An absorbing study of the duels fought between the US Navy's escort
warships and Hitler's U-boats between December 1941 and May 1945.
Although the Battle of the Atlantic lasted several years, its most
critical phase began once the United States entered World War II. By
December 1941, the British had mastered the U-boat threat in the Eastern
Atlantic, only to see the front abruptly expand to regions the US Navy
would patrol, chiefly the Atlantic Seaboard. Unless the US Navy overcame
the U-boat threat, the Allies would struggle to win.
The Battle of the Atlantic was made up of thousands of individual duels:
aircraft against U-boats, aircraft against aircraft, aircraft against
ships-but most crucially, ships against U-boats. The individual clashes
between Germany's U-boats and the Allied warships escorting the vital
convoys often comprised one-on-one actions. These stories provide the
focus of this detailed work. The technical details of the U-boats,
destroyers, and destroyer escorts involved are explored in stunning
illustrations, including ship and submarine profiles and weaponry
artworks, and key clashes are brought to life in dramatic battlescenes.
Among the clashes covered are including USS Kearny vs. U-568, USS
Roper (DD-147) vs U-85, USS Eugene E. Elmore (DE-686) vs U-549, and
USS Atherton (DE-169) vs U-853.