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Visit our “Tour Destination:
Submarine USS Becuna (SS-319). Photo courtesy of Independence Seaport Museum. |
USS Becuna, Independence Seaport
Museum
Penn’s Landing
Website: Explore the Historic Ship Zone
The Treasure: The submarine Becuna (SS-319) is both a good example of the standard fleet-type
Balao class submarine of World War II and (following a 1951 conversion) the streamlined
fast underwater submarine known as a GUPPY (Greater Underwater Propulsion
Project) type 1A. The Becuna was commissioned in May 1944 and
was used for service in World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War
before being decommissioned in 1969.
Interior view of the Workshop on the Water at the Independence Seaport Museum. Photo courtesy of Independence Seaport Museum. |
Accessibility: Check the Independence Seaport
Museum website for
up-to-date information on available tours of the Becuna. This winter, tours
are limited to Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, with regular daily tours
scheduled to resume in April.
The Independence
Seaport Museum
is open daily from 10 to 5.
Notes: Built in New London , Connecticut ,
the USS Becuna is 307 feet long and carried 10 officers and 80
enlisted men. During the final two years of World War II, the Becuna was used
in five wartime patrols with the U.S. Special Fleet. Modernized in 1951, the Becuna continued to
serve, mainly on Cold War missions tailing Soviet submarines in the Atlantic .
Notes from the
Editor: Named after a Mediterranean pike-like fish called the becuna, the submarine
inspired several affectionate nicknames from its crew including Becky
(sometimes expanded to “old Becky B, queen of the sea”) and Becuna Maru.
Poking around the internet, I found an old Becuna Guest Book which provides a wonderful glimpse of
submarine nostalgia, recording the visits of many men who served aboard the Becuna. Also, the Independence Seaport
Museum has led an oral history project to record the memories of the men who served on the ship.
Other Recommended
Sites: If you’re still in a maritime mood, check out the view
through the Becuna’s periscope. That’s the neighboring Mosholu, a floating
restaurant inside a turn-of-the-century tall ship. Consider splurging on dinner
there after your visit to the Independence
Seaport Museum .
On the other hand, if you want a historical change of mood
for dinner (retreating 200 years prior to the Becuna), the City Tavern at 2nd and Walnut offers Philadelphia’s
recreation of an 18th century colonial tavern.
The forward torpedo room on the submarine USS Becuna. Photo courtesy of Independence Seaport Museum. |
Tour America's History Itinerary
Friday’s destination: Mother Bethel, AME
Monday’s destination: American Philosophical Society
Monday’s destination: American Philosophical Society
© 2012 Lee Price
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