A copy of this was discovered in the collection at the Mariners' Museum in 2004. Later, one of Sealion's crew, Fred Schuler, acquired a copy of the training records and added his own music and narration and transferred the sounds to cassette tape. Navy Underwater Sound Laboratoryįort Trumbull, New London, Connecticut. It was later transferred with a narrators voice at the beginning and end to 78 RPM records by Columbia University Division of War Research at the U.S. The Kongo attack was first recorded on a portable film optical recording machine. The sound you hear on the links below has been copied many times and is at times hard to understand. These truly remarkable recordings may be the only audio or video from within a submarine during an attack that has survived. Very, very few sound recordings of any kind where made aboard submarines during the war. They also recorded another attack during their 5th war patrol in March of 1945. The crew of Sealion made sound recordings in the conning tower of the submarine during the attack. On, Imperial Japanese Navy Battleship Kongo was sunk by USS Sealion. Recordings Made on USS Sealion During WW II: US Navy Band Website, with downloads of Music for Honors and Ceremonies Video from 1945 built USS Steinaker, now ARM Netzahualcoyotl taken in March 2006: Video from 1951 built ex-USS Tang, now TCG Pirireis made in 2004 Recordings Made on USS Sealion During WW IIĮxpendable Radio Sonobuoy Training Records, 15P3Īttack on Imperial Japanese Navy submarine I-52 Please contact us with the Feedback Form if you have any interesting sounds you wish to share. We are always looking for additional real underwater sounds of interest to the historic naval ship community (or better copies of what we have). These are in MP3 format which should work on most modern browsers. Below are some real (nothing from Hollywood) underwater sounds and some video.
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