In 1907, when Bruce Ismay, director of the White Star Line, decided to outmatch
Cunard’s Lusitania and Mauretania, he did not intend to only build one or two
vessels. The decision was that three vessels should be constructed. The first
two, built almost simultaneously should be followed by a third. The three ships
should be called Olympic, Titanic and Gigantic. The White Star Line, owners
of these new ships had commissioned its first vessel in 1871; the Oceanic. The
company was British and was one of Britain’s two prime ship companies. The other
one was the Cunard Line. But in 1902, when Bruce Ismay had been on White Star’s
throne for three years, his company was devoured by the ever-expanding American
company I.M.M. (International Mercantile Marine). The director of the I.M.M.,
J. P. Morgan wanted to establish a monopoly on passenger trade on the Atlantic.
The purchase of the White Star Line was the largest affair ever for the I.M.M.
But still, all officers aboard the White Star vessels were to be British, and
completely controlled by the rather independent Ismay.
It was for the glory of Britain these ships were built, not for America’s. The
enormous amount of money that had to be raised in order to complete the three
ships was not a problem; I.M.M. was a wealthy company, and White Star did not
have to go to the British government for money, as Cunard had done with their
prize tag for the Lusitania and the Mauretania in 1907. It was rather embarrassing
for the White Star Line when Cunard’s Lusitania and Mauretania entered service.
Before that, White Star had had the largest vessel in the world; the Baltic
at almost 24,000 tons, but with a service speed of only 16 knots. The Lusitania
was 8,000 tons larger and could go 10 knots faster. The speed was not very concerning
for Bruce Ismay, because White Star had been the icon of comfort rather than
speed throughout its time, but the fact that Cunard had surpassed Baltic, and
the rest of White Star's quartet; the Big Four, in size was not acceptable.
His new ships would be roughly 45,000 gross tons, and would have a service speed
of 21 knots. Not being in range of the Blue Riband of the Atlantic, Ismay’s
ships would at least be able to claim they were the largest in the world.
In 1908 construction of the Olympic started at Harland and Wolff’s shipyard
in Belfast, Ireland. Only months after, on March 31, 1909, the first steel of
the Titanic’s keel was laid. The two mammoth gantries where Olympic and Titanic
were built were originally constructed in order to handle the building of three
ships. But as White Star Line’s new ships reached dimensions never dreamed of
before, these three gantries had to be converted into two. On April 6 that same
year the Titanic had gone so far in construction that she was fully framed and
thanks to that the beautiful shape of the vessel was now becoming apparent.
The man responsible for the Olympic-class’ exterior was Alexander Carlisle,
a man that had had that mission for several other White Star ships. On the 20th
October, 1910, the Olympic was successfully launched. By that time the Titanic’s
hull was entirely plated. The Olympic was entirely completed on May 31, 1911,
the very same day as the Titanic was launched.
Titanic’s launch was a complete success, as her communicating flags at her stern
spelled out. The Olympic was, when she entered the Atlantic trade route, the
largest moving object ever created by the hand of man in all history. She quickly
became a very popular ship amongst the passengers and the crew. This, in spite
of the fact that the ship was lacking enormously in life preserving life boats
for all. Titanic was equipped with exactly the same inadequacy. This was common
on the seas at that time, however - there had not been a change in the Board
of Trade’s restrictions since the former century. Because in those times there
was no ship exceeding 10,000 gross tons, there were no restrictions concerning
larger ships. As the Titanic was 46,328 gross tons, she needed many more lifeboats
than she carried. She was allowed to carry nearly 3,500 passengers, but there
was only room in the lifeboats for about 1,200. But no man worried about this;
the ship was the latest in the means of safety and housed 16 strong bulkheads
inside her hull, and had a double bottom large enough for a man to stand upright
in. Any two of her largest compartments could be flooded at any time and still
the ship would remain afloat. In fact, all of the first four compartments could
be filled without endangering the ship’s floatation. Damage gteater than that
was unthinkable. Olympic and Titanic, like so many other ships, was rumoured
to be unsinkable. The White Star Line itself never made this claim. It was the
Stone and Lloyd (the company that made the watertight doors in ship’s bulkheads)
who said that thanks to their materia,l the new vessels were ‘practically unsinkable’.
The public removed ‘practically’ and the vessels became unsinkable.
Though Olympic and Titanic were constructed from the same drawings, and were
identical in most aspects, there were differences. On the Olympic was a promenade
deck stretching the entire length of B-deck, but Ismay had noted that this area
was hardly used by the passengers. The Titanic was therefore changed in this
detail, making room for more first class cabins. Two of the parlour suites on
this deck thus received a private promenade deck on the Titanic. If you want
to see what it looked like, I recommend you to examine Rose’s cabin in the 1997
movie ‘Titanic’, which is parlour suite B52-56.
