Military Wiki
Convoy SC.20
Part of World War II
Date22 January 1941-8 February 1941
LocationNorth Sea
Belligerents
Germany  Royal Canadian Navy
United Kingdom
Commanders and leaders
Admiral Karl Dönitz
Strength
~3 U-boats 48 merchant ships
7 escorts
Casualties and losses
5 ships sunk
1 Damaged


SC.20 was a North Atlantic convoy of the SC series which ran during World War II from Halifax to Liverpool.

U-Boats[]

The convoy was attacked by U-Boats of each of the 2nd and 9th Flotillas, operating from Lorient and Brest, respectively.

Ships in the convoy[1][]

Name Flag Tonnage (GRT) Notes
Alcor (1920)  Netherlands 3,526
Allende (1928)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 5,081
HMS Arbutus (K86)  Royal Navy Escort 04 Feb - 08 Feb
Corvette
Baron Ogilvy (1926)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 3,391
Baron Yarborough (1928)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 3,388
Bernhard (1924)  Norway 3,563 Returned with engine defects and a sick man
Biafra (1933)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 5,405
Blairesk (1925)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 3,300
Calafatis (1917)  Greece 4,443 Romped and sunk by a Focke-Wulf Fw 200 naval bomber, of I./KG.40, with the loss of 18 of her 31 crew[2]
HMS Camellia (K31)  Royal Navy Escort 04 Feb - 08 Feb
Corvette
Cape Corso (1929)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 3,807
Copeland (1923)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 1,526 Rescue Ship
Coryton (1928)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 4,553
Coultarn (1938)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 3,759
Dione II (1936)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 2,660 Romped & sunk by U-93[3] on 4 Feb
Einar Jarl (1921)  Norway 1,858
Emmy (1914)  Greece 3,895 Returned
Empire Engineer (1921)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 5,358 Straggled and sunk by U-123[4] On 4 Feb
HMS Erica (K50)  Royal Navy Escort 04 Feb - 08 Feb
Evviva (1921)  Norway 1,597 Returned
Flensburg (1922)  Netherlands 6,421
Flowergate (1911)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 5,161 Arrived with furnace defects
Fylingdale (1924)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 3,918
Hadleigh (1930)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 5,222
HMS Harvester (H19)  Royal Navy Escort 04 Feb - 08 Feb
Destroyer
Ila (1939)  Norway 1,583 Returned
Inger Toft (1920)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 2,190
Ingertre (1921)  Norway 2,462
Ioannis M Embiricos (1934)  Greece 3,734 Bombed and sunk, NW of Ireland, by a Focke-Wulf Fw 200 naval bomber, of I./KG.40[5]

She was en route from Montreal to Preston with lumber.

Kordecki (1930)  Poland 1,975 Returned
Lars Kruse (1923)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 1,807
Lylepark (1929)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 5,186 Returned
Maclaren (1915)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 2,350 Wrecked, Salved, Repaired
Manchester Division (1918)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 6,048
Maplecourt (1894)  Canada 3,388 Sunk by U-107[6] On 4 Feb
Maplewood (1930)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 4,566 Capt A G Maundrell CB CIE RIN (Commodore)
Mathilda (1920)  Norway 3,650
Milcrest (1919)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 5,283
Myson (1927)  France 4,564
Narocz (1915)  Poland 1,795 Returned
HMCS Otter  Royal Canadian Navy Escort 22 Jan - 23 Jan
Armed yacht
HMS Philante (4.12)  Royal Navy Escort 04 Feb - 08 Feb
Armed yacht, acting as convoy escort vessel
Pilar De Larrinaga (1918)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 7,046
Pontypridd (1924)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 4,458
Quistconck (1918)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 5,144
Ranella (1912)  Norway 5,590 Straggler from BHX 104
HMS Ranpura  Royal Navy Escort 22 Jan - 04 Feb
Armed merchant cruiser
Rolf Jarl (1920)  Norway 1,917
Rozenburg (1918)  Netherlands 2,068 Returned
Selbo (1921)  Norway 1,778
Sevill (1921)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 1,383
Sinnington Court (1928)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 6,910 Returned
Telesfora De Larrinaga (1920)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 5,780
Trident (1917)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 4,317
Willesden (1925)  United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 4,563

References[]

Bibliography[]

  • Hague, Arnold (2000). The Allied Convoy System 1939-1945. ISBN 1-86176-147-3. 

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 Convoy SC 20 and the edit history here.