Actions

USAT Sidney H Short

From Our Contribution

Revision as of 20:27, 13 September 2023 by Linton (talk | contribs) (Remarks)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
USAT Sidney H Short
USAT Sidney H Short.jpg
Standard C2 Freighter
History
Name USAT Sidney H Short
Owner US Army
Builder Permanente Metals Richmond, California
Yard number Hull No 2760
Launched 28 Feb 1944
Completed March 1944
In service 25 Mar 1944
Out of service February 1970
Fate Scrapped 1973
General characteristics
Type Standard Liberty Ship
Tonnage 10,856 tons
Length 441 feet (134.4 m)
Beam 56 feet (17.07 m)
Depth 28 feet 2 inches (8.59 m)
Propulsion 2 x oil burning boilers = 2,500 hp
Speed 10.5 knots
Capacity 44 crew and 30 Naval Armed Guard to operate 1 x 3 inch bow gun; 1 x 4 or 5 inch stern gun; 2 x 37 mm bow guns; and 6 x 20 mm machine guns



Remarks

Liberty ships formed the backbone of a supply line that enabled the Allies to wage total war against the Axis Powers during World War II. In what has been called "the most stupendous building program the world will probably ever see", some 2,700 Liberty ships — making up nearly three-quarters of the 40 million dead-weight tons of shipbuilding in the United States during the war — were built at an average cost of US$1.6 million each, in 18 shipyards.


The 'Sidney H Short, Hull No 2760, was laid down on 10 Feb 1944 as an EC2-S-C1 Type. It was launched on 28 Feb 1944 and completed on 7 Mar 1944. It remained in service until February 1970 after which it was scrapped in 1973.

Soldiers carried


Note

Sidney Howe Short (October 8, 1858 – October 21, 1902) was an electrical engineer, inventor, physicist, professor and businessman