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{{Short description|Clemson-class destroyer}}
{{otherships|USS Bancroft}}
{{other ships|USS Bancroft}}
{|{{Infobox Ship Begin}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2021}}
{{Infobox Ship Image
{|{{Infobox ship begin}}
|Ship image=[[Image:No Photo Available.svg|300px|AlternateTextHere]]
{{Infobox ship image
|Ship caption=
|Ship image=USS Bancroft (DD-256) underway c1940.jpg
|Ship caption=USS ''Bancroft'' (DD-256) underway circa 1940
}}
}}
{{Infobox Ship Career
{{Infobox ship career
|Ship country=United States
|Hide header=
|Ship country=US
|Ship flag={{USN flag|1940}}
|Ship flag={{USN flag|1940}}
|Ship name=USS ''Bancroft'' (DD-256)
|Ship name=USS ''Bancroft''
|Ship namesake=[[George Bancroft]]
|Ship namesake=[[George Bancroft]]
|Ship ordered=
|Ship ordered=
|Ship builder=[[Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation]], [[Fore River Shipyard]], [[Quincy, Massachusetts|Quincy]]
|Ship builder=[[Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation]], [[Fore River Shipyard]], [[Quincy, Massachusetts|Quincy]]
|Ship original cost= $1,218,962.89 (hull and machinery)<ref>{{cite journal |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=mZEqAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA762 |title= Table 21 – Ships on Navy List June 30, 1919 |journal= Congressional Serial Set |publisher= U.S. Government Printing Office |year= 1921 |page= 762 }}</ref>
|Ship laid down=4 November 1918
|Ship laid down=4 November 1918
|Ship launched=21 March 1919
|Ship launched=21 March 1919
|Ship acquired=
|Ship commissioned=30 June 1919
|Ship commissioned=30 June 1919
|Ship decommissioned=24 September 1940
|Ship decommissioned=24 September 1940
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|Ship struck=8 January 1941
|Ship struck=8 January 1941
|Ship reinstated=
|Ship reinstated=
|Ship honours=
|Ship honors=
|Ship identification=[[Hull classification symbol|Hull number]] DD-256
|Ship fate=Transferred to Canada, 24 September 1940
|Ship fate=Transferred to Canada, 24 September 1940
|Ship status=
|Ship notes=
|Ship notes=
}}
}}
{{Infobox Ship Career
{{Infobox ship career
|Hide header=
|Hide header=title
|Ship country=Canada
|Ship country=Canada
|Ship flag=[[Image:Naval Jack of Canada.svg|60px|RCN Ensign]]
|Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Canada|naval-1911}}
|Ship name=HMCS ''St. Francis''
|Ship name=HMCS ''St. Francis''
|Ship namesake=[[St. Francis River (Maine)|St. Francis River]]
|Ship namesake=[[St. Francis River (Maine)|St. Francis River]]
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|Ship struck=
|Ship struck=
|Ship reinstated=
|Ship reinstated=
|Ship honours=
|Ship honours=Atlantic 1941–43
|Ship identification=[[Pennant number]] I93
|Ship fate=declared surplus 1 April 1945. sank July 1945 off Cape Cod, Massachusetts, en route to scrapping.
|Ship fate=Declared surplus, 1 April 1945; sank off [[Cape Cod]] en route to scrapping, July 1945
|Ship status=
|Ship notes=
|Ship notes=
}}
}}
{{Infobox Ship Characteristics
{{Infobox ship characteristics
|Hide header=
|Hide header=
|Header caption=
|Header caption=
|Ship class= [[Clemson class destroyer|''Clemson''-class]] [[destroyer]]
|Ship class= {{sclass|Clemson|destroyer}}
|Ship displacement=1,216&nbsp;tons
|Ship displacement= {{convert|1216|LT|t|lk=on}}
|Ship length=314&nbsp;feet 4&nbsp;inches (95.81 m)
|Ship length={{convert|314|ft|4|in|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship beam=31&nbsp;feet 8&nbsp;inches (9.65 m)
|Ship beam={{convert|31|ft|8|in|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship draft=9&nbsp;feet 10&nbsp;inches (3 m)
|Ship draft={{convert|9|ft|10|in|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship propulsion=26,500&nbsp;shp (20&nbsp;MW); <br/>geared turbines, <br/>2 screws
|Ship propulsion=* {{convert|26500|shp|kW|abbr=on|lk=in}};
* Geared turbines,
|Ship speed=35 knots (65 km/h)
* 2 screws
|Ship range=4,900 [[Nautical mile|nmi]] (9,100 km) <br/>&nbsp; @ 15 [[knot (speed)|kt]]
|Ship speed={{convert|35|kn|lk=in}}
|Ship complement=122 officers and enlisted
|Ship range={{convert|4900|nmi|lk=in|abbr=on}} at {{convert|15|kn}}
|Ship complement=122
|Ship sensors=
|Ship sensors=
|Ship EW=
|Ship EW=
|Ship armament=4 x 4" (102 mm), 1 x 3" (76 mm), 12 x 21" (533 mm) tt.
|Ship armament=*4 × [[4"/50 caliber gun]]
* 1 × [[3"/23 caliber gun]]
|Ship armour=
* 12 × {{convert|21|in|mm|abbr=on|0}} [[torpedo tubes]]

