After shakedown off the New England coast, R-14 moved to New London, Connecticut, where she prepared for transfer to the Pacific Fleet. In May she headed south. Designated SS-91 in July, she transited the Panama Canal in the same month and arrived at Pearl Harbor on 6 September. There, for the next nine years, she assisted in the development of submarine and anti-submarine warfare tactics, and participated in search and rescue operations.
During a search for the sea-going tug Conestoga in May 1921, R-14 ran out of fuel southeast of Hawaii. Sails were made from blankets and mattresses, and the submarine arrived at Hilo[?] on 15 May after five days under sail.
On 12 December 1930, R-14 cleared Pearl Harbor for the last time and headed back to the Atlantic. Proceeding via San Diego, California, and the Panama Canal, she returned to New London, on 9 February 1931, and through the end of the decade conducted training exercises for the Submarine School. In the spring of 1941, she moved down the coast to Key West, Florida, her homeport as of 1 June. In the fall, she returned to New London, for overhaul and on 22 November resumed operations out of Key West. Into April 1945 she conducted training exercises for the Sound School and patrolled the Yucatan Channel[?] and the Florida Straits[?]. On 25 April she headed north and in early May arrived at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
R-14 was decommissioned on 7 May, struck from the Naval Vessel Register on 19 May, and sold on 28 September 1945, to Rossoff Brothers of New York. She was later resold to the Northern Metals Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and scrapped in 1946.
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|