1943
JANUARY 1943
Battle
of the Atlantic - Severe weather and evasive convoy routing kept
losses down in January 1943. However, south of the
Azores, out of range of air cover, Trinidad/Gibraltar
tanker convoy TM1 lost seven out of nine ships to
U-boats.
Monthly Loss Summary,
including Russian Convoys
- 30
British, Allied and neutral ships of 189,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes
- 4
U-boats including 1 by RAF in North Atlantic; 2 by US
aircraft off Brazil; 1 by unknown causes
PROSPECTS FOR ALLIED
VICTORY -
The Russians gained a famous victory
with the German surrender at Stalingrad in January 1943. Taken
with the October 1942 British Battle of
El Alamein and
June 1942 American Battle of Midway, the three Allied
successes are usually considered as marking the
turning point in the 40 month old war against the
Axis powers. The Battle for Guadalcanal, ending as it did Japanese
hopes of controlling the South West Pacific
should also be added to this roll-call of
victory. However, more than 30 months of struggle
and bloodshed had to be endured before victory
was certain. Even then, one Battle was not over
until the very end - the Battle of the
Atlantic, although it did peak over the
next four months. |
FEBRUARY 1943
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian Convoys
- 50
British, Allied and neutral ships of 310,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 1 corvette
- 15
U-boats including 5 by RAF in North Atlantic and off
Portugal and Gibraltar; 2 by RAF and US aircraft on Bay
of Biscay patrols; 1 by US Navy in North Atlantic.
MARCH 1943
Battle
of the Atlantic - Throughout the war a large proportion of the losses
due to U-boats were among independently routed
merchantmen and stragglers from convoys, but in March
1943 the Germans came close to overwhelming well escorted
convoys. Between the 7th and 11th, slow convoy SC121 lost
13 ships. Worse was to come between the 16th and 20th in
the largest convoy battle of the war - around HX229 and
SC122. Over 40 U-boats were deployed against the two as
they slowly coalesced in the mid-Atlantic air gap until
there were 100 ships plus their escorts. Twenty U-boats
took part in the attacks and sank 21 merchantmen before
additional air and surface escorts finally drove them
off. A RAF Sunderland accounted for the one U-boat
destroyed. Again the German B-Service was responsible for
providing Doenitz' packs with accurate convoy details and
routeing. These losses took place at another turning
point in the secret war around the Enigma codes. Early in
the month the U-boats changed from three-rotor to the far
more complex four-rotor 'Triton' code. Yet by month's end
this had been broken by the men and women of Bletchley
Park and their electromechanical computers. The Allies'
tremendous advantage was restored. This came at the same
time as a number of other developments which together
brought about a complete reversal in the war against the
U-boats. (1) The first five Royal Navy support groups
with modern radars, anti-submarine weapons and HF/DF were
released for operation in the North Atlantic. Two were
built around Home Fleet destroyers, two around Western
Approaches escorts, including Capt Walker's 2nd Escort
Group, and one with escort carrier "Biter".
Escort carriers "Archer" and the American
"Bogue" were also ready for action, but "Dasher"
was unfortunately lost in UK waters.
Nevertheless, the mid-Atlantic air gap was about to be
finally closed. (2) Another major breakthrough was again
in the air war. Aircraft were being fitted with the 10cm
wavelength radar which was undetectable by U-boat Metox
receivers. The new radar and the Leigh light made a
powerful weapon against surfaced submarines, especially
as they tried to break out through the Bay of Biscay air
patrols. (3) More VLR aircraft were also joining Coastal
Command to further extend the Allies grip on the convoy
routes throughout their length.