|Ship armor=
|Ship armor=
|Ship aircraft=
|Ship aircraft=
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|}
|}


The second '''USS ''Bancroft'' (DD-256)''' was a [[Clemson class destroyer|''Clemson''-class]] [[destroyer]] in the [[United States Navy]], and transferred to the [[Royal Canadian Navy]], where she served as '''HMCS ''St. Francis''''' during [[World War II]].
The second '''USS ''Bancroft'' (DD-256)''' was a {{sclass|Clemson|destroyer}} in the [[United States Navy]], which briefly served in 1919. Placed in [[Reserve fleet|reserve]], the ship lay idle before being reactivated for [[World War II]]. She was transferred to the [[Royal Canadian Navy]] in 1940, where she served as '''HMCS ''St. Francis'' (I93)''' in the [[Battle of the Atlantic]] escorting convoys. The ship was declared surplus in April 1945, sold for [[Ship breaking|scrap]] and sank on the way to the breakers after a collision in July.


==Construction and career==
==As USS ''Bancroft''==


=== United States Navy service ===
Named for [[George Bancroft]], she was launched 21 March 1919 by [[Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation]], [[Quincy, Massachusetts]], sponsored by Miss Mary W. Bancroft, great granddaughter of George Bancroft; and commissioned 30 June 1919, Lieutenant Commander H. S. Haislip in command.


Named for [[George Bancroft]], an American historian and diplomat, the destroyer was [[Ship naming and launching|launched]] on 21 March 1919 by [[Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation]]'s [[Fore River Shipyard]] in [[Quincy, Massachusetts]], sponsored by Miss Mary W. Bancroft, great granddaughter of George Bancroft. The ship was [[Ship commissioning|commissioned]] on 30 June 1919.{{sfn|Dictionary of American Fighting Ships}}
''Bancroft'' joined the [[U.S. Atlantic Fleet|Atlantic Fleet]] and took part in fleet training activities until 26 November 1919 when she went into reserve commission. She was placed out of commission at [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]] 11 July 1922.


''Bancroft'' was recommissioned 18 December 1939 and served with the Atlantic Squadron on the east coast until decommissioned at [[City of Halifax|Halifax, Nova Scotia]], and transferred to [[Great Britain]] in the [[Destroyers for Bases Agreement|destroyer-land bases exchange]] 24 September 1940.
''Bancroft'' joined the [[U.S. Atlantic Fleet|Atlantic Fleet]] and took part in fleet training activities until 26 November 1919 when the ship went into reserve commission. The destroyer was placed out of commission at [[Philadelphia]] on 11 July 1922. ''Bancroft'' was recommissioned 18 December 1939 and served with the Atlantic Squadron on the east coast until [[Ship decommissioning|decommissioned]] at [[Halifax, Nova Scotia]]. She was then transferred to [[Great Britain]] in the [[Destroyers for Bases Agreement|destroyer-land bases exchange]] on 24 September 1940.{{sfn|Dictionary of American Fighting Ships}}


