Transferred to Greece on 29 October 1973. |
SS-488 | Sarda | |
SS/SSR-489 | Spinax | |
SS-490 | Volador | Last fleet submarine to be launched on 17 Jan 1946. Transferred to Italy on 18 August 1972. |
SS-491 | Pompano | cancelled |
SS-492 | Grayling | cancelled |
SS-493 | Needlefish | cancelled |
SS-494 | Sculpin | cancelled |
SS-495 to SS-521 | cancelled | |
SS-522 | Amberjack | |
SS-523 | Grampus | |
SS-524 | Pickerel | |
SS-525 | Grenadier | Last fleet submarine to be commissioned on 10 Feb 1951. |
SS-526 | Dorado | cancelled |
SS-527 | Comber | cancelled |
SS-528 | Sea Panther | cancelled |
SS-529 | Tiburon | cancelled |
SS-530 to SS-549 | cancelled | |
SS-550 | Barracuda | Also designated as SSK-1 and SST-3. |
SS-551 | Bass | Also designated as SSK-2. |
SS-552 | Bonita | Also designated as SSK-3. |
SS-553 | Kinn | Cancelled, offshore procurement of KNM Kinn (S316)[1] |
SS-554 | Springeren | Cancelled, offshore procurement of HDMS Springeren (S329)[1] |
AGSS-555 | Dolphin | Research submarine. Last conventionally powered submarine in service with the US Navy. Museum ship, Maritime Museum of San Diego, San Diego, California |
SS-556 | offshore procurement for Norway | |
SS-557 to SS-562 | cancelled | |
SS-563 | Tang | |
SS-564 | Trigger | |
SS-565 | Wahoo | |
SS-566 | Trout | |
SS-567 | Gudgeon | |
SS-568 | Harder | |
AGSS-569 | Albacore | Experimental prototype with teardrop hull. Museum ship, Albacore Park and Museum, Portsmouth, New Hampshire |
AGSS-570 | Mackerel | completed as SST-1 |
SSN-571 | Nautilus | First nuclear powered submarine. First submarine to travel under the North Pole. Museum ship, U.S. Navy Submarine Force Museum, Groton, Connecticut |
SSR-572 | Sailfish | |
SSR-573 | Salmon | |
SSG-574 | Grayback | Converted and re-designated as LPSS-574 (amphibious transport submarine) on 30 Aug 1968. |
SSN-575 | Seawolf | |
SS-576 | Darter | |
SSG-577 | Growler | Museum ship, Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum, New York, New York |
SSN-578 | Skate | First submarine to surface at the North Pole. |
SSN-579 | Swordfish | |
SS-580 | Barbel | First diesel powered attack submarine with a teardrop hull. |
SS-581 | Blueback | Last conventionally powered attack submarine in service with the US Navy. Museum ship, OMSI Museum, Portland, Oregon |
SS-582 | Bonefish | Last conventionally powered submarine built for the US Navy. Laid after Blueback but launched and commissioned before |
SSN-583 | Sargo | |
SSN-584 | Seadragon | First submarine to complete a submerged circumnavigation of the Northwest Passage. |
SSN-585 | Skipjack | First nuclear powered submarine with a teardrop hull. |
SSRN-586 | Triton | First submarine to complete a submerged circumnavigation of the globe, and the only Western submarine powered by two nuclear reactors. |
SSGN-587 | Halibut | First and only American nuclear powered submarine designed and built as a guided missile submarine. |
SSN-588 | Scamp | |
SSN-589 | Scorpion | Lost in accident 22 May 1968. |
SSN-590 | Sculpin | |
SSN-591 | Shark | |
SSN-592 | Snook | |
SSN-593 | Thresher | Lost in accident 10 Apr 1963. |
SSN-594 | Permit | |
SSN-595 | Plunger | |
SSN-596 | Barb | |
