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USS Turbot (SS 427)

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Name
  
USS Turbot

Laid down
  
13 November 1943

Commissioned
  
Never

Construction started
  
13 November 1943

Namesake
  
The turbot

Completed
  
Never

Length
  
95 m

Builder
  
William Cramp & Sons

USS Turbot (SS-427) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Launched
  
as incomplete hulk 12 April 1946

USS Turbot (SS-427), a Balao-class submarine, was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named for the turbot, a large, brown and white flatfish, valued as a food.

Turbot's keel was laid down on 13 November 1943 at Philadelphia by the Cramp Shipbuilding Company, but the contract for her construction was cancelled on 12 August 1945. Her partially completed hulk was launched on 12 April 1946 and, in 1950, was assigned to the Naval Ship Research and Development Center at Annapolis, Maryland, where it was used for research and development in connection with the control and reduction of machinery noise in submarines.

Turbot was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register in 1958, and sold for scrapping to the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, at Sparrow's Point, Maryland; however, rather than being scrapped, she remained tied up to a U.S. Navy pier in Carr's Creek at the North Severn Naval Station in Maryland, where she continued to be used for testing well into the 1980s. Some material was removed from her hulk for use in other submarines, and her six torpedo air flasks were installed in the submarine USS Pampanito (SS-383) in San Francisco, California.

References

USS Turbot (SS-427) Wikipedia