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SS Arthur M. Huddell

SS Arthur M. Huddell is a Liberty ship built in the United States during World War II and is now a museum ship, SS Hellas Liberty, in Greece.

SS Hellas Liberty in Piraeus Port, Greece after major restoration (2010)
History
United States
NameArthur M. Huddell
NamesakeArthur M Huddell
OwnerWar Shipping Administration (WSA)
OperatorA. H. Bull Steamship Company
Orderedas type (EC2-S-C1) hull, MC hull 1215
BuilderSt. Johns River Shipbuilding Company, Jacksonville, Florida[2]
Cost$1,401,249[1]
Yard number23
Way number5
Laid down25 October 1943
Launched7 December 1943
Sponsored byMrs. Arthur M. Huddell
Completed18 December 1943
Identification
Fate
StatusDonated to Greece, 2008
Greece
NameHellas Liberty
Acquired2008
Identification
StatusConverted to a museum ship
General characteristics [3]
Class and type
Tonnage
Displacement
Length
  • 441 feet 6 inches (135 m) oa
  • 416 feet (127 m) pp
  • 427 feet (130 m) lwl
Beam57 feet (17 m)
Draft27 ft 9.25 in (8.4646 m)
Installed power
  • 2 × Oil fired 450 °F (232 °C) boilers, operating at 220 psi (1,500 kPa)
  • 2,500 hp (1,900 kW)
Propulsion
Speed11.5 knots (21.3 km/h; 13.2 mph)
Capacity
  • 562,608 cubic feet (15,931 m3) (grain)
  • 499,573 cubic feet (14,146 m3) (bale)
Complement
Armament

Coordinates: 37°56′33″N 23°37′51″E / 37.942414°N 23.630944°E / 37.942414; 23.630944

She was named after Arthur M. Huddell, an American union leader. Huddell had been president of the Boston Central Labor Union, vice president of the International Engineers’ Union, and president of the International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE).

From delivery on 18 December 1943 the ship was operated by an agent for the War Shipping Administration until laid up September 1945 with a brief operating period in 1947. Between October 1947 and February 1956 the ship was in long term layup. In 1956 Arthur M. Huddell began operations as a cable transport for the American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T).

The Historic American Engineering Record for the ship notes significance as an existing Liberty ship example and role in Operation PLUTO (pipeline-under-the-sea) and later work as a cable transport for AT&T communications cable installations and then for installation of the Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS) until 1983. In 2009 Arthur M. Huddell was donated to Greece to serve as the museum ship Hellas Liberty. The fully restored ship is on display in the Port of Piraeus, Athens.

Construction

Arthur M. Huddell was laid down on 25 October 1943, under a Maritime Commission (MARCOM) contract, MC hull 1215, by the St. Johns River Shipbuilding Company, Jacksonville, Florida; she was sponsored by Mrs. Arthur M. Huddell, the widow of the namesake, and was launched on 7 December 1943.[2][1] The ship, assigned official number 244760, was delivered to the War Shipping Administration (WSA) on 18 December 1943 with A.H. Bull & Co., Inc. assigned as the WSA operating agent under a general agency agreement.[1][4]

War history

After Arthur M. Huddell loaded explosives and general cargo in Jacksonville, she sailed for New York, in February 1944, where she joined a convoy for London.[5] Following the completion of this voyage the ship returned to Norfolk, Virginia, in March 1944 before at the end of April 1944 departing from Charleston, South Carolina, with a cargo of explosives to Oran, in Algeria.[6][5]

During the summer of 1944 the ship was modified with number 4 and 5 holds converted to carry coiled pipe for the construction of a fuel pipeline under the English Channel as part of Operation PLUTO supporting the Normandy landings. She departed New York, 22 September 1944, carrying 70 mi (110 km) of pipe and general cargo. She then spent 84 days in London, unloading 17 mi (27 km) of pipe into a cable laying ship, and unloading the remainder at the dock.[7][8] This turned out to be Arthur M. Huddell's first and only fuel pipe transport mission.