=== Royal Canadian Navy service ===
==As HMCS ''St. Francis''==


[[File:HMCS St. Francis.jpg|thumb|As HMCS ''St. Francis'', 1940–1945]]
''Bancroft'' was allocated to the Royal Canadian Navy and was taken over by the Canadians 24 September 1940. Following the Canadian practice of naming destroyers after Canadian rivers (but with deference to the U.S. origin), ''St. Francis'' was named after the [[St. Francis River (Maine)|St. Francis River]] forming the border between northern [[Maine]] and [[Quebec]] and [[New Brunswick]].<ref>Milner 1985 p.23</ref> ''St. Francis'' left Halifax 15 January 1941 and arrived in the [[River Clyde]], [[Scotland]], 26 January. She joined the 4th Escort Group and on 20 May she rescued all the survivors of the steamship ''Starcrose'' which had to be sunk after being torpedoed by a [[submarine]]. At the end of June she escorted a troop convoy to the [[Middle East]] and in July she joined the newly formed [[Newfoundland Escort Force]]. Between 1941 and 1943 ''St. Francis'' made several attacks on enemy submarines while escorting convoys ON-95, SC-85, ON-105, HX-197, and ON-116 with [[Mid-Ocean Escort Force]] group C-4.<ref>Milner 1985 p.286</ref> ''St. Francis'' subsequently escorted convoy ON-121 with Escort Group C-3, convoy SC-99 with Escort Group C-1, and convoy ON-147 with Escort Group C-4.<ref>Milner 1985 pp.285-9</ref>
''Bancroft'' was allocated to the Royal Canadian Navy and was taken over by the Canadians on 24 September 1940. Following the Canadian practice of naming destroyers after Canadian rivers (but with deference to the U.S. origin), the destroyer was renamed '''HMCS ''St. Francis''''' after the [[St. Francis River (Maine)|St. Francis River]] forming the border between northern [[Maine]] and [[Quebec]] and [[New Brunswick]].{{sfn|Milner|1985|p=23}} ''St. Francis'' left Halifax 15 January 1941 and arrived in the [[River Clyde]], Scotland, 26 January. She joined the 4th Escort Group and on 20 May she rescued all the survivors of the steamship ''Starcrose'' which had to be sunk after being torpedoed by a [[submarine]]. At the end of June she escorted a troop convoy to the [[Middle East]] and in July she joined the newly formed [[Newfoundland Escort Force]]. Between 1941 and 1943 ''St. Francis'' made several attacks on enemy submarines while escorting convoys ON-95, SC-85, ON-105, HX-197, and ON-116 with [[Mid-Ocean Escort Force]] group C-4. ''St. Francis'' subsequently escorted convoy ON-121 with Escort Group C-3, convoy SC-99 with Escort Group C-1, and convoy ON-147 with Escort Group C-4.{{sfn|Milner|1985|pp=285–289}}


After refitting at Halifax, ''St. Francis'' joined Escort Group C.2 in the [[Western Approaches Command]] in June 1943 but in August was transferred to the 9th Escort Group (RCN), working from [[Londonderry Port]], [[Northern Ireland]]. She returned to the Western Local Escort Force at Halifax the following month. From early 1944 she was employed on training duties at [[Digby, Nova Scotia]], where on 1 April 1945 she was declared surplus.
After refitting at Halifax, ''St. Francis'' joined Escort Group C2 in the [[Western Approaches Command]] in June 1943 but in August was transferred to the 9th Escort Group (RCN), working from [[Londonderry Port]], [[Northern Ireland]]. She was reassigned to the [[Western Local Escort Force]] at Halifax the following month. From early 1944 she was employed on training duties at [[Digby, Nova Scotia]], where on 1 April 1945 she was declared surplus.


On 14 July 1945, the destroyer was under tow of the tug ''Peter Norman'', and bound for Baltimore to be broken up for scrap by the Boston Iron & Metal Co.. After passing through the [[Cape Cod Canal]], the vessels encountered a thick fog, which enshrouded [[Buzzards Bay]]. Near the entrance to the bay the collier ''Windward Gulf'' collided with the old destroyer opening a hole in its hull. ''Peter Norman'' tried to ground the destroyer, but it was taking on water too quickly and soon sank on an even keel in {{convert|60|ft}} of water approximately {{convert|2|mi|spell=in}} off Acoaxet with no loss of life.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.mass.gov/service-details/hmcs-st-francis |title=HMCS St. Francis |publisher=Government of Massachusetts |access-date=11 June 2021 }}</ref>
On her way to Baltimore to be scrapped by the Boston Iron & Metal Co. in July 1945, she sank as a result of a collision off Cape Cod, Mass.<ref>http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/b2/bancroft-ii.htm</ref>