The Titanic was completed and dry-docked in Belfast Harbour Commissioners’ new
graving dock on February 3, 1912, her funnels, masts and machinery were now
all fitted in place. Her maiden voyage was decided long before to occur on March
20, 1912. However, this did not happen. On September 20, 1911, the Olympic had
accidentally collided with a British cruiser outside Southampton. The cruiser
was so badly damaged that she almost capsized, but managed to stay afloat. The
Olympic had not escaped the event unscathed either. Her starboard side had been
badly damaged and water had flooded two compartments. All of her passengers
had been transferred to smaller vessels and brought back ashore. With the hole
in her side mended with wooden planks, the Olympic sailed at low speed back
to Belfast for repairs. Titanic was removed from her fitting out basin in favour
for the Olympic. This delayed the Titanic’s maiden voyage and in an announcement
in The London Times, October 11, 1911 the new date was said to be April 10,
1912. When finally completed, the Titanic’s sea trials were to take place in
the Belfast Lough on April 1, 1912. But because of bad weather, the trials were
cancelled and moved to the next day.
For the first time in her life, the Titanic’s life system started to pound.
With a crew eager to see what the new ship was capable of, the Titanic went
at high speed and then turned, making a circle with 3,850 feet in diameter.
She also made a halt in 850 yards at 20 knots. The top speed clocked up to was
23.5 knots, much above her designed 21 knots. Had Lusitania and Mauretania not
been, the Olympic and the Titanic would perhaps have taken the Blue Riband from
Germany’s Deutschland. When trials completed, the Titanic was made ready for
her departure to Southampton, from where she would sail eight days later to
the New World. On April 3, the Titanic reached Southampton and was tied up shortly
after midnight at Berth 44. The following days, officers were installed in their
new working place, cargo was loaded and stewards learned the ship by heart in
order to help passengers when at sea. Everything went on just as it should do,
except for one thing. Since February there had been a coal strike in Britain
which stopped some ships from sailing. But because Titanic had had delays before,
the White Star Line did not want to postpone her maiden voyage any further.
Coal was scratched from the bottom of every I.M.M. ship that did not sail, and
finally the Titanic was fuelled to the maximum. However, in order to save coal,
only 25 of the 29 boilers were decided to be used. At last the sailing day came.
The Titanic was scheduled to depart on midday. Passengers and officers went
around the ship looking like ants on their anthill. On the land beside the Titanic
stood all relatives and friends who had come to say goodbye to their loved ones.
The ship towered itself almost 70 feet from the water to the boat deck. To the
top of one of the four huge funnels it measured almost 150 feet. The funnels
themselves were about 75 feet high. One extraordinary thing a second class passenger
could do now was to visit all first class public rooms, and that was certainly
an opportunity one should have taken, because at sea the partition between the
classes was rigorous.
At noon, Titanic’s assisting tugboats helped her out from her berth, and when
clear, Titanic’s reciprocating engines started, and her two wing propellers
started to revolve. Around her were numerous other vessels with inadequate coal
supplies. Behind her to the right were Majestic, Philadelphia and St. Louis,
all tied up alongside each other. Right ahead of the Titanic lay Oceanic and
New York whom the 46,000-tonner had to pass. When doing so, a sort of suction
appeared from the larger vessel's hull, and the New York was pulled towards
the Titanic, stern first. Of course, her mooring lines were securely fastened,
but Titanic’s enormous power made them snap, one by one. The smaller ship’s
stern approached closer and closer, dangerously. But Titanic’s captain, Edward
John Smith, immediately ordered the port propeller astern so that his ship would
turn away from the New York. As no one was on board the New York, she floated
absolutely free, unaware of the danger she caused. One of Titanic's tugboats,
the Vulcan, acted at once by throwing a mooring line on the New York and pulling
her out of Titanic’s way. The flagship of the White Star Line and the world’s
largest liner could at last begin her maiden voyage.
The Titanic’s first port of call was Cherbourg, France. There passengers and
further cargo was to be loaded. The passengers were ferried out to Titanic by
two tenders built especially for Olympic and Titanic: the Nomadic who took all
first and second class passengers to the ship and the Traffic who ferried all
steerage passengers to their temporary homes. Here John Jacob Astor, one of
the richest men in America, stepped on board together with his newly wedded
wife Madeleine, and their dog - an Airedale Terrier named Kitty. They had been
on a honeymoon trip throughout Europe, which ended in Egypt, and now they were
going home. Other famous persons that embarked here was Margaret ‘Maggie’ Brown,
and Mr. and Mrs. Cardeza who occupied the starboard side parlour suite on B-deck,
with its own private promenade deck. The port side mirror suite was occupied
by Bruce Ismay. After Cherbourg, Titanic steamed towards Queenstown, Ireland
(today Cobh, Cork). There several emigrants waited for her, and a few second
class passengers, but no one for first class. Here one Reverend Brown disembarked,
taking with him many photographs he had taken on Titanic’s way from Southampton
to Queenstown. These photos are today valued very highly amongst many thankful
Titanic-buffs. Since no footage exists from after that (except for wreck photographs),
this is extremely interesting. Then, the Titanic left the Old World in favour
of the New.