For the remainder of the war and immediate post war period she carried coal, general cargo, and personnel. Departing in February 1945, the ship carried coal in a convoy from Hampton Roads in Virginia to Marseilles in France before returning the following month to Philadelphia. In May 1945, the ship departed transporting general cargo to Naples in Italy, and Oran in Algeria, before returning to New York.[9]

In June 1945, the ship transported coal to Marseilles in France before continuing on to Port de Bouc from where it carried 619 French and Moroccan troops to Oran in Algeria.[9] In July of that year the ship returned to Baltimore, Maryland before making a voyage to New York before the Maritime Commission laid up the ship in the James River Reserve Fleet, Lee Hall, Virginia, 25 September 1945, with $20,000 worth of costly repairs needed.[4]

Between 15 February 1947 and 9 October 1947 the ship was again assigned under a general agency agreement and bareboat charter to A.H. Bull before being again laid up in the Reserve Fleet.[4]

Post war history

As the ship’s pipe and cable-handling fittings had been left intact she was chartered by AT&T, 23 February 1956, and converted to a cable transport and layer.[7][4] After operations delivering undersea telephone and communication cables laid between the US mainland, Hawaii and Alaska in support of Distant Early Warning (DEW) line the ship was transferred to the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet, Suisun Bay, California on 11 October 1957.

With a brief service in 1963, she was again returned to Suisun Bay on 10 July 1964. On 13 December 1977, the US Navy took delivery of the Arthur M. Huddell, where after its propeller, lifeboats and most of its equipment had been removed the ship was reclassified as a barge in July 1978, to support cable operations for the Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS).[7][10]

Two years later, following the loading of cables from the Simplex Wire & Cable Company pier in Newington the vessel was again employed in cable transport operations, this time in conjunction with the cable ship Long Lines.[11] In 1982, the Arthur M. Huddell was used in US Navy cable-laying operations in the Pacific. Once this work was completed the vessel was again laid up at James River Fleet, 22 August 1983.[4] After that date, many components, including the rudder, were removed and used as spare parts for SS John W. Brown.

By the late 1970s the US reserve fleets had considerably increased due to Victory ships being decommissioned following the end of the Vietnam War. As a result there was no need to retain in the reserve the few remaining Liberty ships, which led to most being scrapped or scuttled with obsolete ammunition, or to create dive and fishing reefs.[5] By the end of the 20th century the SS Arthur M. Huddell was one of three Liberty ships remaining afloat, the others being SS John W. Brown and SS Jeremiah O'Brien.[12] both of which had been restored and preserved following dedicated lobbying and hard work by US preservation groups.

Museum ship

Of the 1,272 ships operating under the Greek flag at the start of World War II, 914 were lost during the course of the war.[5] Following the end of the war all of the undamaged Allied shipyards were operating at full capacity, building replacement ships for their own fleets. Greece was among a number of countries wanting to rebuild their fleets. In response the United States passed a law in March 1946 allowing the sale of American vessels to foreign nationals.[13] In July of that same year the US Maritime Commission decided to sell ships for cash or on credit to allied governments or individuals from allied powers who could produce a letter of guarantee from the state.

As a result a number of Greeks shipowners who had dollars in American banks bought Liberty ships, with many registering them in Honduras, Panama and the United States. Those shipowners without this source of funds asked the Greek state to provide them with a letter of guarantee which on 6 April 1946, the Greek government issued for the purchase of up to 100 Liberty ships.[13] Backed by this financial guarantee Greek shipowners were able to purchase 98 Liberty ships from the US Government between December 1946 and April 1947.[5]

Further Greek purchases of Liberty ships continued through the 1950s, with the peak occurring in 1963 before the number in the Greek fleet began declining in 1964. Of the 722 Liberties in service in 1966, 603 were owned by Greeks.[13] By the early 1970s, Greeks controlled the biggest commercial fleet in the world.[13] As the Liberty ships had formed the foundations on which their post-war merchant fleet was built, the Greek shipping community refer to the Liberties as the “blessed ships”.[14] To honor the service of the Liberties several members of the Greek shipping industry developed a vision of acquiring a Liberty-type ship for conversion into a floating museum in Greece. While the Arthur M. Huddell was awaiting its turn to be scuttled as a fish reef, an exchange of communications between Greece and officials in the United States began in an effort to obtain the ship for Greece.[5] Shipowner Spyros M. Polemis played a significant role in activating members of the Greek Diaspora to assist in this effort.[11] As a result of the efforts of US politicians of Greek heritage headed by Rhode Island Senator Leonidas Raptakis and Connecticut congressman Dimitrios Yiannaros approval was given for the gifting of the Arthur M. Huddell to Greece with legislation being passed by the US Congress to allow the transfer of ownership.[11]

