Convoy HX 231
Convoy HX 231 was the 231st of the numbered series of Second World War HX convoys of merchant ships from HalifaX to Liverpool. The ships departed New York City on 25 March 1943 and were met on 31 March by Mid-Ocean Escort Force Group B-7. The convoy was found on 4 April and attacked by eleven U-boats of the 1st, 3rd, 6th and 10th U-boat flotillas, from Brest, La Rochelle, St Nazaire and Lorient, respectively. These U-boats formed wolfpack Löwenherz. The U-boats sank six ships before losing contact on 7 April, and, were sunk. The convoy reached Liverpool on 10 April.
Background
Convoy organisation 1942
In 1942, convoys west of 26° West came under the command of the US Vice-Admiral Arthur Bristol along with the escort forces in the western North Atlantic as Task Force 24. The Canadian Western Local Escort Force was under the tactical command of the Commanding Officer Atlantic Coast, Rear-Admiral Leonard Murray at Halifax, Nova Scotia, comprising 25 Canadian and 13 British destroyers and corvettes that escorted convoys from Halifax to the Western Ocean Meeting Point at 49° West when SC convoys began sailing from Halifax.The Mid-Ocean Escort Force was based at St John's Newfoundland and Londonderry and Liverpool in the British Isles and became Task Group 24.1, with seven British, four Canadian and one US Navy escort groups. The MOEF escorted HX, SC, ON and ONS convoys to the Eastern Ocean Meeting Point at about 20° West where the convoy was handed over to the Eastern local Escort Groups. Ships to Iceland the base for Task Group 24.6 with two US escort groups, detached at about 25° West. The mainly old coastguard ships escorting convoys on the Sydney to Greenland leg came under Task Force 24 as Task Group 24.9.
When the US established the Interlocking Convoy System along the east coast and the Caribbean, the northern termination was at New York and from September 1942 the port became the departure point for transatlantic convoys. The Western Atlantic escort forces were insufficient for the leg from New York to the WOMP and a new Halifax Ocean Meeting Point was created around 61° West, where the eventual twelve WLEF groups were relieved. After April 1942 an attempt had been made to keep the Ocean Escort Groups together to reap the benefits of teamwork and experience and in the summer of 1942 led to EASTOMP being moved west to accommodate British escorts being sent to the Caribbean. The British escort groups B1 to B7 became based permanently in Britain and the Canadian groups C1 to C4, with the US group A3, at St John's. to the west of 26° West, the Change of Operational Control line, operational control of convoys was vested in the Commander in Chief of the United States Fleet, through the commander of Task force 24 and east of that line control devolved to the British Commander-in-Chief, Western Approaches based in Liverpool.