During these days there was nothing special the passengers could do. The ship
offered numerous artefacts for spending time. But it was very odd for the emigrants,
who had worked every day since childhood, to only spend their time by eating,
sleeping and walking around. The weather was clear all the time, except for
a very brief time of fog. The temperature kept falling, and soon no one could
spend too much time up on deck. The Titanic's maiden voyage was nearing its
end as Sunday was about to turn into Monday. The night on the North Atlantic
between the 14th and 15th of April 1912 was a cold one. The fifth day of Titanic’s
maiden voyage was coming to its end, and so far the weather had been good, although
the temperature had dropped during the last hours. The water was just above
freezing, and the air was getting colder too. In the wireless room, senior wireless
operator John Phillips was busy sending private messages to Cape Race for relaying.
The wireless equipment had been used extensively throughout the voyage, and
a few ice warnings from other ships had been received and relayed. Although
such warnings from the Nordaam, Empress of Britain, La Tourine, Caronia and
Athinai had been posted for notice on the bridge, ice warnings from the Mesaba
and
Californian went by unnoticed by the officers. By 10 p.m., first Officer
William M. Murdoch relieved second Officer Charles H. Lightoller on the bridge.
Lightoller informed Murdoch of the conditions and gave him the orders of the
night; to maintain speed and course and keep a sharp lookout for ice.
The Titanic raced on with a speed of approximately 22 knots. By 11.30, the lookouts
Frederick Fleet and Reginald Lee were waiting to be relieved from their posts
at 12.00, after having finished their two-hour watch. The air had been clear
all night, but by now a slight haze had settled on the horizon. Both men were
well aware of how difficult it could be to spot icebergs, especially on a night
like this one. There was no moon, and therefore no reflections on the surface
of the berg. In addition to this, the sea was dead calm, and because of this
there was no breaking water at the base of icebergs. The time was now approaching
11.40, and suddenly in the calm night, a ghostly figure appeared from the haze.
Fleet would later describe it as ‘two tables put together’. He immediately recognised
it as a menacing iceberg. Fleet reacted instinctively and signalled ‘Object
right ahead’ by striking thrice on the ship’s bell. He then reached for the
electric telephone on his right side that connected the crow’s nest with the
bridge. There Sixth Officer James Moody picked up the phone and asked Fleet
what he had seen. The answer was short; ‘Iceberg dead ahead!’ Moody thanked
him and then relayed the message to first Officer Murdoch, who acted swiftly.
He rushed to the engine room telegraph and ordered the engines stopped and then
‘Full Astern’ so that the ship would slow down. He then turned to quartermaster
Robert Hitchens, who was at the helm, and ordered ‘hard-a-starboard ‘. In reality,
this meant that the ship would turn to port. This might seem a little queer,
however this type of command dated back to the days of sail, where putting the
helm to starboard made the ship turn to port.
Murdoch’s initial thought was to ‘port-round’ the berg and then turn to starboard
to avoid impact in the stern. As customary, Murdoch then turned to the panel
where the controls for the watertight doors were located. By simply pressing
and holding an electric button, Murdoch closed the watertight doors that separated
the sixteen compartments from each other. At the same time, a loud warning bell
rang in the boiler rooms, far below in the ship's hull. Quartermaster Hitchens
quickly put the helm to port when ordered, and the ship slowly began to turn.
Up in the crow’s nest, Fleet and Lee held their breath. The iceberg was coming
closer and closer. Its peak was about the same height as the boat deck, and
its surface was somewhat dark, not bright white. About half a minute later,
the collision came, on the starboard side. The berg scraped along 300 feet of
the ship’s hull, making rivets pop and buckling hull plates along the way. The
impact, however, was not very violent. The two lookouts hadn’t heard that much
noise, and as the berg disappeared in the night, Fleet turned to Lee and said:
‘That was a narrow shave!’ Captain Smith, who had been asleep in his cabin,
had felt the impact and soon appeared on the bridge, just as did fourth Officer
Joseph Boxhall. Smith asked Murdoch what the ship had hit. Murdoch explained
what had happened and how he had acted but that it had been too late. Captain
Smith ordered the watertight doors closed, but Murdoch had already done this.
The two men went out on the starboard bridge wing to try to get a sighting of
the iceberg, but it had already disappeared into the darkness. Back on the bridge,
Captain Smith ordered Boxhall to investigate the forward part of the ship and
then report back as quickly as possible with a damage report. Boxhall did so,
and a quarter of an hour later, he returned to the bridge. He told Captain Smith
that he had found no sign of any damage above F-deck, but that Postal Clerk
Smith had told him that the lower mail room was flooding, and that the mail
was being moved to a higher level.
Captain Smith thanked Boxhall, and asked him to calculate the ship’s current
position in case they would be forced to call for assistance. Boxhall hurried
to the chart room, and by the stars, the ship’s course and his own estimate
of the speed, he roughly calculated the position. It was scribbled down on a
piece of paper, and handed to the master. Thomas Andrews, the ship’s chief constructor
who was on board for the maiden voyage, had spent most part of the evening in
his cabin. He was called to the bridge, and he arrived there a few minutes later.
