Titanic: True Stories of her Passengers, Crew and Legacy
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About this ebook
Her story is one of all those bound together on that fateful voyage. On board were: writers, artists, honeymooners, sportsmen, priests, reverends, fashion designers, aristocrats, millionaires, children, crew and emigrants looking for a better life.
This book tells of their lives, and shines the spotlight on:
- Some of the great ship's surprising treasures
- Her fêted voyage from Belfast's
Harland & Wolff shipyard
- The fascinating museums devoted to her memory, including Titanic Belfast
- The iconic music and movies
- Her winged and four-legged passengers
- The sister ships of Olympic and Britannic
- Tales of heroism
- Theories surrounding Titanic's fatal collision
- The lifeboats and just how close the SS Californian was on that tragic night
- How Arctic explorer Ernest Shackleton and the inquiries viewed eventsThese stories and much more lie inside.
Nicola Pierce
Nicola Pierce published her first book for children, Spirit of the Titanic, to rave reviews and five printings within its first twelve months. City of Fate, her second book, transported the reader deep into the Russian city of Stalingrad during World War II. The novel was shortlisted for the Warwickshire School Library Service Award, 2014. Nicola went on to bring seventeenth-century Ireland vividly to life in Behind the Walls (2015), a rich emotional novel set in the besieged city of Derry in 1689, followed by Kings of the Boyne (2016), a moving and gritty account capturing the Battle of the Boyne (1690), which was shortlisted for the Literacy Association of Ireland (LAI) awards. In 2018 Nicola delved in to the true stories of the passengers, crew and the legacy of the fated ship Titanic, in her illustrated book of the same name. To read more about Nicola, go to her Facebook page, www.facebook.com/NicolaPierce-Author and on Twitter @NicolaPierce3.
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Reviews for Titanic
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Book preview
Titanic - Nicola Pierce
Dedication
For Titanic buffs
And for Niall Carney
Acknowledgements
The author would like to extend her gratitude to the following for assistance and their generosity in research: Titanic historians and authors Randy Bryan Bigham, Steve Hall and Bill Wormstedt, Straus Historical Society (Executive Director Joan Adler), Southampton FC (Official Historian to SFC, Duncan Holley), Julie Stoner at the Library of Congress and Zoe Rainey who kindly checked out graveyards for me on her New York holiday.
I also wish to thank The O’Brien Press for asking me to write this book. As always, I must thank my tireless editor, Susan Houlden, for all her help and encouragement. I depend on her sharing my passions, book to book, and she never fails me.
The fact that this book looks good is absolutely nothing to do with me; once again I’m grateful for the artist that is Emma Byrne. I can only hope the book is as good as it looks. Also, I hasten to add, any mistakes are entirely mine.
Contents
Title Page
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Author’s Note
Titanic – How It All Began
Timeline
1. Titanic’s Captain
2. Titanic’s Sisters and Their Disasters
3. The Man Who Owned Titanic
4. Winged and Four-Legged Passengers
5. Lost Treasures
6. Artists and Writers
7. Iconic Music and Iconic Orchestras
8. Brides, Widows and Famous Couples
9. Sporting Heroes
10. Heroic Clergymen
11. Morgan Robertson – Genius or Psychic?
12. The Titanic Trail
13. Bruce Ismay – Titanic Hero or Titanic Devil?
14. Ernest Shackleton and Titanic
15. The SS Californian and the ‘Mystery Ship’
16. Titanic and the Movies
17. The First and Last Survivors
18. The Lifeboats
19. The Rescue Ships of the Living and the Dead
20. The Nova Scotia Graveyards
21. Titanic Belfast
22. Titanic Experience Cobh
Bibliography/Sources
Picture Credits
Index
About the Author
Copyright
Author’s Note
RMS Titanic changed my life with the release of my children’s novel Spirit of the Titanic. The tragedy is narrated by the spirit of the first victim associated with Titanic, a fifteen-year-old catch-boy, or junior riveter, Samuel Joseph Scott who was working on the building of the great ship in the Harland & Wolff shipyard. On 20 April 1910, Samuel fell twenty-three feet to his death from a ladder propped against the side of the ship. I had no idea that the research I had undertaken for the novel and the novel itself would result in my spending the next six years crisscrossing the island of Ireland, including a jaunt to the Irish college in Paris, talking to students of all ages, teachers, librarians and parents about Titanic. I have been ambushed by four-year-olds determined to show me their Titanic portraits, while older and elderly Titanic enthusiasts have shared their own research and connections with me.
Over the years, many theories have been explored as to the cause of the sinking, including that of a fire in Boiler Room 6. During my talks, I have been asked a lot of questions about the ship, some I could answer and some I could not. My publisher wanted an accessible, affordable history book, which presented me with a huge challenge as I sifted through the mound of information available, needing to cram in as much as I could, in as few words as possible. Admittedly, some of the stories will be familiar; however, I learned a lot during the research and I hope that the reader might share my experience.