Monthly Loss Summary
- 90
British, Allied and neutral ships of 538,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 1 destroyer
- 12
U-boats including 4 by the RAF in North Atlantic; 1 by
RAF Bay of Biscay patrols; 1 by US aircraft off Barbados;
2 by US forces off the Azores and Canary Islands; 1 by
unknown causes
APRIL 1943
Battle
of the Atlantic - U-boat strength was up to 425 with 240 boats
operational, and over half of them on passage through or
on patrol throughout the North Atlantic. However, there
was somewhat of a lull until the end of the month with
the start of the ONS5 battle. A group also operated once
again in the weakly defended Sierra Leone area. In just
one night "U-515" sank seven of the 18 ships in
Takoradi/Sierra Leone convoy TS37. Changes were again
made in the Allies' responsibility for the North Atlantic
routes. As agreed at the March 1943 Atlantic Convoy
Conference in Washington: (1) Royal Canadian Navy was to
exercise full control of the northerly routes west of the
47-00'W CHOP line - approximately south of Greenland. (2)
Royal Navy took over to the east of 47-00'W. (3) US Navy
looked after the southerly convoys,and also the CU/UC
tanker routes between the West lndies and UK. With these
organisational changes, the far more effective convoy
Escort Groups, and the developments described in March, the scene was set for the
decisive convoy battles of May 1943.
Monthly Loss Summary
- 40
British, Allied and neutral ships of 242,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 1 destroyer and 1 submarine
- 14
German and 1 Italian U-boats including 3 by the RAF in
the North Atlantic and off the Canaries; 1 by RAF Bay of
Biscay patrol; 1 by RAF-laid mine in the Bay of Biscay; 1
by RAAF north of the Faeroes; 3 to US forces in the North
and South Atlantic, including the one Italian
MAY 1943
Victory
of the Escorts - The May 1943 Convoy Battles were a
major victory. Summary statistics for the main battles
are:
15
convoys totalling 622 merchantmen, protected by seven
British B and five Canadian C convoy groups, six
British and one US supporting Escort Group, three
escort carriers
Well
over 70 German U-boats at sea; 23 sunk
11
convoys were unscathed, four convoys lose 19
ships - a loss rate of 3 percent
Without
the heavy losses of ONS5, loss rate was 1 percent
Without
the U-boats sunk in attacks on OSN5, 16 U-boats
were lost in exchange for 6 merchantmen
Monthly Loss Summary
- 40
British, Allied and neutral ships of 204,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes
- 37
German and 1 Italian U-boats. In addition to those lost
in or around the convoy battles: 3 by RAF in North
Atlantic; 6 by RAF and RAAF Bay of Biscay patrols; 4 by
US forces in the North Atlantic, off Florida and Brazil;
2 by collision in the North Atlantic
DEFENCE OF TRADE - January 1942 to May
1943
Total Losses = 2,029 British, Allied and
neutral ships of 9,792,000 tons ( 576,000 tons per month)
By Location
Location |
Number
of British, Allied, neutral ships |
Total
Gross Registered Tonnage |
North
Atlantic |
1,234 |
6,808,000 tons |
South
Atlantic |
97 |
611,000 tons |
UK waters |
105 |
248,000 tons |
Mediterranean |
129 |
598,000 tons |
Indian Ocean |
230 |
873,000 tons |
Pacific Ocean |
234 |
654,000 tons |
By Cause
Causes *
in order of tonnage sunk (1. 4. ...
- Order when weapon first introduced) |
Number
of British, Allied, neutral ships |
Total
Gross Registered Tonnage |
1. Submarines |
1,474 |
8,048,000 tons |
4. Aircraft |
169 |
814,000 tons |
5. Other causes |
228 |
348,000 tons |
6. Raiders |
31
|
202,000
tons |
2. Mines |
71 |
172,000 tons |
3. Warships |
31 |
130,000 tons |
7. Coastal forces |
25
|
78,000
tons |
JUNE 1943
Battle
of the Atlantic - The Royal Navy had finally changed
the convoy codes and made them secure against the work of
the German B-Service.
In contrast, the British 'Ultra' work was fully
integrated into the Admiralty U-boat Tracking Room, and
an almost complete picture of German Navy and U-boat
operations was available. Not one North Atlantic convoy
was attacked during the month although U-boats were
operating around the Azores. As Allied air and sea forces
grew in strength and effectiveness, especially through
the use of 10cm radar and 'Ultra', Adm Doenitz sought
other ways to regain the initiative. This he was never
able to do, although right through until the last day of
the war, the Allies coulld not relax their efforts, and
continually introduce new detection systems, weapons and
tactics. Against numerous, well-trained and effectively
used escorts, the day of the conventional submarine was
drawing to a close. The Germans placed much faith in the
Walther hydrogen peroxide boat now under development,
which with its long underwater endurance and high speed,
would have proved a formidable foe. It did not get beyond
the experimental stage by war's end. An interim step on
the road towards the 'true' submarine started at the end
of 1943 with the design and building of Type XXI ocean
and XXIII coastal boats. Using the streamlined hull of
the Walther and high capacity batteries, their underwater
speed made them faster than most escorts. Fortunately for
the Allies they did not enter service in numbers until
too late in 1945.