Smith asked him to accompany him on an investigation round below decks. They
left, and ten minutes later they returned. Andrews explained the size of the
damage. During the first ten minutes since the collision water had risen 14
feet above the keel in the foremost compartment. The iceberg had penetrated
five and a half of the watertight compartments, and the first five were now
flooding. The terrible truth now dawned on the men present on the bridge. The
Titanic’s unsinkability was based on that she could stay afloat with any of
her two compartments flooded. She would even stay afloat if her four foremost
compartments were breached, but with five compartments flooding simultaneously,
she could never be expected to stay afloat. The sheer weight of the water would
inevitably bring her down at the head. The water would then spill over the top
to the next compartment, filling it, and so on.
The Titanic was doomed. The bridge lay quiet for a brief moment. Then, Captain
Smith broke the silence with a simple question: ‘How much time have we got?’
Andrews made a quick calculation on a small piece of paper and then answered:
‘One hour. Possibly two.’ Smith then ordered the lifeboats to be uncovered.
The time was now a couple of minutes past midnight. Captain Smith went to the
wireless room and handed the ship’s position to Phillips, asking him to send
the distress signal CQD, along with Titanic’s call signal, MGY. Down in the
boiler rooms, there was much activity. Since the collision, water had been flooding
into the hull. The engines were stopped and the furnaces were now being raked
out, to avoid a possible explosion. In the foremost boiler rooms, firemen had
to abandon their posts immediately because of the fast flooding of these.
The passengers had experienced the collision in many different ways, according
to in which class they were travelling. Among the single male passengers in
third class, who were located down below in the ship’s bow, the impact had been
very violent and water was now entering their cabins. As a complete opposite,
people in first class didn’t notice the collision that much, if they even did
at all. In the smoking room several men were gathered, and most of these experienced
the impact as a grinding, less alarming sound. Some went out on the promenade
space on A-deck out of curiosity but there was nothing to see, the iceberg was
already gone. Lawrence Beesley, a teacher travelling in second class, had been
up reading when the collision occurred. He felt as if the engines were speeded
up and the vibration in his mattress increased. The thought of an accident didn’t
occur to him. But after a while he noticed that the engines were stopped, and
this made him curious. He went up on deck to ask what was the matter. But the
decks were quiet and deserted and he decided to go back to his cabin. On his
way down he noticed that the stairs was tilting. This was also noticed on the
bridge where the inclinometer showed a list of two degrees towards the bow and
five degrees to the starboard side.
Fourth Officer Boxhall had now noticed a ship that was visible on the horizon
on a distance of about five miles. He told Captain Smith about this, and was
given permission to start firing rockets. Boxhall ordered Quartermaster George
Rowe to fire a rocket every fifth minute, and so the first rocket was fired
at about 12.45 a.m. George Rowe was probably the last crewman onboard to be
notified of the accident. He was on watch on the docking bridge, situated on
the poop deck, at the time of the collision. As he suddenly saw a great mass
passing the ship on the starboard side, his first thought was that they had
encountered a large sailing vessel in mid-ocean. Then, as the first lifeboat
was lowered about an hour after the collision, Rowe was surprised. Why was one
of the ship’s lifeboats in the water? Using the electric telephone that connected
him to the bridge, he reported that one of the lifeboats was adrift. On the
bridge, it was suddenly realised that Rowe had been forgotten, and he was immediately
ordered to report to the bridge. There, he was informed of the situation. At
the same time, wireless operators John Phillips and Harold Bride were busy sending
distress calls into the night.
Several ships replied, but they were all too far away to be of any assistance.
The closest ship that had been heard from so far was the Cunarder Carpathia,
but she was still a considerable 58 miles off. The Carpathia was an older vessel
on her way from New York to the Mediterranean with a speed of 14 knots when
she intercepted the Titanic’s signals. The ship’s only wireless operator, Thomas
Cottam, was actually about to turn in for the night when he suddenly heard the
distress calls from the stricken Titanic. At first, he couldn’t believe what
he heard, but soon he realised what was happening. He wrote down the message
and the Titanic’s position, and then quickly made his way to the Carpathia’s
bridge. There he met First Officer Dean, and together they hurried to the master’s
cabin. In the rush, they entered without knocking on the door first, and Captain
Arthur Rostron was very upset about this insolence. However, when told of the
situation, he immediately realised that neglecting to knock before entering
his cabin was the least of his concerns at the moment. He quickly ordered the
ship turned around, to head north for the Titanic’s given position. Although
his ship was travelling in ice-infested waters, he ordered ‘Full Ahead’, knowing
that many lives could be at stake. Full ahead was an understatement. All the
exhaust steam was pressed into the old engines. The hot water was turned off,
and almost all the energy produced contributed to the ship’s propulsion.
That now-famous night, the Carpathia managed to keep an average speed of between
17 and 18 knots, a speed she wasn’t really designed - or thought - to attain.
