Everything about Liberty Ship totally explained
The
Liberty ships were
cargo ships built in the
United States during
World War II. They were British in conception but adapted by the USA, cheap and quick to build, and came to symbolize U.S. wartime industrial output. Based on vessels ordered by
Britain to replace ships torpedoed by
German U-boats, they were purchased for the U.S. fleet and for
lend-lease provision to Britain. Eighteen American
shipyards built 2,751 Liberties between 1941 and 1945, easily the largest number of ships produced to a single design.
The production of these vessels mirrored, on a much larger scale, the manufacture of the
Hog Island ship and similar standardized types during
World War I. The immense effort to build Liberty ships, the sheer number of ships built, and the fact that some of the ships survived far longer than the original design life of five years, make them the subject of much study.
History and service
In 1936, the American
Merchant Marine Act was passed to subsidize the annual construction of 50 commercial merchant vessels to be used in wartime by the
United States Navy as naval auxiliaries. The number was doubled in 1939 and again in 1940 to 200 ships a year. Ship types included a tanker and three types of merchant vessel, all to be powered by
steam turbines. Limited industrial capacity, especially for turbine construction, meant that relatively few of these ships were built.
In 1940, the
British Government ordered 60
tramp steamships from American yards to replace war losses and boost the merchant fleet. This
Ocean class were simple but fairly large (for the time) with a single coal-fired, 2,500 horsepower (1.9 MW)
reciprocating engine of obsolete but reliable design. Britain specified coal plants because it had plenty of coal mines but no indigenous oil fields. The predecessor designs, including the
Northeast Coast, Open Shelter Deck Steamer, were based on a simple ship originally produced in
Sunderland by
J.L. Thompson & Sons (see
Silver Line) in 1879, and widely manufactured until the SS
Dorrington Court of the 1930s. The order specified an 18 inch (457 mm) increase in draught to boost displacement by 800 tons to 10,100 tons. The accommodation, bridge and main engine of these vessels were located amidships, with a long tunnel to connect the main engine shaft to its aft extension to the propeller. The first
Ocean-class ship,
Ocean Vanguard was launched on
16 August 1941.
The design was modified by the
United States Maritime Commission to conform to American construction practices and to make it even quicker and cheaper to build. The U.S. version was designated EC2-S-C1; EC = Emergency Cargo, 2 = A ship between 400 and 450 feet long (Load Waterline Length), S = Steam engines, C1 = Design C1. The new design replaced much riveting, which accounted for one-third of the labour costs, with
welding and featured oil-fired boilers. The order was given to a conglomerate of West Coast engineering and construction companies known as the
Six Companies, headed by
Henry J. Kaiser, and was also adopted as the Merchant Marine Act design.
On
27 March 1941, the number of lend-lease ships was increased to 200 by the
Defense Aid Supplemental Appropriations Act, and increased again in April to 306, of which 117 would be Liberty ships.
The ships were constructed of sections that were welded together. This is similar to the technique used by
Palmer's at
Jarrow but substitutes welding for riveting. Riveted ships took several months to construct. The work force was newly trained - no one previously built welded ships. As America entered the war the shipbuilding yards employed women to replace men who were enlisting in the armed forces.
The ships initially had a poor public image because of their looks. In a speech announcing the emergency shipbuilding program, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt had referred to the ship as "a dreadful looking object," and
Time magazine called it an "Ugly Duckling." To try to assuage public opinion,
27 September 1941 was designated
Liberty Fleet Day, and the first 14 "Emergency" vessels were launched that day. The first of these was
SS Patrick Henry, launched by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt. In remarks at the launch ceremony, FDR cited
Patrick Henry's 1775 speech that finished "
Give me liberty or give me death". Roosevelt said that this new class of ships would bring liberty to Europe, which gave rise to the name Liberty Ship.
Early on, each ship took about 230 days to build (
Patrick Henry took 244 days), but the average eventually dropped to 42 days. The record was set by
Robert E. Peary, which was launched 4 days and 15 1/2 hours after the
keel was laid, although this
publicity stunt wasn't repeated -- and in fact much fitting-out and other work remained to be done after the
Peary was launched. The ships were made assembly-line style, from prefabricated sections. In 1943, three new Liberty ships were being completed every day. They were mainly named after famous Americans, starting with the signatories of the
Declaration of Independence.
Any group which raised
War bonds worth $2 million could propose a name. Most were named for deceased people. The only living namesake was Francis J. O'Gara, the
purser of the
SS Jean Nicolet, who was thought to have been killed in a submarine attack but in fact survived the war in a
Japanese
prisoner of war camp. Other exceptions to the naming rule were the
SS Stage Door Canteen, named for the
USO club in
New York, and the
SS U.S.O., named after the organization itself .
Another notable Liberty ship was
SS Stephen Hopkins, which sank the German
commerce raider Stier in a ship-to-ship gun battle in 1942 and became the first American ship to sink a German surface combatant.
SS Richard Montgomery is also notable, though in a less positive way; the wreck of the ship lies off the coast of
Kent with 1,500 tons of
explosives still on board, enough to match a small
nuclear weapon should they ever go off.
The last Liberty ship constructed was the
SS Albert M. Boe, launched on
26 September 1945 and delivered on
30 October 1945. She was named after the chief engineer of a
United States Army freighter who had stayed below decks to shut down his engines after a
13 April 1945 explosion, an act that won him a posthumous
Merchant Marine Distinguished Service Medal (External Link
).