For now the Germans had to
rely on the U-boats currently in service and building.
Total numbers stayed at around the 400 mark for the
remainder of the war, in spite of a 40 boat per month
construction programme, and various steps were taken to
improve their offensive and defensive capability. Apart
from extra AA armament, the Gnat acoustic torpedo was
introduced specifically to combat the convoy escorts. Its
first test came in September 1943. Before then in July,
the schnorkel, a Dutch development that allowed batteries
to be recharged at periscope depth, started trials. It
did not enter general service until mid-1944, but then
went quite some way to nullifying the radar of the air
escorts and patrols. Even now the German Navy was unaware
that the Allies were using short wavelength radar, but
when they did, early in 1944, an effective detector was
shortly introduced.
Monthly Loss Summary
- 7
British, Allied and neutral ships of 30,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes,
- 16
German and 1 Italian U-boats including 4 by US and RAF
aircraft off Iceland and the Strait of Gibraltar, and the
Italian boat in the North Atlantic; 3 by the US Navy, one
off the east coast of America and two to escort carrier
"Bogue" off the Azores; 1 by French aircraft
off Dakar.
JULY 1943
Monthly Loss
Summary
- 29
ships British, Allied and neutral ships of 188,000 tons
in the Atlantic from all causes
- 34
U-boats including 3 by RAF and US aircraft off Portugal;
7 by US escort carrier groups south and west of the
Azores (6 of these by aircraft from "Core",
"Santee" or "Bogue"); 9 by US
aircraft in the Caribbean and off Brazil.
AUGUST 1943
Monthly Loss
Summary
- 4
British, Allied and neutral ships of 25,000 tons, 1
escort
- 20
U-boats including 6 by aircraft of US escort carriers
Card and Core off the Azores and in mid-Atlantic; 2 by US
aircraft in the Caribbean area; 1 by RAF and French
aircraft off Dakar; 1 by US forces in the South Atlantic
SEPTEMBER 1943
Assault on the Escorts: Convoys ONS18 and
ON202 - The German
wolf-packs returned to the North Atlantic armed with Gnat
acoustic torpedoes to home on and disable the escorts so
they could reach the merchantmen. In attacks on these
convoys, three U-boats were lost in exchange for six
merchant ships and escorts "LAGAN", Canadian "ST
CROIX", "POLYANTHUS" and "ITCHEN". Fortunately the Allies had
anticipated the introduction of acoustic torpedoes and
soon put into service 'Foxer' noisemakers, towed astern
to attract the Gnat away from the vessel. The U-boats did
not repeat their successes.
Monthly Loss
Summary
- 11
ships of 54,000 tons and 4 escorts
- 6
U-boats including one each by RAF and RCAF Bay of Biscay
patrols, and one by US aircraft off Brazil
OCTOBER 1943
Battle of the Atlantic - After lengthy negotiations ending in
August 1943, Portugal granted the Allies the right to
establish air and sea bases in the Azores
as from October. This greatly extended the Allies'
ability to cover the central Atlantic and the convoy
routes between Britain and North and West Africa; also
between North America and the Mediterranean.
Monthly Loss
Summary
- 13
ships of 61,000 tons and 1 destroyer
- 23
U-boats including 4 by RAF and US aircraft in North
Atlantic and off Portugal; 6 by US escort carriers Card,
Core and Block Island off the Azores and in mid-Atlantic.
NOVEMBER 1943
Monthly Loss
Summary
- 7
ships of 28,000 tons and 1 US destroyer off the Azores
- 16
U-boats including 2 by RAF and US Bay of Biscay air
patrols; 2 by RAF in North Atlantic and off the Azores; 3
by US forces in mid-Atlantic and off Ascension in the
South Atlantic.