Knowing what a great risk he was taking when driving his ship at such high speed
through icy waters, Rostron took every precaution that came to his mind, and
posted extra lookouts on the forecastle of the ship. When en route for the Titanic’s
position, Rostron asked Cottam to contact the stricken liner and inform them
that the Carpathia was on her way - she would be with them in about four hours.
On board the Titanic, passengers were now ordered to put their lifebelts on
and come up to the boat deck. Captain Smith knew that his vessel had lifeboats
for just about half of the people on board, and in the ice-cold water, he knew
that no one could survive for long. The master was also aware of the importance
of avoiding panic breaking out. Therefore, passengers were asked to come to
the boat deck, but they were not told of any danger. Soon passengers began crowding
the deck, mostly from first and second class. People in third class found their
way to third class promenade spaces at most, and these were located on the bow
and the stern.
Getting up to the boat deck proved to be a problem for many of these people,
on one hand because they simply never had been there and on the other because
many of them didn’t speak English. On the boat deck, the lifeboats were being
uncovered. A task that was harder than one might think, because exhaust steam
was being vented through the funnels, and the noise it created made communication
between the crewmembers almost impossible. After a while though, the exhaust
steam was gone, and the noised stopped. Now that the boats had been made ready,
the order was ‘Women and children first’. First Officer Murdoch was in charge
of the lowering of the boats on the starboard side, all with odd numbers, and
second Officer Lightoller handled the port side boats, those with even numbers.
No matter what side, people were still reluctant to enter the lifeboats. On
this great ship, it was hard to see that something was wrong, and few wanted
to swap this lighted, seemingly safe ship for a small wooden craft on the dark
and cold North Atlantic.
There was no organised handling of the lifeboats. Very few of the crewmembers
knew to which boat station they were posted, and the only boat drill that had
been carried out was in Southampton, before the passengers embarked. This drill
had been very simple; boats number 11 and 15 had been lowered and raised, simply
to see if the lowering equipment was in order. At 12.45 a.m., the first lifeboat
was lowered under the supervision of first Officer Murdoch and fifth Officer
Lowe. It was number 7, on the starboard side. With a total capacity of 65 people,
this boat contained only 28, all being first class passengers except for three
crewmen. At the same time, Fourth Officer Boxhall was desperately trying to
contact the ship he could see on the horizon with a Morse lamp. But the ship
did not reply, and Boxhall could see the ship slowly tuning away, and disappearing
out of sight. It was now 12.55 a.m. The bow of the Titanic was not notably deeper
in the water, and the first boat from the port side, number 6, was lowered.
Second Officer Lightoller, who was in charge of the lowering was very firm in
following the order ‘Women and children first’, and let very few men enter the
boats even if there were was room for them and no women could be seen close
by. But as boat number 6 was being lowered, the women on board it discovered
that there was only one man present in the boat. They called up to the boat
deck, and Lightoller allowed first class passenger Major Arthur Peuchen to lower
himself into the boat on one of the falls. Boat number 6 left the Titanic with
28 people. Almost at the same time, boat number 5 was lowered from the starboard
side. Capable of carrying 65 people, this boat held 43. Third Officer Pitman,
who was responsible for the loading of the boat, let several men into the boat,
as he could see no women on the decks.
Bruce Ismay, the chairman of the White Star Line, stood by one of the davits
and waved one of his arms ferociously whilst loudly telling the crewmen to lower
the boat. Fifth Officer Lowe, who probably didn’t recognise his employer, told
Ismay to shut up; he was disturbing the procedure. Ismay quietly walked away
from the scene. At 1 a.m. boat number 3 was lowered from the starboard side,
carrying 32 people. A few minutes later, boat number 8 went down the port side
with 39 onboard. Both boats had a capacity of 65. Isidor Straus, owner of the
Macys department store, and his wife Ida were offered room in boat number 8.
However, Mr. Straus refused to leave the ship before every woman was safe, and
Mrs. Straus refused to leave her husband. They stayed onboard, and eventually,
they perished together. By 1.10 a.m., it was time for boat number 1, situated
on the starboard side near the bridge, to be lowered. In the aftermath of the
tragedy, this boat was to become the most debated one. With a capacity of 40
people, this boat left the Titanic with only 12 in it, among these Millionaire
Sir Cosmo Duff Gordon, his wife, her maid and seven crewmen. On the boat deck,
the ship’s band with leader Wallace Hartley had gathered, and they were now
playing cheerful ragtime tunes to calm the passengers. The boats were one by
one still being lowered. At about 1.20 a.m., boats number 9, 10, 12 and 14 were
lowered. The tilt towards the bow was now more apparent, and people were now
beginning to realise that the Titanic would founder. Therefore, boats were now
being loaded with more people, but none of them was completely filled. Some
now began to jump into the water from the ship’s side in the hope of being rescued
by one of the boats already afloat. The officers had all been handed a pistol,
and Fifth Officer Lowe was now forced to fire warning shots down the ship’s
side as a group of panicking men tried to enter a life boat by force. Fortunately,
Lowe was able to keep the men at a distance. Millionaire and playboy Benjamin
Guggenheim went to change in to evening clothes. He is reported to have said;
‘We have dressed in our best, and are prepared to go down as gentlemen’.