The relative agreement was signed on between US Maritime Administrator Sean Connaughton and Greek Minister of Merchant Marine, Georgios Voulgarakis on 30 June 2008.[11] The ship was subsequently towed in the next month to a repair facility in Norfolk, Virginia for the necessary inspections and preparations before on 6 December 2008 the ship left Norfolk under tow by the Polish tug Posidon, and arrived at Piraeus on 11 January 2009.[11]

The project, still without formal Greek government support, was largely financed by Greek shipowners.[15][16] In January 2009 Arthur M. Huddell was officially transferred to Greece after several years mitigating hazardous materials and negotiations and was renamed Hellas Liberty.[12] General repairs and conversions took place at Perama and Salamis, during 2009 and 2010, including installation of a new rudder and propeller.[5] The rudder was fabricated new in Greece, but the propeller was donated by the United States government to the Greek government. The propeller was a spare Victory ship propeller, which is the same diameter of 18 ft (5.5 m), as on a Liberty ship. The difference is that the Liberty has an output of 2,500 hp (1,900 kW) while the Victory is 7,500 hp (5,600 kW). They had a different pitch, but as it isn't turning, it doesn't make a difference. In June 2010, she was presented to the public in her restored form in Piraeus harbor in Athens.

Other work was undertaken to restore the vessel, as near as possible, to being a sistership to the Greek Liberties of the post-war years including changing the grey paint which had covered her hull and superstructure throughout her the service of the US Government to more commercial colours.[5]

References

Bibliography

  • "St. John's River Shipbuilding, Jacksonville FL". ShipbuildingHistory.com. 16 October 2010. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
  • Maritime Administration. "Arthur M. Huddell". Ship History Database Vessel Status Card. U.S. Department of Transportation, Maritime Administration. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  • Davies, James (May 2004). "Specifications (As-Built)" (PDF). p. 23. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
  • Gerhardt, Frank A. "Arthur M. Huddell". United States Maritime Commission – 1936 thru 1950. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
  • Clayton, Brian (2011). Liberty Ship / Pipe Carrier Arthur M. Huddell - Design type: EC2-S-Cl (PDF). Historic American Engineering Record (HAER No. VA-132) (Report). National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  • Harlaftis, Gelina (19 July 2012). "Cornerstone of Greek shipping: 100 Liberties". Ekathimerini. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  • Greek Shipping Miracle. . Greek Shipping Miracle. Archived from the original on 6 December 2020. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  • Hellenic Communication Service (14 April 2009). "The Return of an 'Old Loved One' to Greece Last Liberty Arrives to Become a Museum". HCS Article Index or Archives: History--American-Hellenic. Hellenic Communication Service. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  • Ship Management International (14 January 2009). "Last Liberty ship reaches Greece". Elaborate Communications Limited. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  • "System Log 1949 – 20XX" (PDF). SOSUS/IUSS: Monitoring the World's Oceans. IUSS/CAESAR Alumni Association. Retrieved 28 September 2022.
  • Pournara, Margarita (29 November 2017). "The little-known story of the Liberty ships and the miracle of Greek shipping". Ekathimerini. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  • Young, Victor (October 2020), "Hellas Liberty: A floating museum and a 'blessed ship'", Ships Monthly: 52–55

External links

  • Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. VA-132, "Arthur M. Huddell, James River Reserve Fleet, Newport News, Newport News, VA"
  • Business Plan for a National Hellas Liberty Ship Memorial Museum.
  • Official website of Hellas Liberty.

