The Battle of the Atlantic: Allied Naval Intelligence in World War II


Allied Convoy in the Atlantic, circa 1942
U.S. Navy photograph in the collections of The Mariners' Museum

Allied merchant vessels sailing in convoy usually traveled in rectangular formations, which were designed to minimize the number of ships vulnerable to outside attacks. Ships laden with the most essential cargoes usually sailed in the center, while vessels with lower-priority cargoes acted as buffers. Antisubmarine—warfare—equipped aircraft and surface escorts orbited the formation to repel attacking submarines.