Titanic opens tonight
Thursday 17th July 2008 10:14 PM
Wilmington News Journal
Wilmington College-Community Theatre’s presentation of “Titanic, the Musical” begins its six-show run tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Hugh G. Heiland Theatre.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
Titanic lunch for commemoration plan
Tuesday 15th July 2008 10:13 PM
Liverpool Daily Post
LIVERPOOL Lord Mayor Steve Rotheram yesterday hosted a lunch identical to the last meal eaten by passengers onboard the Titanic.
It was part of the first gathering of the “Titanic Cities” event, aimed at bringing together representatives from places with a connection with the ill-fated vessel. The ship was registered in Liverpool and had the city’s name on her stern, although she was built in Southampton.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
Titanic author visits Branson
Monday 14th July 2008 4:50 PM
Branson Courier
History happens a moment at a time and is perhaps remembered most accurately that way. In terms of what happened to the Titanic at 2:20 a.m. on April 15, 1912, the memory of a mother, shared eight years later with the nine week old baby she carried into the lifeboat that fateful night just before the mighty behemoth slipped to her watery grave, might not add much to determining the cause of the tragic event.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
Titanic luncheon
Friday 11th July 2008 10:02 PM
Liverpool City Council
THE final meal on the Titanic is to be recreated at a special event hosted by the Lord Mayor of Liverpool on Monday (14 July).
Representatives from cities connected with the Titanic's tragic maiden voyage are gathering to discuss how one of the worst maritime disasters ever should be commemorated in the run up to the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the ship in 2012.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
Sale of rare account of Titanic sinking
Tuesday 8th July 2008 9:40 PM
Liverpool Daily Post
A RARE account of the night the Titanic sank is being sold alongside the hero's medal given to the seaman who wrote it.
The Carpathia bronze medal presented to Liverpool able-seaman George Gardner is being auctioned today with his handwritten account of that fateful night in 1912.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
RMS Titanic Teams Up With Major Financial Company for New Titanic Tour
Tuesday 8th July 2008 9:38 PM
Primenewswire
RMS Titanic, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Premier Exhibitions, Inc. (Nasdaq:PRXI), has entered into an agreement to present a new Titanic exhibition and tour sponsored by a major financial services provider.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
Vested in the Titanic
Monday 7th July 2008 10:46 PM
Roanoke Times
After Christie's got $119,000 for a Titanic life jacket at an auction in London last year, Gregg Dietrich was not surprised that his phone kept ringing with offers of other items from the ill-fated ship.
"When we sell one ... more seem to come out of the woodwork," said Dietrich, who heads the maritime (or "ocean liner") division of the auction house here. "We're been inundated with Titanic offers."
The problem was, many of the calls came from people like the man who was certain he had all sorts of valuable Titanic keepsakes: a first-class passenger list, a menu from its Cafe Parisienne, even a passenger ticket that would have been the first ever auctioned.
Except it wasn't.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
NEW EXCLUSIVE NOMADIC BOOK NOMADIC TO RETURN HER ORIGINAL DOCK
Monday 7th July 2008 10:44 PM
The Triton
The NOMADIC PRESERVATION SOCIETY is proud to announce the publication of the first ever English language book dedicated entirely to SS Nomadic ‘The Belfast Child – SS Nomadic’. Written by Committee Member Mervyn Pritchard during his term as the ship’s Maintenance Officer.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
Norfolk couple's love for Titanic
Friday 4th July 2008 10:49 PM
Norwich Evening News
It is a tragedy that has captured imaginations for almost a hundred years, and for one Norfolk couple the sinking of the Titanic has become a fascination.
Robin and Sue Burrows, from Little Plumstead, are avid collectors of memorabilia and items connected to the vessel which at 882ft long and more than 46tonnes was the world's largest passenger steamship.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
Titanic life jacket sells in New York for $68,500
Friday 27th June 2008 3:33 PM
Canada.com
An unused life jacket from the doomed Titanic ship sold for $68,500 in New York on Wednesday, Christie's auction house said.
