Convoy HX 126

Summary

Convoy HX 126 was the 126th of the numbered series of World War II HX convoys of merchant ships from HalifaX to Liverpool.

Convoy HX.126
Part of World War II
Date10–-28 May 1941
Location
Belligerents
Nazi Germany Germany United Kingdom United Kingdom
Commanders and leaders
Admiral Karl Dönitz Rear-Admiral F B Watson
Strength
9 U-boats 33 merchant ships
22 escorts (1 during attacks)
Casualties and losses
9 merchant ships sunk

Prelude edit

The ships departed Halifax on 10 May 1941.[1] At this time, there were no escorts to provide protection against U-boats for the whole duration of the journey across the North Atlantic. For the first leg of the crossing, the only escort was the armed merchant cruiser HMS Aurania which task was to provide protection against merchant raiders.

On the U-boat side, the submarines were reorganized in the group West after the attack on convoy OB 318 and were sent to scout for convoys ever more westward.[2]

Action edit

On 19 May, the U-boat U-94 found the convoy and she directed the other boats of the group West. The group began their attacks on 20 May. The first attack of U-94 in the early morning misses, but in a second attack she sank one[3] or two ships.[4][2] Then contact with the convoy is lost. The next U-boat, U-556 found the convoy at noon. In two attacks U-556 sank three ships.[3] As the convoy was still unescorted at the time, it started to break up.

U-111 discovered the large 13,000-ton tanker San Felix and damaged it with a torpedo, but the tanker did not belong to HX 126. It was an outbound vessel from the dispersed convoy OB 322.[5] In the evening U-98 sank the freighter Rothermere. Around the same time U-94 regained contact with the convoy and sank the tanker John P. Pedersen. Just before midnight, U-109 sank the straggler Harpagus with two torpedoes. Harpagus had fallen behind to rescue survivors from Norman Monarch. The 12th escort group, which comprised at the time five destroyers, four corvettes and two anti-submarine trawlers, arrived and started to round up the dispersed ships and reform the convoy. Five of the escorts find U-109 and damage the submarine with depth charges. As a result U-109 aborted to France.[6]

In the early morning of 21 May, U-93 struck the tanker Elusa which was later scuttled. U-74 was damaged and forced to abort to France by depth charge attacks from the corvette HMS Verbena and a destroyer (either HMS Churchill[4] or HMS Burnham[7]). Upon learning that a strong escort has arrived, German command disengaged the U-boats and reformed them in a new patrol line further south. Only U-111 is left in place in order to transmit decoy radio signals. On 22 May U-111 found and sank Barnby which either straggled or romped from the convoy.

Ships in the convoy edit

Allied merchant ships edit

A total of 33 merchant vessels joined the convoy, either in Halifax or later in the voyage.[8] Surviving ships reached Liverpool on 28 May.[1]

Name Flag Tonnage (GRT) Notes
Athelprincess (1929)   United Kingdom 8,882
Barnby (1940)   United Kingdom 4,813 Straggled and sunk by U-111[9]
Baron Carnegie (1925)   United Kingdom 3,178
Baron Elgin (1933)   United Kingdom 3,942
Bente Maersk (1928)   United Kingdom 5,722
British Freedom (1928)   United Kingdom 6,985 Straggled 20 May
British Security (1937)   United Kingdom 8,470 Sunk by U-556[10]
British Splendour (1931)   United Kingdom 7,138
Cockaponset (1919)   United Kingdom 5,995 Sunk By U-556[11]
Darlington Court (1936)   United Kingdom 4,974 Sunk By U-556[12]
Dorelian (1923)   United Kingdom 6,431
Eemland (1906)   Netherlands 4,188 Straggled 20 May
Elusa (1936)   Netherlands 6,235 Sunk By U-93[13]
Empire Kudu (1919)   United Kingdom 6,622
Gretavale (1928)   United Kingdom 4,586
Hada County (1921)   Norway 4,853
Harpagus (1940)   United Kingdom 5,173 Sunk By U-109.[14] Rescue Ship
Havsten (1930)   Norway 6,161
Hindustan (1940)   United Kingdom 5,245 Rear-Admiral F B Watson DSO (Commodore)
John P Pedersen (1930)   Norway 6,128 Sunk By U-94[15]
Karabagh (1932)   United Kingdom 6,427
Morgenen (1930)   Norway 7,093
Nicoya (1929)   United Kingdom 5,364
Norman Monarch (1937)   United Kingdom 4,718 Sunk By U-94[16]
Regent Panther (1937)   United Kingdom 9,556
Ribera (1940)   United Kingdom 5,559 Straggled 20 May
Rosewood (1931)   United Kingdom 5,989 Iceland
Rothermere (1938)   United Kingdom 5,356 Sunk By U-98[17]
Salando (1920)   Netherlands 5,272 Returned
Tongariro (1925)   United Kingdom 8,720
Toward (1923)   United Kingdom 1,571 Rescue Ship
Westport (1918)   United Kingdom 5,665 Joined Ex Convoy SC 31
Winona County (1919)   United Kingdom 6,159 Returned

