On the basis of experience during World War I, the Admiralty instituted trade convoys in United Kingdom coastal waters from September 1939.[3] Convoys gradually extended westward until HX 129 left Halifax, Nova Scotia on 27 May 1941 as the first convoy to receive escort for the entire trip from Canada.[4] The American Neutrality Zone offered some protection in North American coastal waters until United States declaration of war in December 1941.[5]
Organization
The Royal Canadian Navy organized the Halifax-based Western Local Escort Force in February 1942 as German U-boats began patrolling North American coastal waters during the "second happy time".[6] The Royal Navy provided the WLEF with twelve old, short-range destroyers well-equipped for anti-submarine warfare and manned by experienced personnel.[6] Newly commissioned Canadian Flower-classcorvettes and Bangor-classminesweepers were assigned to the WLEF.[7]Town-class destroyersSt. Clair, Columbia, and Niagara were assigned to the WLEF after their endurance proved inadequate for MOEF assignments.[7] During the winter of 1942–43, some of these destroyers were organized into Western Support Force (WSF) groupings of three ships to augment protection of convoys coming under attack in the western Atlantic.[8]
Operations
The WLEF was theoretically organized into eight escort groups[1] able to provide an escort of four to six ships to each convoy.[9] WLEF escort group assignments were more dynamic than the MOEF escort groups, and WLEF escorts seldom worked with the same team of ships through successive convoys.[10] A WLEF escort group would typically meet a westbound ON convoy at WOMP and then individual WLEF ships would be detached with elements of the convoy proceeding separately to Halifax, Sydney, Nova Scotia, Quebec ports on the St. Lawrence River, Saint John, New Brunswick, Boston, Massachusetts, or New York City. Some WLEF escorts were assigned to coastal convoys reaching as far south as the Caribbean Sea.[11] Eastbound HX convoys and SC convoys worked in reverse forming with a few WLEF escorts in New York City and picking up others as ships joined from New England ports or the Maritimes.[12] Short range escorts or escorts experiencing mechanical problems might be similarly detached and replaced at intermediate points between WOMP and New York City.[13] The most frequent location for escort exchanges was the Halifax Ocean Meeting Point (HOMP) off the WLEF home port of Halifax.[14]
The WLEF operated exclusively within range of anti-submarine patrol bombers; although weather often limited flight operations. U-boats were deployed cautiously in areas where air patrols were expected, so single U-boat encounters were more common than wolf pack engagements. The name was shortened to "Western Escort Force" (WEF) in the summer of 1943.[15]
Major combat event chronology
12 May 1942 – U-553 sank two ships in the St. Lawrence River.[16]
20 July 1942 – U-132 sank one ship from convoy QS 19 escorted by Flower-class corvette HMCS Weyburn, Bangor-class minesweeper HMCS Chedabucto and anti-submarine motor launchesQ059, Q064 and Q074.[17]
29 July 1942 – U-132 sank one ship from convoy ON 113 escorted by WLEF.[18]
27 August 1942 – Flower-class corvette HMCS Oakville sank U-94 while U-511 sank two ships from convoy TAW 15.[19]
3 September 1942 – U-517 sank one ship from convoy NL 6 escorted by Flower-class corvette HMCS Weyburn and Bangor-class minesweeper HMCS Clayoquot.[20]
11 September 1942 – U-517 sank the Flower-class corvette HMCS Charlottetown that had been traveling with the Bangor-class minesweeper HMCS Clayoquot.[20]
15–16 September 1942 – U-517 sank two ships and U-165 sank two ships from convoy SQ 36 escorted by Town-class destroyer HMCS Salisbury, Flower-class corvette HMCS Arrowhead, Bangor-class minesweeper HMCS Vegreville, and three motor launches.[20]
21 September 1942 – Bangor-class minesweeper HMCS Georgian defended convoy SQ 38 from U-517.[20]
Gretton, Peter (1974). Crisis Convoy. Naval Institute Press. ISBN0-87021-925-1.
Hague, Arnold (2000). The Allied Convoy System 1939–1945. Naval Institute Press. ISBN1-55750-019-3.
Lenton, H.T. & Colledge J.J. (1968). British and Dominion Warships of World War II. Doubleday and Company.
Middlebrook, Martin (1976). Convoy. William Morrow and Company.
Milner, Marc (1985). North Atlantic Run. Naval Institute Press. ISBN0-87021-450-0.
Morison, Samuel Eliot (1975). History of United States Naval Operations in World War II, Volume I The Battle of the Atlantic 1939–1943. Little, Brown and Company.
Rohwer, J. & Hummelchen, G. (1992). Chronology of the War at Sea 1939–1945. Naval Institute Press. ISBN1-55750-105-X.
Runyan, Timothy J. & Copes, Jan M. (1994). To Die Gallantly. Westview Press. ISBN0-8133-2332-0.