Encyclopedia Titanica

Quigg Edmond Baxter

First Class Passenger

Quigg Edmond Baxter
Quigg Edmond Baxter

Mr Quigg Edmond Baxter, 24, was born in Montreal on 13 July 1887, the son of banker James Baxter and his wife, Hélène de Lanaudière Chaput.

Quigg was educated by Jesuits at Loyola College,a private boys school in Montreal. He joined the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association when he was 17 and quickly earned a reputation as a star football and hockey player. He played hockey with the Montreal Shamrocks until he took a low blow to his eye from a stick during a game in 1907, and lost the sight of it. Although he was no longer able to play hockey, he coached, and is credited with organizing one of the first international hockey tournaments ever played in Paris.

Quigg Baxter
Quigg Edmond Baxter
(Courtesy: Alan Hustak, Canada)

In 1911 he dropped out of his first year in Applied Sciences at McGill University to accompany his mother and sister (Hélène Douglas) to Europe. While in Brussels, he met and fell in love with a 24-year old cabaret singer, Berthe Mayné. He was determined to bring Mayné back to Montreal with him, and booked her into a stateroom of her own on Titanic C-90 under an assumed name, Mme. DeVilliers.Berthe Mayne / Mme de Villiers

Baxter himself occupied boarded the Titanic at Cherbourg with Ticket No. PC 17558.

On the night of the sinking, he was in his cabin (B-60) when his mother demanded to know why the Titanic had stopped in mid ocean. When he stepped outside just before midnight to investigate, he saw Captain Smith talking to Bruce Ismay outside Ismay's cabin next door. "There's been an accident, Baxter, but it is all right," Smith told him. As Smith hurried away to the bridge, Ismay told him to get his mother and sister into the lifeboats. Baxter carried his mother up the grand staircase to lifeboat 6. "Quigg didn't seem at all disturbed," his sister later told The Montreal Standard, "While he didn't relish being parted from us, he bade me farewell bravely." As he put his mother into the boat he handed her a sterling silver flask of brandy, and she began to complain about his drinking. He cut her short: "Etes vous bien maman?" he asked, Au revoir, bon espoir vous-autres." (Goodbye and keep your spirits up everyone.) Berthe Mayné didn't want to get into the boat without him, but Molly Brown convinced her to do so. He waved them away, and drowned in the sinking, his body, if recovered, was never identified.

Memorial

Quigg Baxter is remembered on his mother's grave at Notre Dame de Neiges Cemetery, Montreal.

References and Sources

John Baxter, Canada (Quigg Baxter's nephew)
Contract Ticket List, White Star Line 1912 (National Archives, New York; NRAN-21-SDNYCIVCAS-55[279])

Newspaper Articles

Toronto Daily Star (17 April 1912) Portrait Of Quigg Baxter
Edmonton Daily Bulletin (30 April 1912) Two Canadian Survivors And A Victim Of The Titanic
Quigg Baxter, Mrs Baxter and Mrs Douglas

Images

Documents and Certificates

Contract Ticket List, White Star Line 1912, National Archives, New York; NRAN-21-SDNYCIVCAS-55[279]).

Bibliography

Alan Hustak (1999) Titanic: The Canadian Story, Véhicule Press. ISBN 1 55065 113 7

Titanic Passenger Summary

Name: Mr Quigg Edmond Baxter
Age: 24 years 9 months and 2 days (Male)
Nationality: Canadian
Marital Status: Single
Last Residence: in Montréal, Québéc, Canada
Embarked: Cherbourg on Wednesday 10th April 1912
Ticket No. 17558, £247 10s 5d
Cabin No. B58/60
Died in the Titanic disaster (15th April 1912)
Body Not Identified

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