- Source: Convoy PQ 17 order of battle
Convoy PQ 17 was the penultimate of the PQ/QP series of arctic convoys, bound from British ports through the Arctic Ocean via Reykjavík to the White Sea ports of the Soviet Union, particularly Murmansk and Archangel. The convoy was heavily defended, but fearing an imminent attack by substantial German surface forces, the Admiralty made the decision to disperse the convoy.
The convoy comprised 35 merchant ships and 6 naval auxiliaries (41 in all) and was defended by a close escort and two distant escort forces, 43 warships in total. It was opposed by a U-boat group, Eisteufel, of first 6, then 8 U-boats, and a surface attack force of 16 warships, in two battle groups. This operation was code-named Rösselsprung. These were assisted by the 234 aircraft of Luftflotte 5.
Before the convoy dispersed, three ships had been lost. After it scattered each ship began its individual journey to the Russian ports. Some ships took refuge along the frozen coast of Novaya Zemlya, landing at Matochkin. The Soviet tanker Azerbaijan had lost her cargo of linseed oil, and much of SS Winston-Salem's cargo had also been jettisoned in Novaya Zemlya.
Of the forty-one ships which left Iceland, three were forced to return, and twenty-four were sunk.
Ten merchant ships (one British, six American, one Panamanian and two Russian) and four auxiliaries reached Archangel, and delivered 70,000 tons out of the 200,000 which had started from Iceland. Fourteen American ships in all were sunk.
Allied forces
= Merchants
=This along with the * indicates that the ship was sunk
= Escorts
=Convoy Close Escort
Commander Broome, RN
Covering Force - Cruiser Squadron 1 (CS1)
Rear Admiral Hamilton, RN
Distant Force - Home Fleet
Admiral Tovey, RN
Axis forces
= U-boats
== Surface ships
=See also
Arctic convoys of World War II
Operation Rösselsprung
Operation Wunderland
Notes
References
External links
U.S. Naval Historical Center account of PQ-17 Archived 2 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine
Description of Rösselsprung Archived 15 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
The Requiem on Convoy PQ-17, Russian novel by Valentin Pikul
Memoirs of Chief Steward Horace Carswell DSM, MM, BEM during Convoy PQ.17
Coxswain Sid Kerslake of armed trawler "Northern Gem" in PQ.17
Convoy PQ.17, a primary source diary and supporting material by Jack Bowman, ERA aboard HMS La Malouine.
PQ 17 at Convoyweb
Helgason, Gudmundur. "PQ-17 The Greatest Convoy Disaster". German U-boats of WWII - uboat.net.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar operasi militer Perang Dunia II
- Convoy PQ 17 order of battle
- Convoy PQ 17
- Convoy PQ 18 order of battle
- Arctic convoys of World War II
- Convoy PQ 18
- Convoy PQ 13
- Convoy PQ 8
- Battle of the Barents Sea
- Convoy PQ 4
- Arctic naval operations of World War II