| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | THE TRURO CHURCHES The Rev. W. F. Fenwick (vicar) referred to the disaster at St. John’s on Sunday morning and at the evening service the Rev. G. Rhys said that from that small parish two persons (Messrs. West and Fillbrook) had gone down with the doomed vessel: he tru... |
25th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | BODMIN PRIESTS BEREAVED At Mass at St. Piran’s Roman Catholic Church, Truro on Sunday morning, prayers were offered for those who went down in the Titanic, and special mention was made of Mr. Hugh McElroy, the chief purser, brother of the present Prior of Bodmin (Fr. Richar... |
20th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | BODMIN PRIESTS BEREAVED At Mass at St. Piran’s Roman Catholic Church, Truro on Sunday morning, prayers were offered for those who went down in the Titanic, and special mention was made of Mr. Hugh McElroy, the chief purser, brother of the present Prior of Bodmin, and Mr. Re... |
20th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | CAMBORNE AND REDRUTH PASSENGERS There were no passengers on Titanic from Camborne, and only one from Redruth. Mr Frank Andrew (30 years), of Pencoys, who is missing. He leaves a wife (Rhoda) and one child (Lucy) at Pencoys. ... |
18th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | UNKNOWN TITLE The party of seven adults and four young children from Penzance were all bound to Akron. Mr. George Hocking, his mother (Mrs. Guy), who is a widow, and his sister, Miss Hocking, were of St Mary-street, and with them were Mrs. Emily Ri... |
18th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | UNKNOWN TITLE Other Cornish passengers were Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Chapman, who were going to Chicago. Mr. Chapman, a son of Mr. Chapman, Carpuan Farm, St. Neot, returned home about six months ago from the United States, where he had been engaged in mining. While at h... |
18th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | UNTITLED Mr Frank Andrew, a married miner, 25 years of age, of Pencoys, Four Lanes, near Redruth, was on his first trip across the Atlantic. He has a wife and one child, aged 2 years at Pencoys. Mr Andrews was originally from Lanner. (sic)... |
18th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | UNTITLED Mr. W. A. Lobb, a miner, and his wife of Bugle, who have no children, were returning to New York after a visit.... |
18th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | UNTITLED Mr. and Mrs. Alexandra (sic) Robins, who have been staying with friends at Mount Charles, returned from America a few months ago with the intention of settling down in their native town, but subsequently decided to return to America. They have no fam... |
18th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | UNTITLED Mr. W. H. Nancarrow, an engine driver, who had previously been abroad, was returning to some friends. His wife and nine young children reside at Mount Charles, St Austell.... |
18th April 1912 | |||
| West Briton and Cornwall Advertiser | MR. AND MRS. CHAPMAN Mr. and Mrs. Chapman, Liskeard, were also among the lost. Mrs. Chapman declining to go without her husband. Mrs. Hocking tells of how Mrs. Chapman was behind her when they were getting into the lifeboat. But when Sarah found that her husband J... |
April 1912 | |||