Convoy escorts edit

A series of armed military ships escorted the convoy at various times during its journey.[8] Only one escort was present during the German attacks.

Name Flag Type Joined Left
HMS Arabis (K73)   Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 21 May 1941 23 May 1941
HMS Artifex (F28)   Royal Navy Armed merchant cruiser 10 May 1941 21 May 1941
HMS Burnham (H82)   Royal Navy Town-class destroyer 21 May 1941 22 May 1941
HMS Burwell (H94)   Royal Navy Town-class destroyer 21 May 1941 26 May 1941
HMCS Chambly (K116)   Royal Canadian Navy Flower-class corvette n/a n/a
HMS Dianella (K07)   Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 23 May 1941 23 May 1941
HMS Gladiolus (K34)   Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 23 May 1941 26 May 1941
HMS Heliotrope (K03)   Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 21 May 1941 23 May 1941
HMS Keppel (D84)   Royal Navy Shakespeare-class destroyer leader 23 May 1941 26 May 1941
HMS Kingcup (K33)   Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 23 May 1941 28 May 1941
HMT Lady Elsa   Royal Navy ASW (Anti-Submarine Warfare) trawler 23 May 1941 23 May 1941
HMS Malcolm (D19)   Royal Navy Scott-class destroyer leader 20 May 1941 22 May 1941
HMS Mallow (K81)   Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 21 May 1941 23 May 1941
HMT Northern Gem   Royal Navy ASW trawler n/a n/a
HMT Northern Wave   Royal Navy ASW trawler n/a n/a
HMCS Orillia (K119)   Royal Canadian Navy Flower-class corvette n/a n/a
HMS Sabre (1918)   Royal Navy Admiralty S-class destroyer 23 May 1941 27 May 1941
HMS Scimitar (H21)   Royal Navy Admiralty S-class destroyer 22 May 1941 24 May 1941
HMS Springbank   Royal Navy Seaplane tender/prototype fighter catapult ship 23 May 1941 23 May 1941
HMS Tribune (N76)   Royal Navy T-class submarine 10 May 1941 10 May 1941
HMS Venomous (D75)   Royal Navy Modified W-class destroyer 26 May 1941 28 May 1941
HMS Verbena (K85)   Royal Navy Flower-class corvette 21 May 1941 23 May 1941

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hague p.127
  2. ^ a b Rohwer &Hummelchen, p.62
  3. ^ a b "HX-126".
  4. ^ a b Blair, p.286
  5. ^ "San Felix".
  6. ^ Hirschfeld, Wolfgang (1985). Feindfahrten. Logbuch eines U-Bootfunkers (in German). Miunchen: Heyne. pp. 48–70. ISBN 3-453-02051-0.
  7. ^ "U-74".
  8. ^ a b "Convoy HX.126". Arnold Hague Convoy Database. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  9. ^ "Barnby – British steam merchant". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  10. ^ "British Security – British motor tanker". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  11. ^ "Cockaponset – British steam merchant". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  12. ^ "Darlington Court – British motor merchant". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  13. ^ "Elusa – Dutch motor tanker". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  14. ^ "Harpagus – British steam merchant". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  15. ^ "John P Pedersen – Norwegian motor tanker". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  16. ^ "Norman Monarch – British steam merchant". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  17. ^ "Rothermere – British steam merchant". www.uboat.net. Retrieved 3 November 2013.

Bibliography edit

  • Hague, Arnold (2000). The Allied Convoy System 1939–1945. ISBN 1-86176-147-3.
  • Rohwer, J.; Hummelchen, G. (1992). Chronology of the War at Sea 1939–1945. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-105-X.
  • Blair, Clay (2000). Hitler's U-Boat War [Volume 1 ]: The Hunters. Cassell. ISBN 0-304-35260-8.

External links edit

  • HX.126 at convoyweb[permanent dead link]