USS Liberty (ID # 3461) Fitting out at the yard of her builder, the Federal Shipbuilding Co., Kearny, New Jersey, circa September 1918. This freighter was in commission from October 1918 to May 1919.
At the time of the United States' entry into World War II in December 1941, USAT Liberty was in the Pacific. In January 1942, she was en route from Australia to the Philippines with a cargo of railway parts and rubber. On 11 January, Liberty was torpedoed by I-66 about 10 nautical miles (19 km) southwest of the Lombok Strait, near position 08°54′S115°28′E / 8.900°S 115.467°E / -8.900; 115.467. US destroyerPaul Jones and Dutch destroyer Van Ghent took the damaged ship in tow attempting to reach Celukan bawang harbour at Singaraja, the Dutch port and administrative centre for the Lesser Sunda Islands, on the north coast of Bali. However she was taking too much water and so was beached on the eastern shore of Bali at Tulamben so that the cargo and fittings could be salvaged.
In 1963 the tremors associated with the eruption of Mount Agung caused the vessel to slip off the beach, and she now lies on a sand slope in 25 to 100 feet (7.6 to 30.5 m) of water, providing one of the most popular dive sites off Bali.
The wreck of USAT Liberty is often misidentified as USAT Liberty Glo[Note 2] or identified by its former name, USS Liberty. The wreck is sometimes incorrectly referred to as a Liberty ship, through confusion of the ship's name with the class of World War II-built standard design cargo ships.
Dive site
Liberty′s wreck rests about 40 metres (100 ft) from the beach in Tulamben, Bali, Indonesia.[5] The highest point of the wreck is the stern at a depth of about 5 metres (16 ft)[6] and the lowest point sits at about 30 metres (100 ft).[7][8] The wreck is a great display of how nature creates life everywhere[citation needed] and great coral formations can be observed on the wreck's guns.[9]
It is also just beside a species-rich zone called "Coral Garden" (depth 4-25 m).[10][11]
Jordan, Roger W. (1999). The World's Merchant Fleets, 1939: The Particulars and Wartime Fates of 6,000 Ships. London: Chatham. p. 383. ISBN1-86176-023-X.