===Trans-Atlantic convoys escorted===
{|class="wikitable"
!Convoy
!Escort Group
!Dates
!Notes
|-
|[[SC convoys|SC 49]]
|
|14–21 Oct 1941<ref name="scconvoy">{{cite web|url=http://www.convoyweb.org.uk/sc/index.html|title=SC convoys|publisher=Andrew Hague Convoy Database|access-date=2011-06-19}}</ref>
|[[Newfoundland (island)|Newfoundland]] to [[Iceland]]
|-
|[[SC convoys|SC 55]]
|
|19–25 Nov 1941<ref name="scconvoy"/>
|Newfoundland to Iceland
|-
|[[SC convoys|SC 71]]
|
|27 Feb – 9 March 1942<ref name="scconvoy"/>
|Newfoundland to [[Northern Ireland]]
|-
|[[ON convoys|ON 76]]
|
|16–23 March 1942<ref name="onconvoy">{{cite web|url=http://www.convoyweb.org.uk/on/index.html|title=ON convoys|publisher=Andrew Hague Convoy Database|access-date=2011-06-19}}</ref>
|Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
|-
|[[SC convoys|SC 78]]
|
|9–16 April 1942<ref name="scconvoy"/>
|Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
|-
|[[ON convoys|ON 90]]
|
|5–9 May 1942<ref name="onconvoy"/>
|Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
|-
|[[SC convoys|SC 85]]
|[[Mid-Ocean Escort Force|MOEF group C4]]
|31 May – 12 June 1942<ref name="scconvoy"/>
|Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
|-
|[[ON convoys|ON 105]]
|MOEF group C4
|20–27 June 1942<ref name="onconvoy"/>
|Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
|-
|[[HX convoys|HX 197]]
|MOEF group C4
|9–16 July 1942<ref name="hxconvoy">{{cite web|url=http://www.convoyweb.org.uk/hx/index.html|title=HX convoys|publisher=Andrew Hague Convoy Database|access-date=2011-06-19}}</ref>
|Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
|-
|[[ON convoys|ON 116]]
|MOEF group C4
|26 July – 1 Aug 1942<ref name="onconvoy"/>
|Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
|-
|[[ON convoys|ON 121]]
|[[Mid-Ocean Escort Force|MOEF group C3]]
|20–22 Aug 1942<ref name="onconvoy"/>
|Iceland to Newfoundland
|-
|[[SC convoys|SC 99]]
|[[Mid-Ocean Escort Force|MOEF group C1]]
|9–19 Sept 1942<ref name="scconvoy"/>
|Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
|-
|[[ON convoys|ON 147]]
|[[Mid-Ocean Escort Force|MOEF group C4]]
|20–23 Nov 1942<ref name="onconvoy"/>
|Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
|-
|[[ON convoys|ON 146]]
|[[Mid-Ocean Escort Force|MOEF group B3]]
|29 Nov – 5 Dec 1942<ref name="onconvoy"/>
|Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
|-
|[[SC convoys|SC 127]]
|[[Western Local Escort Force|WLEF]]
|16–20 April 1943<ref name="scconvoy"/>
|Halifax to Newfoundland
|-
|[[ON convoys|ONS 4]]
|WLEF
|29 April – 5 May 1943<ref name="onconvoy"/>
|Newfoundland to Halifax
|-
|[[HX convoys|HX 240]]
|WLEF
|21–25 May 1943<ref name="hxconvoy"/>
|Halifax to Newfoundland
|-
|[[HX convoys|HX 242]]
|[[Mid-Ocean Escort Force|MOEF group C2]]
|6–14 June 1943<ref name="hxconvoy"/>
|Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
|-
|[[ON convoys|ON 190]]
|MOEF group C2
|25 June – 1 July 1943<ref name="onconvoy"/>
|Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
|-
|[[ON convoys|ONS 19]]
|9th escort group
|27 Sept – 9 Oct 1943<ref name="onconvoy"/>
|
|}