SSN-597 | Tullibee | First quiet nuclear submarine with turbo electric drive. First integrated sonar suite, including both a low-frequency passive array, for long range detection, and a spherical array, for approach and attack (AN/BQQ Series Sonar). First submarine specifically designed as an ASW (Anti-Submarine Warfare) weapon. First submarine with torpedo tubes amidships. |
SSBN-598 | George Washington | First nuclear powered ballistic missile submarine. |
SSBN-599 | Patrick Henry | |
SSBN-600 | Theodore Roosevelt | |
SSBN-601 | Robert E. Lee | |
SSBN-602 | Abraham Lincoln | |
SSN-603 | Pollack | |
SSN-604 | Haddo | |
SSN-605 | Jack | |
SSN-606 | Tinosa | |
SSN-607 | Dace | |
SSBN-608 | Ethan Allen | |
SSBN-609 | Sam Houston | |
SSBN-610 | Thomas A. Edison | |
SSBN-611 | John Marshall | |
SSN-612 | Guardfish | |
SSN-613 | Flasher | |
SSN-614 | Greenling | |
SSN-615 | Gato | |
SSBN-616 | Lafayette | |
SSBN-617 | Alexander Hamilton | |
SSBN-618 | Thomas Jefferson | |
SSBN-619 | Andrew Jackson | |
SSBN-620 | John Adams | |
SSN-621 | Haddock | |
SSBN-622 | James Monroe | |
SSBN-623 | Nathan Hale | |
SSBN-624 | Woodrow Wilson | |
SSBN-625 | Henry Clay | |
SSBN-626 | Daniel Webster | Decommissioned on 30 August 1990 and reclassified a moored training ship (S5W Prototype facility) with hull number MTS-626. |
SSBN-627 | James Madison | |
SSBN-628 | Tecumseh | |
SSBN-629 | Daniel Boone | |
SSBN-630 | John C. Calhoun | |
SSBN-631 | Ulysses S. Grant | |
SSBN-632 | Von Steuben | |
SSBN-633 | Casimir Pulaski | |
SSBN-634 | Stonewall Jackson | |
SSBN-635 | Sam Rayburn | Decommissioned on 31 July 1989 and reclassified a moored training ship (S5W Prototype facility) with hull number MTS-635. |
SSBN-636 | Nathanael Greene | |
SSN-637 | Sturgeon | |
SSN-638 | Whale | |
SSN-639 | Tautog | |
SSBN-640 | Benjamin Franklin | |
SSBN-641 | Simon Bolivar | |
SSBN-642 | Kamehameha | Was in active service for 36 years, 4 months. Built as a SSBN but converted to a SSN from 24 September 1992 to 23 Jul 1993[2] |
SSBN-643 | George Bancroft | Sail is located at Naval Submarine Base, Kings Bay, GA |
SSBN-644 | Lewis and Clark | |
SSBN-645 | James K. Polk | Built as a SSBN but converted to a s SSN in August 1994.[3] The "Jimmy P's" sail is now on display at the National Museum of Nuclear Science and History in Albuquerque, NM. |
SSN-646 | Grayling | |
SSN-647 | Pogy | |
SSN-648 | Aspro | |
SSN-649 | Sunfish | |
SSN-650 | Pargo | |
SSN-651 | Queenfish | |
SSN-652 | Puffer | |
SSN-653 | Ray | |
SSBN-654 | George C. Marshall | |
SSBN-655 | Henry L. Stimson | |
SSBN-656 | George Washington Carver | |
SSBN-657 | Francis Scott Key | |
SSBN-658 | Mariano G. Vallejo | |
SSBN-659 | Will Rogers | |
SSN-660 | Sand Lance | |
SSN-661 | Lapon | |
SSN-662 | Gurnard | |
SSN-663 | Hammerhead | |
SSN-664 | Sea Devil | |
SSN-665 | Guitarro | |
SSN-666 | Hawkbill | |
SSN-667 | Bergall | |
SSN-668 | Spadefish | |
SSN-669 | Seahorse | |
SSN-670 | Finback | |
SSN-671 | Narwhal | First submarine constructed with a natural circulation reactor. |
SSN-672 | Pintado | |
SSN-673 | Flying Fish | |
SSN-674 | Trepang | |
SSN-675 | Bluefish | |
SSN-676 | Billfish | |
SSN-677 | Drum | The sail is currently on display at U.S. Navy Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, Illinois |
SSN-678 | Archerfish | |
SSN-679 | Silversides | |
SSN-680 | William H. Bates | |
SSN-681 | Batfish | |
SSN-682 | Tunny | |
SSN-683 | Parche | |
SSN-684 | Cavalla | Last U.S. Navy submarine to be named after a fish until USS Barb (SSN-804). |
