From: DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN NAVAL FIGHTING SHIPS, Vol. V, pp. 335-37.

Pogy

A trout found in Lake Tahoe, Calif.

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(SS-266: dp. 1,525 (surf.), 2,424 (subm.); l. 312'; b. 27'; dr. 15'3"; s. 20 k. (surf.), 9 k. (subm.); cpl. 80; a. 1 5", 1 40mm, 10 21" tt.; cl. Gato)

The first Pogy (SS-266) was laid down 15 September 1941 by the Manitowoc Shipbuilding Co., Manitowoc, Wisc., launched 23 June 1942, sponsored by Mrs. Julius A. Furer and commissioned 10 January 1943, Lt. Comdr. G. H. Wales in command. Pogy t emporarily decommissioned 1 February for a Mississippi cruise on a river barge to New Orleans, La., and recommissioned upon her arrival 12 February.

After fitting out, trial runs, and training, Pogy arrived Pearl Harbor 5 April 1943. On 15 April she set out for her patrol area along the eastern coast of Honshu, making her first contact 1 May. Her periscope attack on a convoy of five ships with one escort sank ex-gunboat Keishin Maru, and damaged a small freighter. Upon surfacing that night, Pogy attacked a destroyer with three torpedoes, but was unable to observe the results. The next day she destroyed a large sampan by gun fire. On 9 May while making a submerged attack on a convoy of four freighters, a bomb close astern forced Pogy to retire. On the 11th, she sank a 100-ton sampan by gunfire. Two torpedo hits sent a small freighter to the bottom 26 May, and on 5 June Pogy retired to Midway.

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She departed Midway on her second war patrol 26 June. Throughout July she covered the Empire-Truk main communication and supply line. While patrolling submerged east of the Pulap Islands 5 July, she attacked two freighters with torpedoes, damaging the lea ding 3000-ton freighter by one hit.

Pogy sighted an aircraft ferry steaming for Truk, and sank the 7,497-ton Mongamigawa Maru and her valuable cargo 1 August. The submarine then departed the area, stopping at Johnston Island for fuel on the 14th, and arriving at Pearl Harbor t wo days later for refit.

Pogy departed Pearl Harbor 9 September for her third war patrol, in the Palau area. On the 28th she sighted a five ship convoy. After a two-day chase and one unsuccessful attack, she scored two torpedo hits on the largest freighter of the convoy, < I>Maebashi Maru, sinking 7,000 more tons of enemy shipping. On 26 October Pogy returned to Pearl Harbor.

The submarine sailed for her patrol area again in the Palau Islands, 25 November. Enroute, she sighted a large freighter and a submarine tender escorted by a destroyer 7 December. In the ensuing attack three torpedoes hit and sank the 6,081-ton submarine tender, and one hit the freighter, before Pogy went deep to sit out an attack of 22 depth charges. She surfaced in the darkness to find the freighter dead in the water with the destroyer circling her. Pogy fired two torpedoes, both hits.

On 13 December Pogy sank a 3,821-ton transport leaving Palau loaded with troops. The angry escort dropped 27 depth charges during the counter-attack, the three closest charges causing damage which forced Pogy to return to Midway 22 December.

On 5 February 1944 Pogy departed Midway on her fifth war patrol for an anti-shipping sweep of the Formosa area. During the morning of the 10th, she spotted a convoy in Bashi Channel, off the southern tip of Formosa, guarded by three Japanese destro yers. Pogy attacked with five torpedoes, sinking Japanese destroyer Minekaze and 5,500-ton passenger-cargo ship Malta Maru, and damaging another freighter.

Pogy then headed northward up the east coast of Formosa and, on the 20th of February, caught a convoy on the Tropic of Cancer. Skillful approach and sharpshooting sent two torpedoes slamming into the Taijin Maru, a 5,154-ton freighter , and one into the Nanyo Maru, a 3,610-ton freighter, sinking both. Three days later in Nansei Shoto waters, Pogy blew the bottom out of another freighter, before heading for Pearl Harbor, arriving 8 March 1944.

On 7 April she departed on her sixth patrol, southeast of Japan. The night of 28 April, Pogy sighted and sank a Japanese submarine, I-185. She then attacked and sank a freighter 5 May, and a medium freighter the 13th. Three days later Pog y sank a 20-ton sampan by gunfire, and took five of her crew prisoner. On the 20th, Pogy destroyed a small trawler and arrived back in Pearl Harbor the 29th. She departed Pearl Harbor 1 June for a West Coast navy yard overhaul, arriving at Hunt er's Point, San Francisco, Calif. 8 June. Pogy departed for Pearl Harbor 17 September. After a training period, she got underway 13 October for her seventh war patrol, in the Nansei Shoto and waters south of Japan, but made no contacts before retur ning to Midway 2 December.

On 27 December Pogy sailed on her eighth patrol in the Bonin and Volcano islands. On 14 January 1945 she made an unsuccessful torpedo attack on a convoy of three freighters. No other opportunity to attack presented itself during the patrol, and the ship returned to Midway 11 February.

On 12 March Pogy got underway for her ninth patrol in the area south of Tokyo Bay. On 19 April, while on lifeguard station, a "Liberator" on patrol strafed and bombed Pogy by mistake, causing considerable damage. On 29 April Pogy resc ued ten Army aviators from a downed B-29, and got underway for Saipan to transfer them. On 6 May she departed Saipan for Pearl Harbor arriving 15 May for refit.

On 2 July Pogy departed Pearl Harbor for the Sea of Japan on her tenth and last war patrol. She made a run under the minefields and patrolled in the "Emperor's private ocean" until V-J day. Hunting was better on this patrol. On 27 July Pogy sank a large freighter with two torpedoes, damaged a 10,000-ton tanker on 2 August, and on 5 August destroyed the

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2,200-ton freighter Kotohirasan Maru. She returned to Midway 21 August with her World War II career completed. She departed Midway 5 September for Panama and then the East Coast of the United States. She arrived New York 3 October.

Pogy was placed out of commission in the U.S. Atlantic Reserve Fleet 20 July 1946 at New London, Conn. She was struck from the Navy List 1 September 1958 and sold 1 May 1959.

Pogy received eight battle stars for service in World War II.