Source: Following a
shakedown cruise in the
Caribbean Sea and visits to
Roosevelt Roads and
San Juan,
Puerto Rico, and
Frederiksted on
St. Croix in the
United States Virgin Islands,
Seahorse returned to her
home port,
Charleston,
South Carolina, joining Submarine Division 42. Through November 1970, she operated in the
Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean, engaging in local operations and conducting
attack submarine and
antisubmarine warfare (ASW) training. On 30 November 1970,
Seahorse got underway from Charleston on her first major deployment, in which she operated in the Atlantic and visited
Bremerhaven,
West Germany, before returning to Charleston on 14 February 1971. For the next four months,
Seahorse conducted
attack submarine training, engaged in air group operations, and made final preparations for an extended
Mediterranean Sea deployment. Departing Charleston on 21 June 1971, she arrived at
Rota,
Spain, on 2 July 1971. She continued to operate in the Mediterranean until 4 October 1971, and was awarded her first
Meritorious Unit Commendation for this deployment. Upon return to home port, she operated from Charleston for the next three and one-half months. On 24 January 1972,
Seahorse ran aground and was stranded for two hours while putting out to sea from Charleston. After breaking free, she returned to port for inspection and minor repairs. On 9 February 1972,
Seahorse again departed Charleston for a
North Atlantic Ocean deployment, visiting
Faslane,
Scotland, before returning to Charleston on 11 May 1972. During the months of June, July, and August 1972, she spent four weeks at sea in the Atlantic providing services for air groups and participating in
destroyer operations. In September 1972,
Seahorse departed for the North Atlantic to participate in the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization Exercise "
Strong Express," followed by exercises with the
United Kingdom and
Canada in October 1972 and with the
Royal Netherlands Navy in November 1972. She returned to Charleston on 5 November 1972. Upon the outbreak of the
Yom Kippur War,
Seahorse got underway on less than 24-hours notice on 25 October 1973, deploying to the Eastern Mediterranean Sea with US naval and air forces monitoring the conflict and ensuring
freedom of passage. From 16 August through 25 September 1975,
Seahorse operated in company with
USS Nimitz (CVN-68) and
USS South Carolina (CGN-37) as part of Navy
Nuclear Task Group 75. In early 1976,
Seahorse again deployed to the North Atlantic for ninety consecutive days underway. On 3 November 1976, she entered the Mediterranean on a cruise which lasted until 11 May 1977. Throughout 1978–79,
Seahorse underwent
nuclear refueling,
overhaul, and systems update in the hands of the
Charleston Naval Shipyard. In 1980,
Seahorse deployed to the North Atlantic,
Norwegian Sea, and Mediterranean Sea on a five-month cruise. In July 1981, she participated in a major
Second Fleet exercise that ranged from the North Atlantic to the Caribbean Sea.
Seahorse sailed for the
Indian Ocean in October 1981, returning to Charleston in April 1982, after a 46,000-mile, 181-day deployment that circumnavigated the globe, and touched five of the modern Seven Seas, and all four oceans. The remainder of 1982, she deployed to the North Atlantic, conducting
Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle (DSRV) operations, and participated in the joint US-Canadian
Maritime Combined Operational Training (MARCOT) 82 antisubmarine warfare exercise.
Seahorse began 1985 underway above the
Arctic Circle, and spent August through October of that year deployed in the North Atlantic. In July, 1986, she again deployed to the Arctic, and surfaced through the ice at the
North Pole.
Seahorse completed her second transit of the
Panama Canal in early 1987, en route to
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard,
Bremerton,
Washington for overhaul; she was in shipyard hands from February 1987 through March 1989. In May 1989 she completed her third transit of the
Panama Canal, returning to her homeport of Charleston. From March through June 1990
Seahorse again deployed to Arctic waters and the North Pole. In 1991,
Seahorse was awarded a second Meritorious Unit Commendation for operations that included under ice operations, another surfacing through the ice at the North Pole, and noteworthy operations in the North Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea. In 1993, at the midpoint of another Mediterranean deployment, Seahorse won her second
Battle Efficiency 'E.' During 1994,
Seahorse deployed as the submarine element of
UNITAS XXXV-94, a five-month circumnavigation of
South America around
Cape Horn, interoperating with Central and South American naval forces and conducting goodwill port calls. She completed her fourth transit of the Panama Canal at the conclusion of UNITAS, and returned to Charleston in December 1994. In early 1995,
Seahorse departed Charleston, her home port for twenty five years, heading to Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for deactivation. En route, she again transited the Panama Canal, and conducted Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle operations. USS
Seahorse, the "Thoroughbred of the Fleet," was decommissioned on 17 August 1995. Over her twenty five years of service,
Seahorse earned a
Navy Unit Commendation, three Meritorious Unit Commendations, and two Battle Efficiency "Es." == Commanding Officers ==