SSN-685 | Glenard P. Lipscomb | The Navy's second submarine design using turbo-electric transmission. |
SSN-686 | L. Mendel Rivers | |
SSN-687 | Richard B. Russell | |
SSN-688 | Los Angeles | Lead boat of her class. Was active for 34 years, 3 months. |
SSN-689 | Baton Rouge | |
SSN-690 | Philadelphia | |
SSN-691 | Memphis | |
SSN-692 | Omaha | |
SSN-693 | Cincinnati | |
SSN-694 | Groton | |
SSN-695 | Birmingham | |
SSN-696 | New York City | |
SSN-697 | Indianapolis | |
SSN-698 | Bremerton | |
SSN-699 | Jacksonville | |
SSN-700 | Dallas | |
SSN-701 | La Jolla | Decommissioned in 2019 and reclassified MTS-701 following conversion to a moored training ship |
SSN-702 | Phoenix | |
SSN-703 | Boston | |
SSN-704 | Baltimore | |
SSN-705 | City of Corpus Christi | |
SSN-706 | Albuquerque | |
SSN-707 | Portsmouth | |
SSN-708 | Minneapolis-Saint Paul | |
SSN-709 | Hyman G. Rickover | |
SSN-710 | Augusta | |
SSN-711 | San Francisco | Out of service as of 2017, undergoing conversion to moored training ship (MTS). |
SSN-712 | Atlanta | |
SSN-713 | Houston | |
SSN-714 | Norfolk | |
SSN-715 | Buffalo | |
SSN-716 | Salt Lake City | |
SSN-717 | Olympia | |
SSN-718 | Honolulu | |
SSN-719 | Providence | Oldest American nuclear submarine still in service. |
SSN-720 | Pittsburgh | |
SSN-721 | Chicago | |
SSN-722 | Key West | |
SSN-723 | Oklahoma City | |
SSN-724 | Louisville | |
SSN-725 | Helena | |
SSGN-726 | Ohio | Lead boat of her class. Built as an SSBN, but converted to an SSGN from November 2003 to December 2005[4] in accordance with START II. |
SSGN-727 | Michigan | Built as an SSBN, but converted to an SSGN from April 2004 to April 2006[4] in accordance with START II. |
SSGN-728 | Florida | Built as an SSBN, but converted to an SSGN from January 2005 to December 2006[4] in accordance with START II. |
SSGN-729 | Georgia | Built as an SSBN, but converted to an SSGN from October 2005 to September 2007[4] in accordance with START II. |
SSBN-730 | Henry M. Jackson | |
SSBN-731 | Alabama | |
SSBN-732 | Alaska | |
SSBN-733 | Nevada | |
SSBN-734 | Tennessee | |
SSBN-735 | Pennsylvania | |
SSBN-736 | West Virginia | |
SSBN-737 | Kentucky | |
SSBN-738 | Maryland | |
SSBN-739 | Nebraska | |
SSBN-740 | Rhode Island | |
SSBN-741 | Maine | |
SSBN-742 | Wyoming | |
SSBN-743 | Louisiana | |
744 to 749 | Unassigned. Originally reserved for 19th-24th Ohio-class submarines but they were cancelled.[5] | |
SSN-750 | Newport News | |
SSN-751 | San Juan | |
SSN-752 | Pasadena | |
SSN-753 | Albany | |
SSN-754 | Topeka | |
SSN-755 | Miami | Lost to arson during maintenance overhaul |
SSN-756 | Scranton | |
SSN-757 | Alexandria | |
SSN-758 | Asheville | |
SSN-759 | Jefferson City | |
SSN-760 | Annapolis | |
SSN-761 | Springfield | |
SSN-762 | Columbus | |
SSN-763 | Santa Fe | |
SSN-764 | Boise | |
SSN-765 | Montpelier | |
SSN-766 | Charlotte | |
SSN-767 | Hampton | |
SSN-768 | Hartford | |
SSN-769 | Toledo | |
SSN-770 | Tucson | |
SSN-771 | Columbia | |
SSN-772 | Greeneville | |
SSN-773 | Cheyenne | |
SSN-774 | Virginia | Lead boat of her class |
SSN-775 | Texas | |
SSN-776 | Hawaii | |
SSN-777 | North Carolina | |
SSN-778 | New Hampshire | |
SSN-779 | New Mexico | |
SSN-780 | Missouri | |
SSN-781 | California | |
SSN-782 | Mississippi | |
SSN-783 | Minnesota | |
