Convoy JW 55A was anArctic convoy sent fromGreat Britain by theWestern Allies to aid theSoviet Union duringWorld War II. It sailed in December 1943, reaching the Soviet northern ports at the end of the month. All ships arrived safely.
JW 55A consisted of 19 merchant ships which departed fromLoch Ewe on 12 December 1943.Close escort was provided by the destroyerWestcott and two minesweepers. There was also an Ocean escort, comprising the destroyerMilne (Capt. IMR Campbell commanding) and seven otherHome Fleet destroyers.The convoy was also accompanied initially by a local escort group from Britain, and was also joined later by a local escort group fromMurmansk. A cruiser cover force comprisingBelfast (V.AdmR Burnett commanding),Norfolk, andSheffield also followed the convoy, to guard against attack by surface units. Distant cover was provided by a Heavy Cover Force comprising the battleshipDuke of York, the cruiserJamaica and four destroyers under the command ofV Adm. Bruce Fraser.
JW 55A was opposed by a U-boat force of eight boats in a patrol line, code-namedEisenbart, in theNorwegian Sea. A surface force comprising the battleshipScharnhorst and five destroyers was also available, stationed atAltenfjord.
JW 55A departedLoch Ewe on 12 December 1943, accompanied by its local escort, of two minesweepers and its close escort. Three days later it was joined by the ocean escort, while the Cruiser Force and Distant Cover Force also put to sea, taking station off Iceland. The convoy was sighted east ofBear Island byU-386 but no attack developed. The darkness of thepolar night limited any action by German aircraft, and no reconnaissance aircraft found JW 55A during her voyage. Nor didScharnhorst make any move to sortie against the convoy, though the intense German radio traffic made Fraser wary of the possibility, and his Heavy cover Force accompanied JW 55A all the way toKola, a risky and highly unusual move.[1] On 20 December the convoy was met by the eastern local escort, three Soviet destroyers and a British minesweeper.JW 55A arrived in Murmansk on 22 December without loss or interference.
All 19 ships of JW 55A arrived safely, though the presence of Adm. Fraser and his force caused much suspicion among the Soviets.[2] The German forces in Norway were discomfited by their lack of activity, and took steps to re-inforce their patrol line in the Arctic, against the next Allied convoy.
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Close escort | Ocean escort
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Cruiser cover force | Distant Cover Force
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