Convoy QP 1 | |||||||
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Part of Arctic Convoys of the Second World War | |||||||
The Norwegian and the Barents seas, site of the Arctic convoys | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Royal Navy Merchant Navy |
Luftwaffe Kriegsmarine | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Escorts: Jack Borrett Convoy: John Dowding |
Hans-Jürgen Stumpff Hermann Böhm | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
No loss | No loss |
Convoy QP 1 (28 September – 19 October 1941) was the first of the Arctic Convoys of the Second World War by which the Allies brought back ships that begun carrying supplies to the Soviet Union after Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of 22 June 1941. The convoy sailed from Murmansk and arrived safely at Scapa Flow in Orkney.
From Operation Dervish, at the end of August 1941 to 20 December, six more convoys (Convoy PQ 1 to Convoy PQ 6) sent 45 ships, all of which reached Archangelsk or Murmansk. German awareness of these and the reciprocal westbound convoys (Convoy QP 1 to Convoy QP 4) was too vague to plan attacks by the Kriegsmarine or the Luftwaffe.
On 13 November 1941, the commander-in-chief of the Kriegsmarine, Großadmiral (Grand Admiral) Erich Raeder, told Hitler that, owing to the extreme weather and the lack of air reconnaissance, the prospects of the small number of U-boats in the Arctic Ocean were poor.