SSN-784 | North Dakota | |
SSN-785 | John Warner | |
SSN-786 | Illinois | |
SSN-787 | Washington | |
SSN-788 | Colorado | |
SSN-789 | Indiana | |
SSN-790 | South Dakota | |
SSN-791 | Delaware | |
SSN-792 | Vermont | |
SSN-793 | Oregon | |
SSN-794 | Montana | |
SSN-795 | Hyman G. Rickover | |
SSN-796 | New Jersey | |
SSN-797 | Iowa | |
SSN-798 | Massachusetts | |
SSN-799 | Idaho | |
SSN-800 | Arkansas | |
SSN-801 | Utah | |
SSN-802 | Oklahoma | |
SSN-803 | Arizona | |
SSN-804 | Barb | |
SSN-805 | Tang | |
SSN-806 | Wahoo | |
SSN-807 | Silversides | |
808-825 | Currently unassigned | |
SSBN-826 | Columbia | Lead boat of her class |
SSBN-827 | Wisconsin | |
828-837 | Currently unassigned, but expected to be assigned to subsequent Columbia-class boats | |
SST-1 (AGSS-570) | Mackerel | |
SST-2 | Marlin | Museum Ship, Freedom Park, Omaha, Nebraska |
SS X-1 | X-1 | Experimental midget submarine. |
SM U-111 | U-111 | Captured World War I U-boat, used for publicity and testing purposes |
SM U-117 | U-117 | Captured World War I U-boat, used for publicity and testing purposes |
SM U-140 | U-140 | Captured World War I U-boat, used for publicity and testing purposes |
SM UB-88 | UB-88 | Captured World War I U-boat, used for publicity and testing purposes |
SM UB-148 | UB-148 | Captured World War I U-boat, used for publicity and testing purposes |
SM UC-97 | UC-97 | Captured World War I U-boat, used for publicity and testing purposes |
U-2513 | U-2513 | captured World War II U-boat, used for publicity and testing purposes |
U-3008 | U-3008 | captured World War II U-boat, used for publicity and testing purposes |
X-1 | Trieste II | Later DSV-1 |
Ships of the United States Navy | |
---|---|
Ships Grouped Alphabetically | |
Ships Grouped By Type | |
| |
See also
- Submarines in the United States Navy
- List of lost United States submarines
- List of most successful American submarines in World War II
- Allied submarines in the Pacific War
- List of pre-Holland submarines
- List of submarine classes of the United States Navy
- List of Sturgeon class submarines
- List of Los Angeles class submarines
- The NR-1 Deep Submergence Craft was an non-commissioned nuclear submarine operated by the United States Navy.
- Turtle, an American submarine of the American Revolutionary War
- Hunley, a human-powered submarine of the American Civil War in the early 1860s, operated by the CSN.
- The United States Navy operated several captured U-boats for publicity and testing purposes. Some were commissioned into the Navy.
- Naval Submarine Medical Research Laboratory
- List of submarines of the Second World War
References
- "Postwar Diesel Submarines". navsource.org.
- "Kamehameha (SSBN-642) (SSN-642)". Navsource Online. Archived from the original on 2015-08-12. Retrieved 2015-08-03.
- "James K. Polk (SSBN-645) (SSN-645)". Navsource Online. Archived from the original on 2015-04-18. Retrieved 2015-08-03.
- "SSGN: A Transformational Force for the U.S. Navy". Commander, Submarine Force Atlantic. Archived from the original on 2015-11-26.
- "SSBN-726 Ohio-Class Fleet Ballistic Missile Submarine SSBN - United States Nuclear Forces". fas.org. Retrieved 2021-02-04.
- "Ship Hull Classification Symbols". Naval Vessel Registry. Archived from the original on 1998-12-06.
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