>From the “Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships,” (1963) Vol. 2, pp.134-135. COBIA Cobia: A food fish found in warm waters. SS-245 Displacement: 1,526 t. Length: 311’9” Beam: 27’3” Draft: 15’3” Speed: 20 k. Complement: 60 Armament: 1 3”; 10 21” torpedo tubes Class: GATO COBIA (SS-245) was launched 28 November 1943 by Electric Boat Co., Groton, Conn.; sponsored by Mrs. C. W. Magruder; and commissioned 29 March 1944, Lieutenant Commander A. L. Becker in command. COBIA reached Pearl Harbor from New London 3 June 1944. On 26 June, she put to sea on her first war patrol, bound for the Bonin Islands. On 13, 17, and 18 July, she sank Japanese freighters, and on 20 July, sank three small armed ships in a running gun battle. One of them rammed COBIA, causing minor damage, but she continued her mission, sinking a converted yacht of 500 tons on 5 August, one of whose survivors she rescued as her first prisoner of war. After refitting at Majuro from 14 August to 6 September 1944, COBIA sailed into the Luzon Straits for her second war patrol, a mission punctuated again and again by attacks by Japanese aircraft. On 22 October, she rescued two survivors of a Japanese ship previously sunk by one of COBIA's sisters. She put into Fremantle to refit 5 November and cleared on her third war patrol 30 November. Sailing into the South China Sea, she reconnoitered off Balabac Strait between 12 December and 8 January 1945, and on 14 January sank the minelayer YURISHIMA off the southeast coast of Malay. Surfacing to photograph her sinking victim, COBIA was driven under by a Japanese bomber. Next day, she rescued two Japanese from a raft on which they had been adrift 40 days. Once more she refitted at Fremantle between 24 January and 18 February 1945, then sailed to the Java Sea for her fourth war patrol. On 26 February, she engaged two sea trucks, one of which resisted with machine-gun fire which killed one of COBIA’s crew and damaged her radar equipment. After sinking both sea trucks, COBIA interrupted her patrol for repairs at Fremantle from 4 to 8 March, then returned to the Java Sea, where on 8 April, she rescued seven men, the surviving crew of a downed Army bomber. COBIA replenished at Subic Bay from 15 April to 9 May 1945, then put out for the Gulf of Siam and her fifth war patrol. On 14 May, she attacked a cargo ship, but was driven deep by depth charges hurled by a minesweeper. Luck changed on 8 June, when COBIA contacted a tanker convoy, and sank both a tanker and the landing craft HAKUSA. She refitted once more at Fremantle between 18 June and 18 July, then sailed for her sixth and final war patrol. After landing intelligence teams along the coast of Java on 27 July, COBIA sailed to act as lifeguard during air strikes on Formosa until the end of hostilities, returning to Saipan 22 August. She sailed on for Pearl Harbor, New York, Washington, and New London, where she was decommissioned and placed in reserve 22 May 1946. Recommissioned 6 July 1951, COBIA trained reservists and Submarine School students at New London until placed in commission, in reserve, at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard 29 October 1953. After overhaul, she was towed to New London, where she was again placed out of commission, in reserve, 19 March 1954. Of COBIA's six war patrols, the first, third, fourth, and fifth were designated as "successful" war patrols, for which she received four battle stars. She was credited with having sunk a total of 16,835 tons of shipping. [Stricken from the Navy Register on 1 July 1970, COBIA has been a museum at Manitowoc, Wisconsin, since 17 August 1970. K. Jack Bauer and Stephen S. Roberts, “Register of Ships of the U. S. Navy, 1775-1990,” p.272] Transcribed by Michael Hansen mhansen2@home.com