In the wireless room, the two operators were still sending distress calls. Although
the situation was now very serious, none of the replying ships actually understood
that the Titanic was sinking. By 1.25 a.m. Titanic’s sister ship, the Olympic,
which was far off, answered one of the calls: ‘Are you turning and coming to
us, or should we come to you?’ To this, Phillips simply answered ‘We are putting
the women into the boats’. In the engine room, the engineers were working to
keep the steam up in boiler rooms number 2 and 3, to keep electricity running
for the lights and pumps. It was now 1.30 a.m., and the bow of the ship was
disappearing in the icy water. People were now panicking, and boat number 11
was now lowered, carrying five people more than it was designed for, a total
of 70. Close by, a near-accident took place. Boat 13, with 64 people onboard,
reached the water but its passengers were unable to detach the falls. The boat
drifted alongside, towards the stern of the Titanic and ended up just below
boat number 15, which was being lowered. In boat 13, in which Lawrence Beesley
was present, someone managed to produce a pocketknife and was able to cut the
falls so that the boat could clear the danger above. Quartermaster George Rowe
had now fired the last of the eight distress rockets carried. But in the wireless
room, signals were still being sent, although now more desperate ones. By now,
the new distress signal, SOS, was also used as well as the old one. The time
neared 1.40 a.m. and boat number 16 was lowered with about 45 people onboard.
Now there were only two regular lifeboats left, namely number 2 and 4. But in
addition to her sixteen life boats, Titanic also carried four so-called Engelhardt
collapsibles, numbered A, B, C and D. These were boats with wooden bottoms,
and canvas sides that were raised when the boats were to be used. Collapsible
C was now hanging in the davits originally occupied by boat number 1, on the
starboard side. Chief Officer Henry Wilde supervised the boat, and when his
calls for more women were unanswered, Bruce Ismay stepped into the boat. Although
he had helped in the loading of several boats throughout the night, he would
later be very criticised for entering a boat and thereby saving his own life
when so many others were lost. By 1.45 a.m. boat number 2 left Titanic with
about 20 people, among them Fourth Officer Joseph Boxhall. Ten minutes later,
boat number 4 was lowered, carrying numerous passengers from first class. Among
them was 19 year-old Madeleine Astor, the wife of real estate-tycoon John Jacob
Astor. As Mrs. Astor was pregnant, Mr. Astor asked Lightoller if he could accompany
her into the boat. Allowing no men into the boats, Lightoller told him no. Accepting
this, Mr. Astor stepped back and waved his young bride off in the two-thirds
full lifeboat.
Now, there were only three boats left, collapsibles A, B and D, together with
about 1,500 people. Collapsible D was now suspended in the davits earlier used
to lower boat number 2. To avoid a rush to the boat, Lightoller ordered some
crewmen to form a circle around it and to only let women and children through.
By 2.05 a.m., the boat was lowered carrying 44 people. The only boats now left
were collapsibles A and B, and they were still lying on the roof of the officer’s
quarters. The Titanic’s bow was now completely submerged. Captain Smith made
his way to the wireless room, and relieved the two operators from their duty.
Phillips continued to send signals for a little while, but the power was now
weak, and the range of the wireless apparatus was greatly decreased. Nothing
more could be done from here, and the two men left their post to try to save
themselves. What happened to Captain Smith will forever be a mystery.
On the roof of the officer’s quarters, just by the base of the foremost funnel,
Murdoch and Lightoller, together with several crewmen, were busy trying to get
the two remaining collapsibles readied for boarding. But at that moment, the
ship made a great dive, causing a massive wave to flow over the bridge. Lightoller
was unfortunate with boat B, which was turned over and washed away along with
a numer of people, among them Lightoller himself. Murdoch had been able to get
boat A free, but this boat was also washed off. Although partially flooded,
it managed to stay afloat, and a few people managed to climb onboard. Murdoch
was never seen again. Some testimonies claim that he shot himself, but it is
more probable that he drowned or froze to death in the cold water. The weight
of the water in the now flooded bow made the expansion joint between the first
and second funnel give way slightly. The wires that held the first funnel could
not bear this strain, and parted one by one. The tall funnel crashed forward
and crushed the bridge wing on the port side and many people who happened to
be in the surrounding waters. The wave made by this enormous construction falling
into the water managed to wash collapsible B away from the sinking liner. On
the boat deck, the band played on. The last tune that was played has been the
topic of much debate throughout the years. The classic myth is of course that
the hymn ‘Nearer My God To Thee’ was played, but others say differently. Junior
wireless operator Harold Bride testified that the band played a melody called
‘Songe d’Automne’, and others said that ragtime tunes were played until the
very end. None of the musicians survived, and they were eventually made the
immortal heroes of the disaster.
