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B-7 Escort Group
Active World War II
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Allegiance British Empire
Branch Royal Navy
Type Escort Group
Role Anti-Submarine Warfare
Size ~Nine ships
Part of Western Approaches Command
Garrison/HQ Lisahally
Engagements Convoy ON 153
Convoy ONS 5
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Commander WE Banks
Cdr EH Tilden
Cdr PW Gretton

B-7 Escort Group was a British formation of the Royal Navy which saw action during the Second World War; principally in the Battle of the Atlantic.

Formation[]

B-7 Escort Group (B-7 EG) was one of seven such British naval groups which served with the Mid-Ocean Escort Force (MOEF). It provided convoy protection in the most dangerous midsection of the North Atlantic route. The MOEF was originally to be five American, five British and four Canadian groups. B-7 was formed in the spring of 1942, following the inability of the USN to form groups A-4 and A-5 due to other commitments. To replace them, two new escort groups, B-6 and B-7, were formed.

Service history[]

HMS Firedrake (H79)

B-7 Group Leader HMS Firedrake

Led by HMS Firedrake, under the leadership of Commander William Banks, B-7 comprised six Flower class corvettes; HMS Loosestrife from the disbanded American group A-5, and Alisma, Coreopsis, Jonquil, Pink and Sunflower.[1] These were joined later by the destroyers HMS Chesterfield and Ripley.

B-7’s first convoys, in the spring of 1942, were uneventful, and as the pace of the Battle of the Atlantic hotted up in the summer and autumn, the group's charges were escorted without loss. But in December, while escorting ON 153, the convoy came under attack, and three ships were sunk. During this action, on 11 December, Firedrake was torpedoed by U-211 and sank with the loss of 168 of her crew, including her current commander, and group SOE (Senior Officer - Escort), Cdr Eric Tilden. Initially 35 survived the torpedoing, but only 27 managed to get on board Sunflower, which was under the command of Captain John Treasure Jones.[2]

HMS Duncan

B-7 Group Leader HMS Duncan

B-7s new SOE was Cdr Peter Gretton, of HMS Duncan, a tough and capable leader, who quickly moulded the group to his own image.

At this point B-7 comprised the destroyers Duncan, Vidette, the frigate HMS Tay, and the corvettes HMS Alisma, Loosestrife, Pink, Sunflower and Snowflake.

After several convoys had been escorted without loss, B-7 covered HX 231 in April 1943. This came under attack by the Lowenherz U-boat group, which sank six ships, but lost two submarines destroyed and five damaged. In May 1943, B-7 escorted ONS 5, sometimes regarded as the turning point of the Atlantic campaign.
In a week long battle against three U-boat groups, Star, Amstel and later Fink, ONS 5 saw the loss of 13 ships, for the destruction of six U-boats. At least four of these were credited to ships of the B-7 EG. Later that month returning with SC 130, B-7 saw the destruction of between three and five U-boats (sources vary) for no losses. at least one of these was credited to ships of B-7 EG.

A series of uneventful convoys followed, as the U-boat Arm withdrew from the North Atlantic after 'Black May', while Gretton lobbied for a chance for B-7 to operate as a Support Group.[3] In October 1943 this was given, as the German U-boat Arm launched its autumn offensive.

B-7 was involved in the battles for convoys ONS 20 and ON 206, ON 207 and ON 208, during which period nine U-boats were destroyed. The battle for ONS20/206 saw six U-boats sunk, of which U-631 was credited to Sunflower and another, U-844, was damaged by Duncan, to be destroyed later in an air attack. ON 207 saw three U-boats destroyed; one, (U-282) by ships of B-7, another was shared with aircraft.

During this period B-7 had steamed 6,700 miles, crossing back and forth across the Atlantic five times. The group members had refueled at sea on six occasions, and had also re-armed with depth charges at sea.[4]

Following this B-7 returned to escort duty on the North Atlantic route, continuing without major incident until the group was disbanded in the summer of 1944 as part of the preparations for Operation Neptune, the naval contribution to the Normandy invasion.

Lists[]

Ships lost[]

  • HMS Firedrake torpedoed and sunk by U-211 escorting convoy ON 153 on 11 December 1942.[5]

U-Boats destroyed[6][]

  • U-192 depth-charged by Pink on 5 May 1943.
  • U-638 depth-charged by Loosestrife on 5/6 May 1943.
  • U-125 rammed by HMS Oribi and finished off with gun-fire by Snowflake on 6 May 1943.
  • U-531 depth-charged by Snowflake and hit by 'Hedgehog' (a new type of anti-submarine weapon), from Vidette on 6 May 1943.
  • U-381 depth-charged by Snowflake and hit by 'Hedgehog' from Duncan on 19 May 1943.
  • U-631 depth-charged by Sunflower on 17 October 1943.
  • U-274 attacked by aircraft, hit by 'Hedgehog' from Duncan on 26 October 1943.
  • U-282 by Duncan and Vidette on 29 October 1943.

Senior Officer Escort[]

From To Captain
4 May 1942 1 September 1942 Cdr William Eric Banks
1 September 1942 17 December 1942 Cdr Eric Henry Tilden
December 1942 May 1944 Cdr Peter Gretton

Table

Notes[]

  1. Rohwer&Hummelchen 1992 p.227
  2. Tramp to Queen p.69-79
  3. Gretton p163
  4. Gretton p175
  5. Blair p128-9
  6. Kemp pp. 113-4 pp. 119 pp. 152-4

References[]

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at B-7 Escort Group (Royal Navy) and the edit history here.
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