DECEMBER 1943
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian Convoys
- 7
ships of 48,000 tons and 2 destroyers including one US in
the North Atlantic
- 1
German battlecruiser ("Scharnhorst" in the
Battle of North Cape) and 5 U-boats including 1 by RAF
Bay of Biscay patrol; 3 by US Navy in Azores and Madeira
areas; 1 scuttled after storm damage in mid-Atlantic
1944
JANUARY 1944
Battle
of the Atlantic - Over the next five months U-boat losses were
so heavy that by May 1944, North Atlantic operations had
virtually ceased. In this period only 25 merchant ships
were lost in the North and South Atlantic at a cost of 77
U-boats from all causes. At the same time the Allies were
not so successful against them as they passed through the
Bay of Biscay from French bases, the Northern Transit
Area from Norway, and direct from Germany. Now equipped
with 10cm radar detectors they only lost five of their
number in the Bay, but in mid-May were badly hit by RAF
Coastal Command off Norway. By then the whole complexion
of the U-boat war near the shores of Europe changed with
the invasion of Normandy.
Monthly Loss Summary,
including Russian Convoys
- 5
British, Allied and neutral ships of 36,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 2 destroyers including one US
off New York, and 1 frigate
- 14
U-boats including 2 by RAF and RAAF Bay of Biscay
patrols; 1 by RAF-laid mine in Bay of Biscay; 1 by US
escort carrier Guadalcanal off the Azores
FEBRUARY 1944
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian Convoys
- 2
British, Allied and neutral ships of 12,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 1 destroyer and 1 sloop
- 15
U-boats including 2 by RAF to the west of Scotland; 1 by
US Navy aircraft off Ascension Island
MARCH 1944
Battle
of the Atlantic - To make more efficient use of available tonnage,
trans-Atlantic convoys were now designated Fast, Medium
or Slow. All this time great numbers of US servicemen
were being carried across to Britain in preparation for
the invasion of Europe, many by the fast, unescorted
liners "Queen Elizabeth" and "Queen
Mary" each carrying 15,000 men every trip.
Monthly Loss Summary,
including Russian Convoys
- 8
British, Allied and neutral ships of 41,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 2 escorts and 1 US destroyer
off Iceland
- 17
U-boats including 1 by RCAF off Ireland; 4 by the
aircraft and ships of USS Block Island off the Azores and
Cape Verde Islands; 1 by unknown causes in the North
Atlantic; 1 by SAAF off South Africa
APRIL 1944
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian Convoys
- 7
British, Allied and neutral ships of 48,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes
- 16
U-boats including 2 by RAF in North Atlantic; 1 by RAF
Bay of Biscay patrol; 6 by US Navy forces off America,
Madeira, Cap Verde Islands and in North Atlantic.
MAY 1944
Battle
of the Atlantic - RAF
Coastal Command and one of its Norwegian squadrons were
particularly successful between the 16th and 27th against
the U-boats passing through the Northern Transit Area off
south and west Norway. In the space of 12 days, "U-240",
"U-241", "U-476", "U-675",
"U-990" and "U-292"
were sunk.
Monthly Loss Summary,
including Russian Convoys
- 3
British, Allied and neutral ships of 17,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 1 frigate and 1 US escort
carrier
- 15
U-boats including 1 by RCAF Bay of Biscay patrol
DEFENCE OF TRADE - June 1943 to May 1944
Total Losses = 324 British, Allied and
neutral ships of 1,733,000 tons (144,000 tons per month)
By Location
Location |
Number
of British, Allied, neutral ships |
Total
Gross Registered Tonnage |
North Atlantic |
76 |
443,000
tons |
South Atlantic |
27 |
147,000
tons |
UK
waters |
23 |
31,000
tons |
Mediterranean
|
105 |
550,000
tons |
Indian
Ocean |
87 |
532,000
tons |
Pacific
Ocean |
6 |
30,000
tons |
By Cause
Causes* in order of tonnage sunk (1. 4. ...
