Submarine of the United States
USS
Casimir Pulaski
(SSBN-633)
, a
James Madison
-class
ballistic missile submarine
, was the second ship of the
United States Navy
to be named for
Casimir Pulaski
(1745?1779), a
Polish
general
who served in the
American Revolutionary War
.
Construction and commissioning
[
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]
The contract to build
Casimir Pulaski
was awarded to the
Electric Boat Division
(EB) of the
General Dynamics
Corporation in
Groton, Connecticut
, on 20 July 1961 and her keel was laid down there on 12 January 1963.
[2]
She was
launched
on 1 February 1964,
[2]
sponsored by Mary Louise (Metz) Gronouski,
[6]
wife of
United States Postmaster General
and first Polish-American cabinet officer
John A. Gronouski
Jr.,
[3]
and
commissioned
on 14 August 1964, with
Captain
Robert L. J. Long
in command of the Blue Crew and
Commander
Thomas B. Brittain Jr. in command of the Gold Crew.
[2]
Service history
[
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]
Casimir Pulaski's
first dive was on 28 June 1964.
[2]
After she was commissioned on 14 August 1964,
[2]
Casimir Pulaski
stood out of Electric Boat for a three-month shakedown cruise with both crews to the waters off
Cape Kennedy
where she test-fired multiple
UGM-27 Polaris ballistic missiles
. Blue Crew's first missile firing was on 31 October and Gold Crew's was on 13 November 1964.
[2]
She completed her shakedown on 5 December 1964, and proceeded back to Groton.
[3]
From Groton, the boat went to the Polaris Missile Facility Atlantic at
Naval Weapons Station Charleston
, South Carolina for her final weapons load out. Assigned to
Submarine Squadron (Subron) 16
, she proceeded to
Naval Station Rota
, Spain, in March 1965.
[3]
The
Pulaski's
Blue Crew set sail on the boat's first deterrent patrol on 13 April 1965.
[2]
After completing 20 deterrent patrols, Casimir Pulaski returned to EB in Groton, Connecticut on 5 January 1970 for
refueling and overhaul
where the S5W reactor was replaced with an
S3G core 3
and the boat became the seventh SSBN refitted to carry
UGM-73 Poseidon
ballistic missiles. After the overhaul, she was reassigned to
Submarine Squadron (SubRon) 14
and departed for
Holy Loch
, Scotland on 30 April 1971.
[3]
In June 1971, while in Holy Loch,
Casimir Pulaski
was the first boat to have the Integrated Data Acquisition System (IDAS) M-35 set installed. On 2 July, the Blue Crew successfully completed the Pulaski's first Poseidon missile launch
[2]
during her
Demonstration and Shakedown Operations (DASO)
? testing of missile systems that allowed the collection of flight data and examinations of submarine launch platforms. The Gold Crew followed up with a launch on 16 August.
[2]
With DASO complete,
Pulaski
returned to the fleet, beginning her next operational patrol on 28 October 1971.
[3]
During her sixth operational test,
Pulaski's
Gold Crew launched four Poseidon missiles on 2 March 1973.
[3]
In July 1974, SubRon 14 bestowed
Pulaski
with the
Battle Efficiency (Battle "E") Award
, the first ever for any ballistic missile boat. Later that year, she completed her 50th strategic deterrent patrol.
[3]
Late in 1980,
Pulaski
entered
Newport News Shipyard
for
refueling and overhaul
where she was modified for the
UGM-96 Trident I ballistic missile
. Reassigned to
Submarine Squadron (Subron) 16
, following overhaul and refueling, she proceeded to her new homeport at
Naval Submarine Base, Kings Bay, GA
, arriving on 10 December 1982. During the post-overhaul DASO, on 19 April 1983, the Gold Crew successfully launched a Trident I ballistic missile and had a Trident missile flight terminated on a malfunction after launch.
[2]
Returning to fleet operations, SSBN-633 began her next deterrent patrol on 3 June.
[3]
On 17 June 1985,
Casimir Pulaski
successfully test fired four Trident I missiles in the
Atlantic Test Range
Range off
Cape Canaveral
, Florida.
[3]
In October 1985,
Casimir Pulaski
Gold Crew won the Arleigh Burke Fleet trophy for most improvement in combat efficiency of any Navy unit in the US Atlantic Fleet during Fiscal Year 1985, under the Command of Commander Conrad A. Plyler, Jr, USN. The ship went on to win the fiscal year 1986 Battle Efficiency "E" for Submarine Squadron Sixteen and the Fleet Ballistic Submarine Superior Performance Award Trophy (Providence Plantation Trophy) for the US Atlantic Fleet under the command of Commander Plyler (Gold Crew) and Commander William W. Schmidt (Blue Crew). The ship also received the Navy Unit Meritorious Commendation ribbon for her service from 1 January 1985 to 2 October 1986. During this period, the ship participated in a successful Atlantic Fleet Follow-on Operational Test on the Atlantic Test Range, evaluating the readiness of the Trident C-4 missile.
From 1 April to 20 May 1989,
Casimir Pulaski
participated in Concept of Operation Exercise LANTCOOPEX 1-89, held at a remote site?Port Canaveral?away from an SSBN refit port, arriving there after the end of Gold Crew deterrent patrol. After being relieved by the Blue Crew, both crews?with tender personnel?conducted a complete resupply of the ship and performed major maintenance and repairs and a torpedo reload with no submarine tender present, just a refit barge, under conditions of round-the-clock special forces simulated attacks. After LANTCOOPEX 1-89, both crews received a Letter of Commendation from
Secretary of the Navy
Henry L. Garrett III
. In the fall of 1989, SubRon 16 awarded
Pulaski
with the
Battle Efficiency (Battle "E") Award
. In November, the Blue Crew sailors were awarded the
Humanitarian Service Medal
for their actions in response to
Hurricane Hugo
which caused widespread damage in the Caribbean and the southeast United States.
[3]
In May 1993,
Pulaski
completed her 88th and final deterrent patrol. The two crews were combined and SSBN-633 was transferred to the
Pacific Fleet
for inactivation and decommissioning.
[3]
USS Casimir Pulaski's
88 Strategic Deterrent Patrols were the most of any of the original "41 For Freedom" missile submarine fleet.
Decommissioning and disposal
[
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]
After her final cruise under Commander Kenneth W. Wrona,
Casimir Pulaski
was
decommissioned
on 7 March 1994 and simultaneously stricken from the
Naval Vessel Register
. Her scrapping via the Nuclear-Powered
Ship and Submarine Recycling Program
at
Bremerton, Washington
was completed on 21 October 1994.
References
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External links
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