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Convoy SC-107

Convoy SC 107
Part of Battle of the St. Lawrence, Battle of the Atlantic
Lockheed Hudson ExCC.jpg
RCAF Lockheed Hudson, like the one that sank U-658
Date 29 October–4 November 1942
Location North Atlantic
Result German tactical victory
Belligerents
Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom
Canada Canada
 Nazi Germany
Commanders and leaders
VADM B C Watson
LCDR D.W. Piers RCN
Admiral Karl Dönitz
Strength
39 freighters
2 destroyers
6 corvettes
17 submarines
Casualties and losses
15 freighters sunk (83,790GRT)
150 killed/drowned
2 submarines sunk
100 killed/drowned
(3 sunk, if counting U-520 before the subs attacked)

Convoy SC 107 was the 107th of the numbered series of World War II Slow Convoys of merchant ships from Sydney, Cape Breton Island to Liverpool. The ships departed New York City on 24 October 1942 and were found and engaged by a wolfpack of U-boats which sank fifteen ships. It was the heaviest loss of ships from any trans-Atlantic convoy through the winter of 1942–43. The attack included one of the largest non-nuclear man-made explosions in history, when U-132 torpedoed ammunition ships SS Hobbema and SS Hatimura (both were sunk, one exploded), with the German submarine also destroyed by the ensuing explosion.

As western Atlantic coastal convoys brought an end to the "Second Happy Time", Admiral Karl Dönitz, the Befehlshaber der U-Boote (BdU) or commander in chief of U-Boats, shifted focus to the mid-Atlantic to avoid aircraft patrols. Although convoy routing was less predictable in the mid-ocean, Dönitz anticipated that the increased numbers of U-boats being produced would be able to effectively search for convoys with the advantage of intelligence gained through B-Dienst decryption of British Naval Cypher Number 3. However, only 20 percent of the 180 trans-Atlantic convoys sailing from the end of July 1942 until the end of April 1943 lost ships to U-boat attack.

B-Dienst decrypted message traffic detailing routing and composition of convoy SC 107, and fifteen U-boats of wolfpack Veilchen (violet) were deployed to intercept it. The convoy was found and reported by U-522, patrolling the same general area as wolfpack Veilchen, on 29 October as the Western Local Escort Force turned the convoy over to Escort Group C-4, supported by the Convoy rescue ship Stockport.Canadian River class destroyer HMCS Restigouche obtained an HF/DF bearing when U-522 sent the first convoy contact report at 16:24, and the convoy made a course change after dark in the hope of evading the shadowing U-boat. Soon after, a No. 10 Squadron RCAF Digby bomber sunk U-520, patrolling in the area of the convoy. As the boats of Veilchen were sailing towards their assembly point, wolfpack boat U-658 was sunk by a RCAF Lockheed Hudson. Wolfpack boat U-438 found the convoy and released U-522 to sail off for other prey.


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Wikipedia

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