Problems
Early Liberty ships suffered hull and deck cracks, and a few were lost to such structural defects. During World War II, there were nearly 1,500 instances of significant
brittle fractures. Twelve ships, including three of the 2710 Liberties built, broke in half without warning, including the
SS John P. Gaines, which sank on
24 November 1943 with the loss of 10 lives. Suspicion fell on the shipyards who had often used inexperienced workers and new
welding techniques to produce large numbers of ships in great haste.
Constance Tipper of
Cambridge University demonstrated that the fractures were not initiated by welding, but instead by the grade of steel used which suffered from
embrittlement. She discovered that the ships in the North Atlantic were exposed to temperatures that could fall below a critical point when the mechanism of failure changed from
ductile to
brittle, and thus the hull could fracture relatively easily. The predominantly welded (as opposed to riveted) hull construction then allowed cracks to run for large distances unimpeded. One common type of crack nucleated at the square corner of a hatch which coincided with a welded seam, both the corner and the weld acting as
stress concentrators. Furthermore, the ships were frequently grossly overloaded and some of the problems occurred during or after severe storms at sea that would have placed any ship at risk. Various reinforcements were applied to the Liberty Ships to arrest the crack problems, and the successor design, the
Victory ship, was built stronger and less stiff to better deal with
fatigue.
Several designs of mass-produced petroleum tankers were also produced, the most numerous being the
T2 tanker series, with about 490 built between 1942 and the end of 1945.
After the war
Many Liberty ships survived the war, and made up a large percentage of the postwar cargo fleet. Many were bought by Greek shipowners at very low prices. Shipping magnates like
Taki Theodoracopoulos were known to have started their fleets by buying many Liberties. The term "Liberty-size cargo" for 10,000 tons may still be heard in the shipping business.
In the 1960s three Liberty ships were reactivated and converted to
technical research ships (they were actually used to gather electronic intelligence and for radar picket duties) by the
U.S. Navy with the
hull type AGTR. SS
Samuel R. Ailken became the USS
Oxford (AGTR-1), SS
Robert W. Hart became the USS
Georgetown (AGTR-2), and SS
J. Howland Gardner became the USS
Jamestown (AGTR-3). All of these ships were decommissioned and stricken from the
Naval Register in 1969 and 1970.
Only two operational Liberty ships survive: the
SS John W. Brown (following a long career as a school ship and many internal modifications) and the
Jeremiah O'Brien, largely in original condition. Both
museum ships, they still put out to sea regularly. In 1994, the O'Brien steamed from San Francisco to England and France, the only large ship that participated in the World War II D-Day invasion to return for the 50th anniversary. The
SS Albert M. Boe survives as
Star of Kodiak, a floating
cannery, docked in
Kodiak Harbor.
Liberty ships continue to serve in a "less than whole" function many decades after their launching. In
Portland, Oregon the hulls of the
Richard Henry Dana and
Jane Adams serve as the basis of floating docks.
U.S. shipyards
Liberty ships were built at seventeen shipyards located along the Atlantic, Pacific and Gulf Coasts:
- Alabama Drydock and Shipbuilding, Mobile, Alabama
- Bethlehem-Fairfield Shipyard, Baltimore, Maryland
- California Shipbuilding Corp., Los Angeles, California
- Delta Shipbuilding Corp., New Orleans, Louisiana
- J. A. Jones Construction Company
- Kaiser Company, Vancouver, Washington
- Marinship, Sausalito, California
- New England Shipbuilding Corporation, South Portland, Maine, East and West Yards (both on the same 60 acres of shipyard)
- North Carolina Shipbuilding Company, Wilmington, North Carolina
- Oregon Shipbuilding Corporation, Portland, Oregon
- Permanente Metals Corporation, Richmond, California (a Kaiser facility)
- St. Johns River Shipbuilding, Jacksonville, Florida
- Southeastern Shipbuilding, Savannah, Georgia
- Todd Houston Shipbuilding, Houston, Texas
- Walsh-Kaiser Co., Inc., Providence, Rhode Island
Fictional appearances
A Liberty ship was featured in the
Quantum Leap episode 'Ghost Ship'.
A Liberty ship, converted to a hospital ship, is the eponymous subject and setting of
Alistair MacLean's mystery thriller
San Andreas (1984) The prologue to this novel, also by MacLean, is an interesting essay on Liberty ships and the conditions, character and behavior of the British Merchant Marine owners that used them, and sailors that sailed them.
A Liberty ship is featured in the
Humphrey Bogart 1943 film
Action in the North Atlantic. Its
deck gun is described as being 5" rather than 4", probably for wartime propaganda reasons.
In
Clive Cussler's book,
Deep Six, the prologue details a Liberty ship that disappears in the 1960s and becomes a recurring Ghost Ship in
The Flying Dutchman vein. It is later found by
Dirk Pitt leading to further adventures from there.
Most of the engine room scenes of the 1997 film
Titanic were shot aboard the museum Liberty Ship in San Francisco Bay.
The wreck of the
SS Richard Montgomery is central to the plot of Stephen Barlay's 1977 novel
Blockbuster, in which a blackmailer threatens to blow it up, thereby causing serious flooding in central London, if his demands are not met.
Further Information
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