S-5 SUBMARINE
The Baltimore Sun, Friday,
September 3, 1920 reports the Army transport ship,
The General Goethals, is standing by
the S-5 U. S. Submarine, sunk in the Atlantic since
Wednesday September 1st,
to keep the vessel near the surface, until a dozen Navy ships
from various ports, on the way to
salvage her arrive. The subs position in the water is almost
vertical, held fast by the General Goethals with cables.
It is not known how the S-5 became
disabled nor how the General Goetheal learned of
the disaster.
***
September 2, 1920, out of New York,
a message revealed more information on
the plight of the S-5 submarine in
distress off the Cape Henlopen coast.
A telephone buoy tossing on the
waves in the path of the Army Transport General Goethals,
whose crew heard the bell on the buoy
ringing, lowered a boat, reached the buoy, tapped into
the telephone line, heard a message
from the S-5, that it was in distress and sinking, air running
short and their machinery damaged. Need help.
The General Goethals then stood by,
sent messages and kept communications by the telephone on the
buoy with the S-5.
In Farmington, Connecticut, an
amateur wireless operator also heard the message and
made it public and that night a
wireless message from the Army vessel said the crew of the
S-5 had received air by the crew
cutting a hole in the subs hull to place a air hose into her.
Another message from the Navy told
that two destroyers were on their way, the
Preston and the Breckenridge , left
Norfolk at 11 pm with divers and apparatus aboard.,
will reach the scene about 2 am.
The battleship, Ohio, reported by wireless that she was
on her way with an electric drill
and acetylene torch on board.
***
The U.S. S-5 S Submarine, left
Boston Monday, September 1, 1920 after being
placed in commission . The S-5 was
built at the Fore River Yards of Bethlehem Ship
Building Corporation in Quincy,
Massachusetts, and is one of the newest submarines
built for the navy. It is 240 feet
long, 23 feet wide, and a cruising radius of 5000 miles with
maximum 15 knots speed. It is equipped with two quick firing
guns, six torpedo tubes and two diesel engines.
Abstract: Friday, September 3, 1920
Baltimore Sun newspaper.
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