==Notes==
==Notes==
{{Reflist}}
{{reflist|30em}}


==References==
==References==
*{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/b2/bancroft-ii.htm}}
* {{cite DANFS |url=https://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/b/bancroft-ii.html |title=Bancroft II (Destroyer No. 256) |access-date=10 January 2020 |ref={{sfnref|Dictionary of American Fighting Ships}}}}
* {{cite book| title=North Atlantic Run |author=Milner, Marc |publisher=Naval Institute Press |year=1985 |isbn=0-87021-450-0}}
* {{cite book |last=Milner |first=Marc |year=1985 |title=North Atlantic Run |publisher=Naval Institute Press |isbn=0-87021-450-0 }}


==External links==
==External links==
*http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/256.htm
* [http://www.navsource.org/archives/05/256.htm Navsource]


{{Clemson class destroyer}}
{{Clemson class destroyer}}
{{Town class destroyers}}
{{July 1945 shipwrecks}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Bancroft (DD-256)}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bancroft (DD-256)}}
[[Category:Clemson class destroyers]]
[[Category:Ships of the Royal Canadian Navy]]
[[Category:Town class destroyers]]
[[Category:Clemson-class destroyers]]
[[Category:World War II destroyers of Canada]]
[[Category:Ships built in Quincy, Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Ships built in Massachusetts]]
[[Category:1919 ships]]
[[Category:1919 ships]]
[[Category:Town-class destroyers converted from Clemson-class destroyers]]
[[Category:Ships sunk in collisions]]
[[Category:Shipwrecks of the Massachusetts coast]]
[[Category:World War II shipwrecks in the Atlantic Ocean]]
[[Category:Maritime incidents in July 1945]]

Latest revision as of 23:05, 26 September 2023

USS Bancroft (DD-256) underway circa 1940
History
United States
NameUSS Bancroft
NamesakeGeorge Bancroft
BuilderBethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, Fore River Shipyard, Quincy
Cost$1,218,962.89 (hull and machinery)[1]
Laid down4 November 1918
Launched21 March 1919
Commissioned30 June 1919
Decommissioned24 September 1940
Stricken8 January 1941
IdentificationHull number DD-256
FateTransferred to Canada, 24 September 1940
Canada
NameHMCS St. Francis
NamesakeSt. Francis River
Commissioned24 September 1940
Decommissioned1945
IdentificationPennant number I93
Honours and
awards
Atlantic 1941–43
FateDeclared surplus, 1 April 1945; sank off Cape Cod en route to scrapping, July 1945
General characteristics
Class and typeClemson-class destroyer
Displacement1,216 long tons (1,236 t)
Length314 ft 4 in (95.81 m)
Beam31 ft 8 in (9.65 m)
Draft9 ft 10 in (3.00 m)
Propulsion
  • 26,500 shp (19,800 kW);
  • Geared turbines,
  • 2 screws
Speed35 knots (65 km/h; 40 mph)
Range4,900 nmi (9,100 km; 5,600 mi) at 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph)
Complement122
Armament

The second USS Bancroft (DD-256) was a Clemson-class destroyer in the United States Navy, which briefly served in 1919. Placed in reserve, the ship lay idle before being reactivated for World War II. She was transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1940, where she served as HMCS St. Francis (I93) in the Battle of the Atlantic escorting convoys. The ship was declared surplus in April 1945, sold for scrap and sank on the way to the breakers after a collision in July.

Construction and career[edit]

United States Navy service[edit]

Named for George Bancroft, an American historian and diplomat, the destroyer was launched on 21 March 1919 by Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation's Fore River Shipyard in Quincy, Massachusetts, sponsored by Miss Mary W. Bancroft, great granddaughter of George Bancroft. The ship was commissioned on 30 June 1919.[2]

Bancroft joined the Atlantic Fleet and took part in fleet training activities until 26 November 1919 when the ship went into reserve commission. The destroyer was placed out of commission at Philadelphia on 11 July 1922. Bancroft was recommissioned 18 December 1939 and served with the Atlantic Squadron on the east coast until decommissioned at Halifax, Nova Scotia. She was then transferred to Great Britain in the destroyer-land bases exchange on 24 September 1940.[2]

Royal Canadian Navy service[edit]