arthur, huddell, liberty, ship, built, united, states, during, world, museum, ship, hellas, liberty, greece, hellas, liberty, piraeus, port, greece, after, major, restoration, 2010, historyunited, statesnamearthur, huddellnamesakearthur, huddellownerwar, shipp. SS Arthur M Huddell is a Liberty ship built in the United States during World War II and is now a museum ship SS Hellas Liberty in Greece SS Hellas Liberty in Piraeus Port Greece after major restoration 2010 HistoryUnited StatesNameArthur M HuddellNamesakeArthur M HuddellOwnerWar Shipping Administration WSA OperatorA H Bull Steamship CompanyOrderedas type EC2 S C1 hull MC hull 1215BuilderSt Johns River Shipbuilding Company Jacksonville Florida 2 Cost 1 401 249 1 Yard number23Way number5Laid down25 October 1943Launched7 December 1943Sponsored byMrs Arthur M HuddellCompleted18 December 1943IdentificationU S official number 244760 Call sign KVDD 1 FateLaid up in the James River Reserve Fleet Lee Hall Virginia 25 September 1945 Laid up in the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet Suisun Bay California 11 October 1957 Laid up in the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet Suisun Bay California 10 July 1964 Laid up in the James River Reserve Fleet Lee Hall Virginia 22 August 1983StatusDonated to Greece 2008GreeceNameHellas LibertyAcquired2008IdentificationIMO number 5025706 Call sign SVAD8StatusConverted to a museum shipGeneral characteristics 3 Class and typeLiberty ship type EC2 S C1 standardTonnage10 865 LT DWT 7 176 GRTDisplacement3 380 long tons 3 434 t light 14 245 long tons 14 474 t max Length441 feet 6 inches 135 m oa 416 feet 127 m pp 427 feet 130 m lwlBeam57 feet 17 m Draft27 ft 9 25 in 8 4646 m Installed power2 Oil fired 450 F 232 C boilers operating at 220 psi 1 500 kPa 2 500 hp 1 900 kW Propulsion1 triple expansion steam engine manufactured by Filer and Stowell Milwaukee Wisconsin 1 screw propellerSpeed11 5 knots 21 3 km h 13 2 mph Capacity562 608 cubic feet 15 931 m3 grain 499 573 cubic feet 14 146 m3 bale Complement38 62 USMM 21 40 USNAGArmamentVaried by ship Bow mounted 3 inches 76 mm 50 caliber gun Stern mounted 4 inches 102 mm 50 caliber gun 2 8 single 20 millimeters 0 79 in Oerlikon anti aircraft AA cannons and or 2 8 37 millimeters 1 46 in M1 AA gunsCoordinates 37 56 33 N 23 37 51 E 37 942414 N 23 630944 E 37 942414 23 630944She was named after Arthur M Huddell an American union leader Huddell had been president of the Boston Central Labor Union vice president of the International Engineers Union and president of the International Union of Operating Engineers IUOE From delivery on 18 December 1943 the ship was operated by an agent for the War Shipping Administration until laid up September 1945 with a brief operating period in 1947 Between October 1947 and February 1956 the ship was in long term layup In 1956 Arthur M Huddell began operations as a cable transport for the American Telephone and Telegraph Company AT amp T The Historic American Engineering Record for the ship notes significance as an existing Liberty ship example and role in Operation PLUTO pipeline under the sea and later work as a cable transport for AT amp T communications cable installations and then for installation of the Sound Surveillance System SOSUS until 1983 In 2009 Arthur M Huddell was donated to Greece to serve as the museum ship Hellas Liberty The fully restored ship is on display in the Port of Piraeus Athens Contents 1 Construction 2 War history 3 Post war history 4 Museum ship 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksConstruction EditArthur M Huddell was laid down on 25 October 1943 under a Maritime Commission MARCOM contract MC hull 1215 by the St Johns River Shipbuilding Company Jacksonville Florida she was sponsored by Mrs Arthur M Huddell the widow of the namesake and was launched on 7 December 1943 2 1 The ship assigned official number 244760 was delivered to the War Shipping Administration WSA on 18 December 1943 with A H Bull amp Co Inc assigned as the WSA operating agent under a general agency agreement 1 4 War history EditAfter Arthur M Huddell loaded explosives and general cargo in Jacksonville she sailed for New York in February 1944 where she joined a convoy for London 5 Following the completion of this voyage the ship returned to Norfolk Virginia in March 1944 before at the end of April 1944 departing from Charleston South Carolina with a cargo of explosives to Oran in Algeria 6 5 During the summer of 1944 the ship was modified with number 4 and 5 holds converted to carry coiled pipe for the construction of a fuel pipeline under the English Channel as part of Operation PLUTO supporting the Normandy landings She departed New York 22 September 1944 carrying 70 mi 110 km of pipe and general cargo She then spent 84 days in London unloading 17 mi 27 km of pipe into a cable laying ship and unloading the remainder at the dock 7 