The cork-filled life preserver - still largely intact, but stained and torn in parts - was thought to have been found by farmer John James Dunbar on the Halifax shoreline after the passenger ship sank off Newfoundland in April, 1912.
Submitted by Jason D. Tiller
The Titanic was a British registered four funnelled ocean liner built for the transatlantic passenger and mail service between Southampton and New York.
Constructed at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, Northern Ireland she was, at the time of her maiden voyage, the largest vessel afloat.
On April 10th 1912 the Titanic set sail from Southampton with 2,200 passengers and crew, four days later the Titanic collided with an iceberg and sank. 1500 people died and 700 survived. This website attempts to tell their story and that of the great ship with which their fate would be inextricably linked.
It is since Titanic was lost.
According to legend the Titanic was conceived at a meeting between Lord Pirrie of Harland & Wolff and Bruce Ismay, Chairman of the White Star Line.
The vessels would forsake speed for increased safety and comfort. While millionaire passengers would grab headlines, vastly increased steerage capacity and accommodation for the growing middle class would drive economic success.
After a construction period of nearly three years the Titanic, commanded by veteran Captain Edward John Smith, departed in Southampton on 10th April 1912 never to return.
In a growing archive of articles this site covers the story of the Titanic from her construction, maiden voyage, disaster and aftermath to the discovery of her wreck in 1985.
The Titanic designed and constructed at the Harland & Wolff shipyard in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
She was 882 feet 9 inches in length and 92 feet in breadth. Her gross tonnage was 46,328 tons. Three propellers were driven by two four-cylinder, triple-expansion, inverted reciprocating steam engines and one low-pressure Parsons turbine. Steam was provided by 25 double-ended and 4 single-ended Scotch-type boilers fired by 159 coal burning furnaces that gave her a theoretical top speed of 23 knots.
The Titanic forms part of our cultural landscape. In Hollywood movies, books, art and music her tragedy is replayed. Titanic has even entered the language: the phrase re-arranging deckchairs on the Titanic exemplifies a futile exercise.
In this site you can learn about how the Titanic has been reflected in contemporary culture; Titanic on film and record, in photographic image and in art. You can also learn about the true stories that inspired the movie makers including The Real Jack Dawson, and you can see the rarest of all film, the Titanic herself.
Other Destinations
Sheet Music | Recorded Music | CGI | Animation
Have you every wanted to know more about the Titanic, a passenger or crew member. So have we! Research can be as simple as picking up a book or going to your library and searching through the local newspapers from 1912. So why not give it a try and post your findings on Encyclopedia Titanica.
Getting Started
Adding to Encyclopedia Titanica
Demystifying Historical Research
Be Inspired
Titanic Research Articles
Get Support
Research Discussions
Encyclopedia Titanica is a thriving community as well as a resource. On our message board you'll meet thousands of people with similar interests.
The members will be happy to answer your queries about the Titanic and help you with researching her history and the stories of the people who sailed on her.
Browse the latest discussions - no membership required
Register - if you want to post.
The People
324 1st class passengers, 201 survived.
277 2nd class passengers, 118 survived.
708 3rd class passengers, 181 survived.
885 crew members, 212 survived.
13 postmen/musicians, none survived.
Grand total: 2,207 on board, 712 survived.
The Ship
Length: 882 feet 9 inches
Beam: 92 feet
Gross tonnage: 46,328 tons
Propulsion: Three propellers
Engines: Two triple-expansion reciprocating steam engines
One low-pressure Parsons turbine
25 double-ended and 4 single-ended Scotch-type boilers
159 coal burning furnaces
Top speed : 23 knots.
Titanic Passenger Research
Cabin Numbers
Collision and Sinking Theories
Titanic Crew Research
Discovery, Salvage and Exploration
The Gilded Age
Life on Board
Lost and Saved
Titanic Mystery Ship
Titanic Construction and Design
Titanic Art, Photography and Music
Titanic Books
Titanic Movies
Titanic on TV
Other Ships and Shipwrecks
more topics...
Have you got a family story to tell about the Titanic? Perhaps you'd like to share some information about a Titanic connection that is local to you. It's easy to add to Encyclopedia Titanica.