As HMCS St. Francis, 1940–1945

Bancroft was allocated to the Royal Canadian Navy and was taken over by the Canadians on 24 September 1940. Following the Canadian practice of naming destroyers after Canadian rivers (but with deference to the U.S. origin), the destroyer was renamed HMCS St. Francis after the St. Francis River forming the border between northern Maine and Quebec and New Brunswick.[3] St. Francis left Halifax 15 January 1941 and arrived in the River Clyde, Scotland, 26 January. She joined the 4th Escort Group and on 20 May she rescued all the survivors of the steamship Starcrose which had to be sunk after being torpedoed by a submarine. At the end of June she escorted a troop convoy to the Middle East and in July she joined the newly formed Newfoundland Escort Force. Between 1941 and 1943 St. Francis made several attacks on enemy submarines while escorting convoys ON-95, SC-85, ON-105, HX-197, and ON-116 with Mid-Ocean Escort Force group C-4. St. Francis subsequently escorted convoy ON-121 with Escort Group C-3, convoy SC-99 with Escort Group C-1, and convoy ON-147 with Escort Group C-4.[4]

After refitting at Halifax, St. Francis joined Escort Group C2 in the Western Approaches Command in June 1943 but in August was transferred to the 9th Escort Group (RCN), working from Londonderry Port, Northern Ireland. She was reassigned to the Western Local Escort Force at Halifax the following month. From early 1944 she was employed on training duties at Digby, Nova Scotia, where on 1 April 1945 she was declared surplus.

On 14 July 1945, the destroyer was under tow of the tug Peter Norman, and bound for Baltimore to be broken up for scrap by the Boston Iron & Metal Co.. After passing through the Cape Cod Canal, the vessels encountered a thick fog, which enshrouded Buzzards Bay. Near the entrance to the bay the collier Windward Gulf collided with the old destroyer opening a hole in its hull. Peter Norman tried to ground the destroyer, but it was taking on water too quickly and soon sank on an even keel in 60 feet (18 m) of water approximately two miles (3.2 km) off Acoaxet with no loss of life.[5]

Trans-Atlantic convoys escorted[edit]

Convoy Escort Group Dates Notes
SC 49 14–21 Oct 1941[6] Newfoundland to Iceland
SC 55 19–25 Nov 1941[6] Newfoundland to Iceland
SC 71 27 Feb – 9 March 1942[6] Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 76 16–23 March 1942[7] Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
SC 78 9–16 April 1942[6] Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 90 5–9 May 1942[7] Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
SC 85 MOEF group C4 31 May – 12 June 1942[6] Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 105 MOEF group C4 20–27 June 1942[7] Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
HX 197 MOEF group C4 9–16 July 1942[8] Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 116 MOEF group C4 26 July – 1 Aug 1942[7] Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
ON 121 MOEF group C3 20–22 Aug 1942[7] Iceland to Newfoundland
SC 99 MOEF group C1 9–19 Sept 1942[6] Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 147 MOEF group C4 20–23 Nov 1942[7] Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
ON 146 MOEF group B3 29 Nov – 5 Dec 1942[7] Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
SC 127 WLEF 16–20 April 1943[6] Halifax to Newfoundland
ONS 4 WLEF 29 April – 5 May 1943[7] Newfoundland to Halifax
HX 240 WLEF 21–25 May 1943[8] Halifax to Newfoundland
HX 242 MOEF group C2 6–14 June 1943[8] Newfoundland to Northern Ireland
ON 190 MOEF group C2 25 June – 1 July 1943[7] Northern Ireland to Newfoundland
ONS 19 9th escort group 27 Sept – 9 Oct 1943[7]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "Table 21 – Ships on Navy List June 30, 1919". Congressional Serial Set. U.S. Government Printing Office: 762. 1921.
  2. ^ a b Dictionary of American Fighting Ships.
  3. ^ Milner 1985, p. 23.
  4. ^ Milner 1985, pp. 285–289.
  5. ^ "HMCS St. Francis". Government of Massachusetts. Retrieved 11 June 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g "SC convoys". Andrew Hague Convoy Database. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "ON convoys". Andrew Hague Convoy Database. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  8. ^ a b c "HX convoys". Andrew Hague Convoy Database. Retrieved 19 June 2011.

References[edit]

External links[edit]