After the two and a half hours that had now passed since the fatal collision,
everything happened very quickly. With 1,500 people still onboard, the Titanic’s
stern rose higher and higher into the cold night air. At 2.17 a.m., the light
that had been burning flawlessly the whole night flickered once, and then went
out completely. It became pitch dark, and people in the lifeboats could only
make out a giant dark silhouette against the night sky. Then, a terrible noise
sounded, and many people now understood that the end was nigh. The hull of the
Titanic, broke in two between the third and the fourth funnel, and a large portion
in this area was literary devastated. It was here that the heavy machinery was
located, and this, combined with the weight of the stern that rose up in the
air, was more than the hull could take. The stern fell back into the water,
and some of the survivors later said that it looked like the ship was coming
back. But as the bow, still attached to the stern by the keel, started to sink
to the bottom, the stern was again pulled up in an almost perpendicular position
before it detached from the bow. The stern stood on end like this, and bobbed
like a cork for a minute or so but then, it too started its final descent. The
water rushing in quickly and violently forced the air out of the stern. It was
smashed from the inside. And then the Titanic slipped beneath the surface. It
was now 2.20 a.m., April 15th, and the only thing left of the once so proud
liner was 20 small lifeboats, and 1,500 people who were now freezing to death
in the ice-cold water.
All there was now, was silence. It was a very calm night on the North Atlantic.
The last sounds heard from the Titanic had been muffled explosions from the
depths, and soon another sound echoed through the night. This was the cries
of the people left in the water, and they were now freeing to death. This sound
would haunt many of the survivors throughout their whole lives. Scattered in
the surrounding waters lay the 20 lifeboats. Many of them were only half-filled,
but they all lay still in the water. Eventually the cries from the dying died
out, and now one lifeboat made it back to the scene. It was number 14, under
the command of Fifth Officer Lowe. Having moved women and children into other
boats, Lowe order the boat turned for the wreck site. Hundreds of bodies floated
in the waters, together with wreckage from the Titanic. Four people were pulled
out of the water, but one of them died later from exposure. Lowe also encountered
the half-flooded collapsible boat A, in which twelve men and a woman stood with
water up to their knees. They were transferred to collapsible D, and this was
taken in tow by boat 14. Collapsible A, still carrying three bodies was set
adrift, at it was later recovered by the White Star liner Oceanic about 30 miles
from the wreck site. The three bodies were then buried at sea. Now, the 700
occupants of the lifeboats could do nothing but wait. It was in the middle of
the night, and not many knew if help was on the way or not.
Meanwhile, the Carpathia swiftly made her way through the night. Preparations
to receive the survivors was made; coffee, tea and hot soup was prepared for
those who suffered from exposure, and every area of the ship was made ready
to accommodate the extra passengers. The davits were swung out to raise the
Titanic’s lifeboats. The passengers of the little Cunarder had been alarmed
when so much activity was going on in the middle of the night. Therefore, crewmen
were told to inform the passengers that the Carpathia was on her way to assist
a stricken vessel, there was no danger of the ship’s own safety. By 2.30 a.m.,
according to the clock on board the Carpathia, a small, green light was sighted
on the horizon. This was a signal flare from one of the lifeboats. Half an hour
later, Captain Rostron ordered rockets to be fired every fifteen minutes. By
3.35 a.m., the Carpathia was so close to the Titanic’s given position, that
the Titanic would have been visible, had she still been afloat. Here and there,
green lights were sighted, but these were so close to the water, that they could
only come from very small boats. There was no longer any hope of finding the
Titanic still afloat. By 4 a.m., the first lifeboat was sighted from the bridge
of the Carpathia. It was number 2, with 25 people onboard. Ten minutes later,
the first survivors were climbing ladders up the side of the Carpathia. The
boat contained only women, except for the man in charge, Fourth Officer Joseph
Boxhall. Captain Rostron sent for Boxhall, and still soaking wet, Boxhall reported
to the bridge. There he informed Captain Rostron that the Titanic had foundered
at 2.20 a.m.
Carpathia continued to search the waters, stopping by each lifeboat to recover
the survivors. Some of them, mostly women and children, were hoisted up the
sides in canvas bags by the ship’s crew. Most of the men had to climb the ladders
that had been suspended down the ship’s sides. When on board, people were brought
below decks where they were given food and blankets. The ship surgeon, Dr. McGee,
examined the most shocked survivors. The rescue went on into the dawn and the
morning. By 6.15 a.m., survivors from collapsible C were recovered. At 7 a.m.,
boat 14 with collapsible D in tow, was spotted. On the upturned collapsible
B, second Officer Lightoller stood, along with other men. Throughout the night,
they had been forced to stand up and lean to the right and left on Lightoller’s
command to keep the boat afloat. The boat was almost completely under water,
and Lightoller had to use his whistle to make the crew on the Carpathia even
notice them. Collapsible B was the last boat to reach the Carpathia, at about
8.30 a.m. Second Officer Lightoller was the last survivor to board the rescue
ship.
