• A Quora on Liberty ships

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 22 16:02:30 2021
    XPost: soc.history.war.misc, alt.war.world-war-two

    Richard Meakin
    MA (Oxon) in History, University of Oxford (Graduated 1981)Updated Thu

    Why was the Liberty Ship considered a production miracle?
    By the end of 1940 alone the British Merchant Navy had already lost 644
    ships amounting to 2,846,573 gross tons.

    In order to replace these losses, and also to provide for the vast
    amount of logistics transport required to wage the war on multiple
    fronts, the allies had an urgent need for very large numbers of cargo
    ships in both the Atlantic and the Pacific. Liberty ships were simple,
    cheap, disposable ships that could be made in large quantities very quickly.

    Ugly ducklings and designed with an expected life of only five years,
    each Liberty ship could carry 11,000 tons of cargo 20,000 miles at 11 knots.

    Made in sections that were welded, rather than riveted, together and
    using old technology (triple expansion steam engines rather than
    turbines) the ships could be built, on average, in 42 days by largely inexperienced workers. In this way Liberty ship production did not
    interfere with warship production.

    2,710 Liberty ships were built in 18 shipyards between 1941 and 1945 at
    the astonishing rate of more than one per day.

    Dave Tarrant
    I have had the privilege of sailing on a remaining Liberty Ship - the
    John Brown - and a very memorable part of the voyage was spending time
    in the Engine Room. Those triple-expansion steam engines were very
    proven technology; at the time there were many hands with experience
    with them; and they were reliable. The chunk-a-chink, chunk-a-chink
    sound they made will always stay with me.


    Chris Judge
    I sailed for just one week on a triple expansion engine ship as an
    Engineer Cadet in 1967. Wonderful experience. I loved it. Unfortunately
    her Scotch boiler was condemned the following year and the college
    couldn't afford the repairs. She had to be taken out of service.

    It was marvellous how they managed … (more)

    Scott Vidas
    Good answer. For those wanting more detail read “Freedom’s Forge” by Arthur Herman. Great book on not just the Liberty ships but production
    in general that won the war.

    Arthur Majoor
    Modern warfare will consume logistics on that sort of scale - perhaps
    some analogue of the “Liberty Ship” will be required again.

    Richard Becker
    Just part of the American productive capacity in World War II that won
    the war for the Allies. The biggest mistake the Axis powers made was
    getting the U.S.A. involved in the war as their enemy. Both Hitler and
    Tojo would have done far better to keep the U.S.A. neutral and
    uninvolved in the war!

    Jens Schuetz
    Flying Tigers were send to help China before Pearl Harbor. Lend Lease
    act and abolishing of the Neutrality act happened before Hitler declared
    war on the US. Gotta say the US knew what was coming and was ready to do
    the right thing even before war was declared.

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