Titanic’s wreck still lies in two sections on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean, while over in China a replica is being built at the Romandisea Seven Star International Cultural Tourism Resort. Their Facebook page already has over 900,000 followers, who avidly comment on the new build via the regularly updated photographs.
Over a century after its fateful journey to the bottom of the sea, this ship, her crew and passengers continue to enthral young and old.
Nicola Pierce
Titanic’s gigantic propellers.
One of our most familiar images of Titanic, under construction in Harland & Wolff.
Titanic
HOW IT ALL BEGAN
Out on the seas in the early years of the twentieth century the Cunard Line held supreme, with the much-loved ships, Lusitania and Mauretania, the biggest, fastest and most lavishly built ships the world had ever seen. In 1907 the number of immigrants travelling to a new life in America totalled a new high at 1.25 million.
There was much money to be made and stiff competition to stir ambition into being. In 1907, Mr Joseph Bruce Ismay, chairman of the White Star Line, and his wife, Florence, were invited to dinner at Downshire House, the London home of Lord Pirrie, chairman of Belfast’s Harland & Wolff shipyard. We may assume that the premise of this dinner was to initiate changes that would prove beneficial to both companies.
Bruce Ismay was also president and managing director of IMM (International Mercantile Marine Company), the American holding company that had bought the shipping White Star Line in 1902.
The entrepreneurial swagger behind the IMM was undoubtedly John Pierpoint (JP) Morgan, the crusading powerhouse whose nose for profit had brought him to the water’s edge. As an American, he was not allowed to own British ships, but there was nothing to prevent his holding company from owning the company that owned the British ships. In typical fashion, Morgan wished to buy out and thus dominate the relatively new world of the transatlantic liner. Along with White Star Line, he had briefly attempted to buy the Cunard Line but was thwarted by the British government who feared an American monopoly of the North Atlantic trade.
Nobody could have guessed that Titanic was leaving Belfast behind forever.
Today, 24 Belgrave Square, the Greco-Roman-styled mansion formerly known as Downshire House, is home to the Spanish Embassy. However, it is far more famous for that 1907 dinner party, during which the two esteemed chairmen, Lord Pirrie and Bruce Ismay, dreamt up Titanic and her sisters. The future of sea travel was in their hands and what they would conceive was undoubtedly a fine testament to the mutually beneficial relationship between a British shipping line and a Belfast ship-building company.
Three years later, an article in the Belfast News Letter described this relationship as ‘one of the most interesting chapters in the history of our ship-building industry’.
It was surely inevitable that Ismay, with IMM funding, and Pirrie would look to breach Cunard’s superiority and the answer was as obvious as it was simple: White Star Line needed new ships and these new ships needed to exceed the Cunard liners in size, speed and luxury. The two men went to work that very evening, making sketches and bestowing names that announced a new type of ship on the horizon: Olympic, Titanic and Gigantic. Of course, the consequences of that conversation would have huge financial requirements; that is, those three ships could only happen thanks to White Star Line’s access to the considerable resources of the IMM.
NOBODY COULD HAVE GUESSED THAT TITANIC WAS LEAVING BELFAST BEHIND FOREVER.
No image of Titanic’s Grand Staircase is known to exist. Pictured here the Grand Staircase in Olympic was of the same design; a replica of the one in Titanic can be seen at Titanic Belfast.
JP Morgan had made his desires clear, telling Ismay to ‘build me the finest vessels afloat’, and that is exactly what he got, not three years later, with Olympic’s launch on 20 October 1910, followed closely by her sister Titanic’s on 31 May 1911. Gigantic would be finally launched as Britannic, on 26 February 1914, to a very different world.
In a way, Titanic was initially in her elder sister’s shadow, not receiving half the fanfare that had been afforded to the first of the White Star Line wonder ships but that would change. Made in the image of Olympic, Titanic was just that bit heavier at 46,328 tonnes to Olympic’s 45,324, because the forward half of Titanic’s A deck promenade was enclosed by a steel screen with sliding windows while Olympic’s promenade deck was completely open to the elements.
Due to her spacious A deck promenade, Olympic’s wealthier passengers had no need for the first-class promenades on B deck and, consequently, the B deck first-class promenades did not appear on Titanic. Instead, Thomas Andrews used the space to build extra, and enlarged, first-class suites. Furthermore, he made a tasteful extension to the À la Carte Restaurant in the form of the Café Parisien. Resembling a Parisian street café, this had never been seen on a British ship before. Passengers could order a meal from the restaurant and, if they so wished, take it in the café, sitting in front of its large windows to enjoy the waterscape as they ate. Weather permitting, the windows could be rolled down, allowing passengers to feel like they were eating outside a café, another first for sea-faring passengers. Thomas Andrews was breaking new ground with Titanic and one can only wonder what he might have done with Britannic. Thanks to the café’s popularity, particularly with the younger passengers, Olympic would later receive her own Café Parisien.
