Convoy OG 71

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Convoy OG.71
Part of
North Atlantic
Result German victory
Belligerents Germany

United Kingdom

 Royal Norwegian NavyCommanders and leaders Admiral Karl Dönitz Vice-Admiral P E Parker DSOStrength 8 U-boats 23 merchant ships
13 escortsCasualties and losses 10 ships sunk
(8 merchants, 2 escorts)
360 killed

Convoy OG 71 was a trade

Focke-Wulf Fw 200 Condor of Kampfgeschwader 40. Starting on August 19, it became the first convoy of the war to be attacked by a German submarine wolfpack, when reached by eight U-boats from 1st U-boat Flotilla, operating out of Brest. Ten ships comprising a total tonnage of 15,185 tons were sunk before the U-boats lost contact on 23 August.[2]

Legacy

This convoy was known as "Nightmare Convoy".

sloop, launched in 1942, was named HMS Wren, while a Liverpool-class lifeboat, launched in 1951, was named Aguila Wren.[5]

Of the convoy's surviving merchant ships, five reached Gibraltar while 10 retreated to neutral Portugal.[6][7] This was described as the most "bitter act of surrender could ever come our way".[8]

The two ships from neutral Ireland were carrying British coal—after this incident, the Irish ship owners decided not to sail their vessels in British convoys and by the early months of 1942 the practice had ceased.[9]

Ships in the convoy

Allied merchant ships

A total of 23 merchant vessels joined the convoy in Liverpool.[10]

Name Flag Tonnage
(GRT)
Notes
Aguila (1916)  UK 3,255 Passenger ship sunk by U-201[11] on 19 Aug, with 146 dead
(another 6 survivors died when Empire Oak was lost 3 days later)
Convoy Commodore's ship (Vice-Admiral P E Parker DSO)
Aighai (1896)  Greece 1,406 Retreated to Porto
Aldergrove (1918)  UK 1,974 Sunk by U-201[12] on 23 Aug, with 1 dead
Alva (1934)  UK 1,584 Sunk by U-559[13] on 19 Aug
Cervantes (1919)  UK 1,810 Retreated to Lisbon.
Ciscar (1919)  UK 1,808 Sunk by U-201[14] on 19 Aug
Clonlara (1926)  Ireland 1,203 Retreated towards Lisbon.
Sunk by U-201[15] on 22 Aug, with 19 dead
Copeland (1923)  UK 1,526 Rescue Ship
Ebro (1920)  Denmark 1,547 Reached Gibraltar.
Empire Oak (1941)  UK 484 Sunk by U-564[16] on 22 Aug, with 19 dead
(including 6 of 6 originally rescued from Aguila and 9 of 11 rescued from Alva)
Empire Stream (1941)  UK 2,911 Retreated to Lisbon. Vice-Commodore's Ship
Grelhead (1915)  UK 4,274 Retreated to Lisbon
Lanarhone (1928)  Ireland 1,221 Arrived in Lisbon, her intended destination.
Lapwing (1920)  UK 1,348 Reached Gibraltar.
Lyminge (1919)  UK 2,499 Retreated to Lisbon.
Marklyn (1918)  UK 3,090 Reached Gibraltar.
Meta (1930)  UK 1,575 Retreated to Lisbon.
Petrel (1920)  UK 1,354 Retreated to Porto
Spero (1922)  UK 1,589 Reached Gibraltar.
Spind (1917)  Norway 2,197 Torpedoed and damaged by U-564 & finally sunk by U-552[17] on 23 Aug, with no deaths
Starling (1930)  UK 1,320 Reached Gibraltar.
Stork (1937)  UK 787 Sunk by U-201[18] on 23 Aug, with 19 dead
Switzerland (1922)  UK 1,291 Retreated to Lisbon.

Convoy escorts

A series of armed military ships escorted the convoy at various times during its journey.[10]

Name Flag Type Joined Left
HNoMS Bath (I17)  Royal Norwegian Navy Wickes-class destroyer 13 Aug 1941 Sunk by U-204[19] on 19 Aug 1941, 88 Dead
HMS Bluebell (K80)  Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 15 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Boreas (H77)  Royal Navy
B-class destroyer
22 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Campanula (K18)  Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 15 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Campion (K108)  Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 15 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Gurkha (G63)  Royal Navy L-class destroyer 20 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Hydrangea (K39)  Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 15 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Lance (G87)  Royal Navy L-class destroyer 20 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Leith (U36)  Royal Navy Grimsby-class sloop 13 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Vidette (D48)  Royal Navy Admiralty V-class destroyer 21 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Wallflower (K44)  Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 15 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Wivern (D66)  Royal Navy Modified W-class destroyer 22 Aug 1941 23 Aug 1941
HMS Zinnia (K98)  Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 13 Aug 1941 Sunk by U-564[20] on 23 Aug 1941, 68 Dead

See also

References

  1. ^ Hague, pp. 175–176
  2. ^ . p. 78
  3. .
  4. . page 46.
  5. ^ Markwell, June (5 May 2005). "12 Scarborough Wrens sunk by U-boat". On the Fourth Watch. Scarborough Maritime Heritage Centre. Retrieved 29 December 2013.
  6. .
  7. ., page 198.
  8. ., page 114.
  9. ., page 87.
  10. ^ a b "Convoy OG.71". Arnold Hague Convoy Database. Archived from the original on 3 November 2013. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  11. ^ "Aguila – British Steam Passenger Ship". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  12. ^ "Aldergrove – British Steam Merchant". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  13. ^ "Alva – British Steam Merchant". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  14. ^ "Ciscar – British Steam Merchant". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  15. ^ "Clonlara – Irish Steam Merchant". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  16. ^ "Empire Oak – British Steam Tug". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  17. ^ "Spind – Norwegian Steam Merchant". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  18. ^ "Stork – British Motor Merchant". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  19. ^ "HNoMS Bath (I 17) – Norwegian Destroyer". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  20. ^ "HMS Zinnia (K 98) – British Corvette". www.Uboat.Net. Retrieved 5 November 2013.

Bibliography