- Order when weapon first introduced) |
Number
of British, Allied, neutral ships |
Total
Gross Registered Tonnage |
1. Submarines |
216 |
1,219,000 tons |
4. Aircraft |
64 |
378,000 tons |
2. Mines |
19 |
55,000 tons |
6. Raiders |
4 |
35,000 tons |
5. Other causes |
9 |
20,000 tons |
7. Coastal forces |
11 |
18,000 tons |
3. Warships |
1 |
8,000 tons |
JUNE 1944
Battle
of the Atlantic - U-boats passing through the Bay of Biscay were
the target for aircraft covering the Normandy invasion,
and also continued to suffer badly at the hands of the
aircraft of the Northern Transit Area patrol. Throughout
the month, seven were sunk and one severely damaged by
RAF, RCAF and Norwegian aircraft. In the case of
"U-1225" to the northwest of Bergen on the
24th, the attacking Canadian Canso (or Catalina) was
badly hit and crashed but not before sinking her. + Flt
Lt David Hornell RCAF, pilot of the Canso of No 162
Squadron, Coastal Command, was posthumously awarded the
Victoria Cross.
Monthly Loss Summary
- 3
British, Allied and neutral ships of 7,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes
- 13
U-boats excluding those sunk in Bay of Biscay
6th of June 1944 - Normandy Invasion:
Operation 'Overlord'
JULY 1944
Monthly Loss
Summary
- 4
British, Allied and neutral ships of 29,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes
- 7
U-boats including one each by task groups of US escort
carriers "Wake Island", "Croatan" and
"Card" off the Canaries, Madeira and Nova
Scotia respectively
AUGUST 1944
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian Convoys
- 1
ship of 6,000 tons, 1 escort carrier, 2 escorts, 1 US
destroyer escort off Azores
- 3
U-boats including 1 by aircraft of escort carrier
"Bogue" off Newfoundland
SEPTEMBER 1944
U-boat Inshore Campaign - With the
start of the British Isles Inshore Campaign,
U-boats sunk off Norway and in the Western Approaches as
well as the Bay of Biscay are no longer included in the
Battle of the Atlantic, but in the European theatre. The
same applies to the Royal Navy and German surface
warships lost. See
Western Europe - Normandy to Berlin
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian Convoys
- 3
British, Allied and neutral ships of 17,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 1 US destroyer in a hurricane
off Bahamas
- 7
U-boats including 1 cause unknown and 1 mined off
Iceland; 1 by RAF off the Azores; 1 by US Navy off Cape
Verde Islands; 1 by US aircraft in South Atlantic
OCTOBER 1944
Monthly Loss
Summary
- For
the first time since September 1939, no merchant ships
were lost throughout the length and breadth of the North
and South Atlantic in October 1944
- 1
U-boat in the North Atlantic due to schnorkel defect.
NOVEMBER 1944
Monthly Loss
Summary
- 3
British, Allied and neutral ships of 8,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 1 corvette
DECEMBER 1944
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian Convoys
- 1
merchant ship of 5,000 tons in the Atlantic
- 3
German U-boats
1945
JANUARY 1945
Monthly Loss
Summary
- 5
British, Allied and neutral ships of 29,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes
- 1
U-boat by USN in mid-Atlantic
FEBRUARY 1945
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian Convoys
- 6
British, Allied and neutral ships of 39,000 tons in UK
waters, 3 escorts
- 3
U-boats including 1 by US and French escorts off Morocco
MARCH 1945
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian convoys
- 4
British, Allied and neutral ships of 27,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 1 sloop
- 1
U-boat by USN off Nova Scotia
APRIL 1945
Monthly Loss
Summary, including Russian Convoys
- 5
British, Allied and neutral ships of 32,000 tons in the
Atlantic from all causes, 1 frigate and 1 US destroyer
off the Azores
- 9
U-boats including 7 by USN off east coast of USA, off the
Azores and in mid-Atlantic
MAY 1945
Battle
of the Atlantic - Conclusion -
Just 68 months before,
northwest of the British Isles liner
"Athenia" was torpedoed by
"U-30" and 11 days later
"U-39" sunk by Royal Navy destroyers.
