Convoy TAG 19 was a trade convoy of merchant ships during the second World War. It was the 19th of the numbered TAG Convoys from Trinidad and Aruba to Guantánamo.[1] The convoy was found on the night of 5–6 November 1942 by U-508. Kapitänleutnant Georg Staats (Knight's Cross) sank two ships from the convoy on 7 November in two approaches aboard U-508.[2]
Ships in the convoy
Name[3] | Flag | Tonnage (GRT) | Notes |
Afghanistan (1940) | United Kingdom | 6,992 | |
Alar (1939) | Norway | 9,430 | |
Baalbeck (1937) | Norway | 2,160 | |
Baldbutte (1919) | United States | 6,295 | Curaçao to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Baron Maclay (1924) | United Kingdom | 6,317 | |
Britamsea (1939) | Norway | 8,238 | |
Courageous (1918) | United States | 7,573 | |
Dunboyne (1919) | United States | 3,515 | Did not sail |
Empire Airman II (1942) | United Kingdom | 9,813 | Aruba to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Empire Metal (1942) | Royal Navy | 8,201 | Curaçao to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Empire Wordsworth (1942) | United Kingdom | 9,891 | Curaçao to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Fenja (1939) | Norway | 8,268 | |
Geo W Mcknight (1933) | United Kingdom | 12,502 | Aruba to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Gulfking (1921) | United States | 6,561 | Curaçao to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Hanley (1920) | United States | 7,583 | |
Lindenhall (1937) | United Kingdom | 5,248 | Sunk by U-508[4] |
Lord Cochrane (1934) | United Kingdom | 4,157 | |
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1942) | United States | 7,176 | Sunk by U-508[5] |
Ocean Peace (1942) | United Kingdom | 7,173 | |
Otina (1938) | United Kingdom | 6,217 | |
Permian (1931) | Panama | 8,890 | Aruba to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Ponca City (1919) | United States | 7,051 | Aruba to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Prins Willem III (1939) | Netherlands | 1,524 | |
Prometheus (1923) | Panama | 8,890 | Aruba to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Robert F Hand (1933) | United Kingdom | 12,197 | Aruba to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Seminole (1936) | United Kingdom | 10,389 | Aruba to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
Svealand (1925) | Sweden | 15,300 | |
Thorsholm (1937) | Norway | 9,937 | Curaçao to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
USCG 475 | United States Navy | | Escort 8 Nov – 11 Nov |
USCGC Agassiz (WSC-126) | United States Navy | | Escort 8 Nov – 11 Nov |
USCGC Colfax (WSC-133) | United States Navy | | Escort 8 Nov – 11 Nov |
USCGC Dix (WSC-136) | United States Navy | | Escort 8 Nov – 11 Nov |
USCG Rush (WSC-151) | United States Navy | | Escort 8 Nov – 11 Nov |
USS 608 | United States Navy | | Escort 6 Nov – 11 Nov |
USS Breckinridge (DD-148) | United States Navy | | Escort 6 Nov – 11 Nov Destroyer |
PT-22 | United States Navy | | Escort 8 Nov – 11 Nov Torpedo boat |
USS PC-493 | United States Navy | | Escort 6 Nov – 11 Nov |
USS PC-549 | United States Navy | | Escort 8 Nov – 11 Nov |
USS PC-566 | United States Navy | | Escort 6 Nov – 11 Nov |
USS PC-583 | United States Navy | | Escort 6 Nov – 11 Nov |
USS PC-609 | United States Navy | | Escort 6 Nov – 11 Nov |
USS Surprise (PG-63) | United States Navy | | Escort 6 Nov – 11 Nov |
Vacuum (1920) | United States | 7,020 | |
Wallace E Pratt (1937) | United States | 7,991 | |
Walter Jennings (1921) | United States | 9,564 | Aruba to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base |
References
Bibliography
- Hague, Arnold (2000). The Allied Convoy System 1939–1945. ISBN 1-86176-147-3.
- Rohwer, J.; Hummelchen, G. (1992). Chronology of the War at Sea 1939–1945. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-105-X.
External links