Another Titanic specification was a reception area for the restaurant that was added in B deck, behind the Grand Staircase, while the main reception room on D deck was also enlarged. The two deluxe parlour suites on B deck were given their own promenades and there were more first-class gangway entrances on B deck too.
A ship full of steerage passengers would certainly pay its way, but the real money was to be made from the likes of the Astors, Guggenheims and their peers. Titanic’s innovative chief designer ensured his ship was the biggest and most luxurious ever to put to sea, and the rich flocked to board her in April 1912.
How exciting it must have been, on leaving Queenstown behind, to know that there would be no more stops, that all passengers and bags of mail were safely onboard and that, at long last, they were on their way to New York.
In many ways, what happened next is still somewhat unbelievable.
Titanic Timeline
1908
16 December: Olympic’s keel is laid and construction begins.
1909
31 March:Titanic’s keel is laid and construction begins.
1910
16 April:Titanic’s frame is completed.
20 April: Catch-boy Samuel Joseph Scott in fatal fall from side of ship.
19 October: Titanic’s plating is completed.
1911
31 May: Titanic is launched just after midday in front of 100,000 people.
14 June: Olympic commences her maiden voyage.
20 September: Olympic collides with HMS Hawke, delaying Titanic’s completion.
30 November:Britannic’s keel is laid and construction begins.
1912
January: Lifeboats are fitted on Titanic.
31 March: Construction of Titanic is completed.
3 February: Titanic captured on news reel, entering the dry dock.
2 April: Following successful sea trials Francis Carruthers signs the Certificate of Sea-Worthiness, valid for one year, and Titanic leaves Belfast forever.
3 April: Titanic docks in Southampton.
10 April: Titanic leaves Southampton and sails to Cherbourg.
11 April: Titanic docks at Roches Point, off the coast of Queenstown, to pick up her final passengers and post bags. Two hours later she leaves for New York.
14 April: At 11.40pm, four days into her first and only voyage, Titanic strikes an iceberg about 375 miles south of Newfoundland.
15 April: At 2.17am, the last message is transmitted from the Titanic before her final plunge at 2.20am. A little over 700 passengers, out of an approximate 2,223 on board, make it safely into lifeboats.
Just after 4am, RMS Carpathia arrives to rescue the survivors.
1985
1 September: Titanic is sighted, after a disappearance of 73 years, when Robert Ballard discovers her wreck, torn in two, on the Atlantic Ocean floor.
A sideroom of Titanic’s opulent first-class dining room, the largest room on any ship at the time.
Pictured is Olympic’s first-class smoking room, identical to Titanic’s and designed as a gentlemen’s club with mahogany panelling and stained-glass windows.
The world was shocked as news spread of Titanic’s fate.
Captain Edward John Smith with his Titanic officers, only four of whom would survive Titanic’s maiden voyage.
1
Titanic’s Captain
In his photographs, Edward John Smith looks exactly like a seafaring captain of old with his solid figure, white hair and weathered face complemented by a trim beard. He is forever ingrained in our minds as ‘the captain of the Titanic’ since, to the author’s knowledge, no photographs exist in the public domain showing him in civilian clothes.
Hanley, in the English Staffordshire town of Stoke-on-Trent, was the land-locked town of his birth and childhood, and is many miles from the sea. He was named after his father, Edward, who was a potter before going into retail and buying a shop with his wife, Catherine. According to an old trade journal from 1893, the prosperous Hanley was the capital of the potteries.
Captain Smith embraced his destiny at an early age. Leaving school at thirteen, he made his way to Liverpool and got himself an apprenticeship with the Gibson shipping line before joining White Star in 1880. Seven years later, at the age of 37, he earned his first command and, on his way to captaining Titanic in 1912, took the helm of many ships including the Majestic, the Baltic, the Adriatic and Olympic. In 1887, he married Sarah Eleanor Pennington and they had just one child, Helen Melville Smith, born in 1898.
Smith served with the British Royal Navy, during the Boer War, and his calm reliability earned him a medal for bravery from the hand of King Edward VII himself. Presumably it was this sort of behaviour that attracted his fans, those wealthy passengers who preferred to sail on his ship over any other White Star captain’s, leading to his nickname, ‘Millionaire’s Captain’. However else they may have felt about the number of funnels or, indeed, lifeboats, most of the first-class passengers would have