It was now understood how many lives that had been lost during the night. Out
of the Titanic’s 2,200 passengers and crew, only 705 had been rescued. In a
last attempt to find any more survivors, the Carpathia circled the waters. As
the ship passed over the Titanic’s given position, Captain Rostron held a memorial
service in the ship’s dining room. On the deck, the Titanic’s lifeboats were
salvaged. Thirteen were hauled aboard, and the remaining six; number 4, 14,
15, B, C and D were set adrift. As the last lifeboat was recovered, the ship
Californian appeared in the west. At 5.50 a.m. they had been told by other ships
what had happened during the night. The
Californian, which had been lying stopped due to ice
all night, had then headed towards the Titanic’s position. Now, Rostron informed
the
Californian’s master, Stanley Lord, what had happened. Then, the Carpathia
made a final turn over the wreck site. There was not much wreckage anymore,
just a few deck chairs, lifebelts and numerous everyday objects. As a lonesome
reminder of all those perished, a body was seen floating with its face down
in the water. The Carpathia’s search for survivors was called off, and she set
her course for New York.
As soon as the 705 survivors were brought ashore by Cunard’s Carpathia on April
18th, many of them were called to an American Senate Investigation. Bruce Ismay,
who fortunately had managed to escape from the Titanic, was not allowed to sail
back to Britain immediately with the Cedric, which had been his intention. In
spite of his weary condition, he was cross-examined for several days by a Mr.
William Alden Smith, who lengthened the disaster hearings by not knowing a thing
about ships or the life at sea. When the hearings were finally over, a new British
investigation started in London. Though being better than the American one,
many of the witnesses were tired and wanted to forget. When both hearings were
over it was concluded that the Board of Trade Regulations should be changed.
There should always be lifeboats for all aboard. No one was really blamed for
the disaster, so a sinner had to be found. He was Captain Stanley Lord of the
Californian, who had turned his radio equipment off during the night, because
his only wireless operator had to sleep. Since the
Californian was the vessel
that lay closest to the Titanic (about 20 miles), Lord was the perfect sinner.
Arthur Rostron, the captain of the Carpathia, the ship that had saved the 705
people in the boats, was 58 miles from the Titanic when he got the distress
call. The Olympic and several other ships were immediately fitted with enough
lifeboats and underwent major changes in the hull structure. Germany’s new Imperator
was launched only a month after the disaster, and you could see how fast her
more than 80 lifeboats were fitted. The Olympic went on sailing without her
sister for a couple of years, but eventually the Britannic (supposed to be called Gigantic,
but changed after the disaster) was launched.
Unfortunately, World War 1 broke out and the Britannic was turned into a hospital
ship and sunk by a mine in the Mediterranean in 1916. White Star’s three ship
service from Southampton to New York was not established until the early twenties
when the 56,000-tonner Majestic (the ex-Bismarck) replaced the Britannic and
the 35,000-tonner Homeric (the ex-Columbus) replaced the Titanic. By the early
forties all of these ships had gone to the scrapyard as a result of the Depression.
In the 1950s, a new interest in the old liners of the Olympic-class vessels
arose, when Walter Lord’s ‘A Night to Remember’ was published. A few years later
a movie, based on the book came out. Several societies were founded, among them
‘The Titanic Enthusiasts of America’, later renamed ‘Titanic Historical Society’.
In 1985 a Franco-American expedition under the command of Dr. Robert D. Ballard
located Titanic’s wreck in 12,000 feet of water, south-east of Newfoundland.
Her condition is in a sad state. She is, like so many survivors had said, broken
in two between the third and the fourth funnel. The funnels themselves are gone
and only fragments of them were found on the ocean floor. In spite of this,
lots of her upperworks are intact. This first expedition did not touch anything,
but later expeditions have brought numerous artefacts to the surface. In 1998,
a large piece of Titanic’s hull from C-deck was raised and preserved. The largest
thing made recently concerning the Titanic is James Cameron’s blockbuster film
‘Titanic’. Cameron was scrupulous about details; there is hardly anything you
can find that is incorrect in the film. Of course, the main characters in the
film; Jack Dawson (Leonardo DiCaprio) and Rose DeWitt Bukater (Kate Winslet)
are fictional. Thanks to this movie, the number of Titanic-buffs seems to increase
more and more as time goes by. In many ways, the Titanic has never been more
alive than she is now.
There was one fictional story written in 1898 - fourteen years before the Titanic disaster - by a merchant seaman by the name of Morgan Robertson. Robertson's book was about an unsinkable passenger liner that sank while carrying the elite people of the time. The ship in Robertson's story was called the Titan and the book was titled The Wreck of the Titan. Even though the book is fictitious, the events in the story parallel the events of the Titanic. Both ships were built to be unsinkable. Both ships sank after striking an iceberg. Both ships were on their maiden voyage. The most well to do famous people were on the Titan and Titanic. Only one third of the passengers on each ship survived. Both ships had an inadequate number of lifeboats. Both ships were encouraged to break speed records during their voyage. Robertson's book
The Wreck of the Titan was never published. Each time it was rejected by editors, they told him the same thing. The story was unbelievable. Surely the events he wrote of could not possibly happen to an unsinkable ship.