Since then, tens of thousands of lives, thousands
of ships and hundreds of U-boats had been lost in
the battle to sustain Britain as the base without
which the liberation of Europe would had been
impossible. As the United States took over from
Britain the mantle of the world's most powerful
navy, so the last merchantmen and U-boats of the
Battle of the Atlantic went to the bottom in
American waters and involving American ships. 6th
- "U-881" was sunk by the US Navy south
of Newfoundland. On the same day,
"U-853" torpedoed freighter "Black
Point" off New York, was hunted down and
sunk by US destroyer escort "Atherton"
and frigate "Moberley".
The cost of the
Battle is usually measured in terms of the 2,400
merchantmen sunk in the North and South Atlantic.
To this must be added one
battlecruiser, three fleet and escort carriers,
two cruisers and 47 destroyers and escorts of the Royal and Canadian
Navies lost in the Atlantic, excluding the convoy
routes to Russia. Also the warships lost by the
United States and other Allied navies. |
Monthly
Loss Summary
- 1
merchant ship of 5,000 tons in the Atlantic
- 2
German U-boats
DEFENCE OF TRADE - June 1944 to May 1945
Total Losses = 210 British, Allied and
neutral ships of 942,000 tons ( 78,000 tons per month)
By Location
Location |
Number
of British, Allied, neutral ships |
Total
Gross Registered Tonnage |
North
Atlantic |
31
|
177,000
tons |
South
Atlantic |
5
|
28,000 tons
|
UK waters |
135 |
500,000 tons |
Mediterranean |
5 |
7,000 tons |
Indian Ocean |
21 |
134,000 tons |
Pacific Ocean |
13 |
96,000 tons |
By Cause
Causes* in order of tonnage sunk (1. 4. ...
- Order when weapon first introduced) |
Number
of British, Allied, neutral ships |
Total
Gross Registered Tonnage |
1. Submarines |
120 |
629,000 tons |
2. Mines |
50 |
162,000 tons |
4. Aircraft |
14 |
96,000 tons |
5. Other causes |
15 |
28,000 tons |
7. Coastal forces |
11 |
27,000 tons |
3. Warships |
- |
- |
6. Raiders |
- |
- |
TOTAL
MERCHANT SHIP LOSSES - SEPTEMBER
1939 to AUGUST 1945
Summarised here in all its
immensity is the losses in ships suffered by Britain, its
Allies and neutral countries throughout the war. Of the
grand totals that follow, Britain's losses amounted to
around 50% of tonnage, with a similar percentage applying
to sinkings in the North and South Atlantic. Both figures
point to the critical importance of the Battle of the
Atlantic and to the price Britain paid for keeping open
the sea-lanes. In concentrating on losses, it should not
be overlooked that taking the war as a whole, well over
99% of merchantmen reached their destination safely. On
the other side of the balance sheet, more than 30,000
officers and men of the British Merchant Navy did not
come home plus the many men of Allied and Neutral
nations. Axis losses must have been comparable.
Total Losses = 5,150 British, Allied and
neutral ships of 21,570,000 tons (300,000 tons per month)
By Location
Location |
Number of
British, Allied, neutral ships |
Total Gross
Registered Tonnage |
North
Atlantic |
2,232
|
11,900,000
tons |
South
Atlantic |
174
|
1,024,000
tons |
UK waters |
1,431 |
3,768,000 tons |
Mediterranean |
413 |
1,740,000 tons |
Indian Ocean |
385 |
1,790,000 tons |
Pacific Ocean |
515 |
1,348,000 tons |
|
By Cause
Causes*
in order of tonnage sunk (1.
4. ... - Order when weapon first
introduced) |
Number of
British, Allied, neutral ships |
Total Gross
Registered Tonnage |
1. Submarines |
2,828 |
14,686,000 tons |
4. Aircraft |
820 |
2,890,000 tons |
2. Mines |
534 |
1,406,000 tons |
5. Other causes |
632 |
1,030,000 tons |
6. Raiders |
133 |
830,000 tons |
3. Warships |
104 |
498,000 tons |
7. Coastal forces |
99 |
230,000 tons |
|