8 This turned out to be Arthur M Huddell s first and only fuel pipe transport mission For the remainder of the war and immediate post war period she carried coal general cargo and personnel Departing in February 1945 the ship carried coal in a convoy from Hampton Roads in Virginia to Marseilles in France before returning the following month to Philadelphia In May 1945 the ship departed transporting general cargo to Naples in Italy and Oran in Algeria before returning to New York 9 In June 1945 the ship transported coal to Marseilles in France before continuing on to Port de Bouc from where it carried 619 French and Moroccan troops to Oran in Algeria 9 In July of that year the ship returned to Baltimore Maryland before making a voyage to New York before the Maritime Commission laid up the ship in the James River Reserve Fleet Lee Hall Virginia 25 September 1945 with 20 000 worth of costly repairs needed 4 Between 15 February 1947 and 9 October 1947 the ship was again assigned under a general agency agreement and bareboat charter to A H Bull before being again laid up in the Reserve Fleet 4 Post war history EditAs the ship s pipe and cable handling fittings had been left intact she was chartered by AT amp T 23 February 1956 and converted to a cable transport and layer 7 4 After operations delivering undersea telephone and communication cables laid between the US mainland Hawaii and Alaska in support of Distant Early Warning DEW line the ship was transferred to the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet Suisun Bay California on 11 October 1957 With a brief service in 1963 she was again returned to Suisun Bay on 10 July 1964 On 13 December 1977 the US Navy took delivery of the Arthur M Huddell where after its propeller lifeboats and most of its equipment had been removed the ship was reclassified as a barge in July 1978 to support cable operations for the Sound Surveillance System SOSUS 7 10 Two years later following the loading of cables from the Simplex Wire amp Cable Company pier in Newington the vessel was again employed in cable transport operations this time in conjunction with the cable ship Long Lines 11 In 1982 the Arthur M Huddell was used in US Navy cable laying operations in the Pacific Once this work was completed the vessel was again laid up at James River Fleet 22 August 1983 4 After that date many components including the rudder were removed and used as spare parts for SS John W Brown By the late 1970s the US reserve fleets had considerably increased due to Victory ships being decommissioned following the end of the Vietnam War As a result there was no need to retain in the reserve the few remaining Liberty ships which led to most being scrapped or scuttled with obsolete ammunition or to create dive and fishing reefs 5 By the end of the 20th century the SS Arthur M Huddell was one of three Liberty ships remaining afloat the others being SS John W Brown and SS Jeremiah O Brien 12 both of which had been restored and preserved following dedicated lobbying and hard work by US preservation groups Museum ship EditOf the 1 272 ships operating under the Greek flag at the start of World War II 914 were lost during the course of the war 5 Following the end of the war all of the undamaged Allied shipyards were operating at full capacity building replacement ships for their own fleets Greece was among a number of countries wanting to rebuild their fleets In response the United States passed a law in March 1946 allowing the sale of American vessels to foreign nationals 13 In July of that same year the US Maritime Commission decided to sell ships for cash or on credit to allied governments or individuals from allied powers who could produce a letter of guarantee from the state As a result a number of Greeks shipowners who had dollars in American banks bought Liberty ships with many registering them in Honduras Panama and the United States Those shipowners without this source of funds asked the Greek state to provide them with a letter of guarantee which on 6 April 1946 the Greek government issued for the purchase of up to 100 Liberty ships 13 Backed by this financial guarantee Greek shipowners were able to purchase 98 Liberty ships from the US Government between December 1946 and April 1947 5 Further Greek purchases of Liberty ships continued through the 1950s with the peak occurring in 1963 before the number in the Greek fleet began declining in 1964 Of the 722 Liberties in service in 1966 603 were owned by Greeks 13 By the early 1970s Greeks controlled the biggest commercial fleet in the world 13 As the Liberty ships had formed the foundations on which their post war merchant fleet was built the Greek shipping community refer to the Liberties as the blessed ships 14 To honor the service of the Liberties several members of the Greek shipping industry developed a vision of acquiring a Liberty type ship for conversion