The Outbound Northern convoys saw some of the major convoy battles of the Atlantic campaign; of the 40 convoys which lost 6 or more ships, 8 were in the ON series (of which 5 were Slow, and 3 were Fast) and one was in the ONS series. •
Convoy ON 67 was one of the few North Atlantic trade convoy of early 1942 to be attacked by multiple U-boats. Eight ships were sunk, and one U-boat damaged, over a four day battle •
Convoy ON 92 lost seven ships over a three-day period •
Convoy ON 122 was the first to illustrate the defensive value of
HF/DF and
type 271 centimeter-wavelength radar. •
Convoy ON 127 was the only North Atlantic trade convoy of 1942 or 1943 where all U-boats deployed against the convoy launched torpedoes. •
Convoy ON 144 demonstrated the ability of s equipped with type 271 centimetre-wavelength radar. •
Convoy ON 154 Loss of 486 lives with 14 ships during the "Christmas Convoy" of December 1942 caused re-evaluation of Canadian convoy escorts. •
Convoy ON 166. Attacked in late February, 1943, ON 166 lost 13 merchant ships and the
Convoy rescue ship Stockport. Three
U-boats were destroyed and the
USCG leading Escort Group A-3 was disabled. •
Convoy ONS 5. Attacked in April–May 1943, ONS 5 saw the loss of 12 ships, and the destruction of 6 U-boats, in a week-long series of actions. It ushered in the period known as
Black May and is widely regarded as the turning point in the Atlantic campaign. •
Convoys ONS 18/ON 202. Attacked in September 1943, these two convoys saw the loss of 6 ships and 3 escorts, for the destruction of 3 U-boats, in the first battle of the
Kriegsmarine's autumn offensive after Black May. •
Convoy ONS 19: In September 1943 the forces escorting this ONS 19 destroyed three U-boats encountered in Mid-Atlantic. The convoy was not attacked and no ships were lost. •
Convoys ONS 20/ON 206: Attacked in October 1943, six U-boats were destroyed while one merchant ship was sunk == See also ==