into a floating museum in Greece While the Arthur M Huddell was awaiting its turn to be scuttled as a fish reef an exchange of communications between Greece and officials in the United States began in an effort to obtain the ship for Greece 5 Shipowner Spyros M Polemis played a significant role in activating members of the Greek Diaspora to assist in this effort 11 As a result of the efforts of US politicians of Greek heritage headed by Rhode Island Senator Leonidas Raptakis and Connecticut congressman Dimitrios Yiannaros approval was given for the gifting of the Arthur M Huddell to Greece with legislation being passed by the US Congress to allow the transfer of ownership 11 The relative agreement was signed on between US Maritime Administrator Sean Connaughton and Greek Minister of Merchant Marine Georgios Voulgarakis on 30 June 2008 11 The ship was subsequently towed in the next month to a repair facility in Norfolk Virginia for the necessary inspections and preparations before on 6 December 2008 the ship left Norfolk under tow by the Polish tug Posidon and arrived at Piraeus on 11 January 2009 11 The project still without formal Greek government support was largely financed by Greek shipowners 15 16 In January 2009 Arthur M Huddell was officially transferred to Greece after several years mitigating hazardous materials and negotiations and was renamed Hellas Liberty 12 General repairs and conversions took place at Perama and Salamis during 2009 and 2010 including installation of a new rudder and propeller 5 The rudder was fabricated new in Greece but the propeller was donated by the United States government to the Greek government The propeller was a spare Victory ship propeller which is the same diameter of 18 ft 5 5 m as on a Liberty ship The difference is that the Liberty has an output of 2 500 hp 1 900 kW while the Victory is 7 500 hp 5 600 kW They had a different pitch but as it isn t turning it doesn t make a difference In June 2010 she was presented to the public in her restored form in Piraeus harbor in Athens Other work was undertaken to restore the vessel as near as possible to being a sistership to the Greek Liberties of the post war years including changing the grey paint which had covered her hull and superstructure throughout her the service of the US Government to more commercial colours 5 References Edit a b c d Gerhardt a b St John s River SBC 2010 Davies 2004 p 23 a b c d e Maritime Administration a b c d e f g h Young 2020 Clayton 2011 p 7 a b c Clayton 2011 pp 1 8 Clayton 2011 Illustration sheet 20 of 20 a b Clayton 2011 p 8 SOSUS IUSS a b c d e Greek Shipping Miracle a b Clayton 2011 p 9 a b c d Harlaftis 2012 Pournara 2017 Hellenic Communication Service 2009 Ship Management International Bibliography Edit St John s River Shipbuilding Jacksonville FL ShipbuildingHistory com 16 October 2010 Retrieved 9 January 2020 Maritime Administration Arthur M Huddell Ship History Database Vessel Status Card U S Department of Transportation Maritime Administration Retrieved 8 September 2020 Davies James May 2004 Specifications As Built PDF p 23 Retrieved 9 January 2020 Gerhardt Frank A Arthur M Huddell United States Maritime Commission 1936 thru 1950 Retrieved 9 January 2020 Clayton Brian 2011 Liberty Ship Pipe Carrier Arthur M Huddell Design type EC2 S Cl PDF Historic American Engineering Record HAER No VA 132 Report National Park Service U S Department of the Interior Retrieved 15 November 2020 Harlaftis Gelina 19 July 2012 Cornerstone of Greek shipping 100 Liberties Ekathimerini Retrieved 16 November 2020 Greek Shipping Miracle The Hellas Liberty Museum Greek Shipping Miracle Archived from the original on 6 December 2020 Retrieved 17 November 2020 Hellenic Communication Service 14 April 2009 The Return of an Old Loved One to Greece Last Liberty Arrives to Become a Museum HCS Article Index or Archives History American Hellenic Hellenic Communication Service Retrieved 1 December 2013 Ship Management International 14 January 2009 Last Liberty ship reaches Greece Elaborate Communications Limited Retrieved 1 December 2013 System Log 1949 20XX PDF SOSUS IUSS Monitoring the World s Oceans IUSS CAESAR Alumni Association Retrieved 28 September 2022 Pournara Margarita 29 November 2017 The little known story of the Liberty ships and the miracle of Greek shipping Ekathimerini Retrieved 16 November 2020 Young Victor October 2020 Hellas Liberty A floating museum and a blessed ship Ships Monthly 52 55External links EditHistoric American Engineering Record HAER No VA 132 Arthur M Huddell James River Reserve Fleet Newport News Newport News VA Business Plan for a National Hellas Liberty Ship Memorial Museum Official website of Hellas Liberty Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SS Arthur M Huddell amp oldid 1147270817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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