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The Sinking of the RMS Titanic and other ships.

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  • Originally posted by GUT View Post
    It’s 31st here, the day she was launched
    Ah, you are always one step/day ahead of me GUT!

    Curious about how close the dates of her launch and demise were so close.

    "Empress of Ireland" is recalled as the worst peacetime marine disaster in Canadian history. That's because in 1914 (and 1912) Titanic sank off the coast (the Grand Banks) of Newfoundland - but Newfoundland/Labrador did not become part of Canada proper until 1949 - they were an independent colony when the Empress and the Titanic sank.


    The Empress was a Canadian Pacific Steamship, as was the Montrose. That steamship line was under the parent company of the Canadian Pacific Railroad Company. In 1912, the President of the Canadian Pacific Railroad Company was Charles Hays. He drowned in the Titanic disaster.


    Jeff

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    • Originally posted by Mayerling View Post
      Ah, you are always one step/day ahead of me GUT!

      Curious about how close the dates of her launch and demise were so close.

      "Empress of Ireland" is recalled as the worst peacetime marine disaster in Canadian history. That's because in 1914 (and 1912) Titanic sank off the coast (the Grand Banks) of Newfoundland - but Newfoundland/Labrador did not become part of Canada proper until 1949 - they were an independent colony when the Empress and the Titanic sank.


      The Empress was a Canadian Pacific Steamship, as was the Montrose. That steamship line was under the parent company of the Canadian Pacific Railroad Company. In 1912, the President of the Canadian Pacific Railroad Company was Charles Hays. He drowned in the Titanic disaster.


      Jeff
      I wasn’t aware that Newfoundland (one of my favourite dogs, by the way) wasn’t part of Canada at the time.
      G U T

      There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by GUT View Post
        I wasn’t aware that Newfoundland (one of my favourite dogs, by the way) wasn’t part of Canada at the time.
        Yeah, Newfoundland dogs are one of the friendliest breeds.

        Jeff

        Comment


        • Tryon and the Victoria-Camperdown Collision.

          Today marks the one hundred and twenty fifth anniversary of the sinking of HMS Victoria, the flagship of Britain's Mediterranean Fleet under command of Vice Admiral Sir George Tryon and Captain Maurice Bourke. The Fleet was on maneuvers off Tripoli, Lebanon, when Tryon (a believer in testing his officer's abilities to think on their feet) gave a set of orders that are still debated to this day. He had the fleet divided into two columns, with Victoria leading one and HMS Camperdown (the fleet's second ship, under command of the second-in command of the fleet, Rear Admiral Albert Hastings Markham, at the head of the other column. The two columns were only eight cables between them, when Tryon ordered the columns to turn towards each other and head together at only six cables between them. The problem was (and remains) that a turning cable distance that was safe for the ships required them to be at least ten cables apart, not eight. Several officers tried to see if Tryon had made an error, but he insisted he was right. The result was that Victoria was holed in her midship by Camperdown, and sank in less than half an hour with the loss of 358 men including Tryon. Before she went down, Tryon was heard to say "It's all my fault." The Court-martial Board reluctantly agreed. However even his claim is subject to disagreement to this day. Best account on this tragedy is Richard Hough's "Admirals in Collision" (1958), and Rupert Gould's essay on the incident in his book "Enigmas".

          Jeff
          Last edited by Mayerling; 06-23-2018, 09:45 AM.

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          • The Titanic Wreck Is a Landmark Almost No One Can See
            Visiting the remains of the doomed ship causes it damage—but so will just leaving it there.
            BY NATASHA FROST AUGUST 01, 2018
            The wreck of the RMS <em>Titanic</em>, photographed in 1996.
            The wreck of the RMS Titanic, photographed in 1996. XAVIER DESMIER/GAMMA-RAPHO/ GETTY IMAGES
            The bride wore a flame-retardant suit—and so did the groom. In July 2001, an American couple got married in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, thousands of feet below the surface. In the background was an international landmark every bit as familiar as the Eiffel Tower, the Taj Mahal or any other postcard-perfect wedding photo destination. David Leibowitz and Kimberley Miller wed on the bow of the Titanic shipwreck, in a submarine so small they had to crouch as they said their vows. Above the water, Captain Ron Warwick officiated via hydrophone from the operations room of a Russian research ship.

            The couple had agreed to the undersea nuptials only if they could avoid a media circus, but quickly became the faces of a troubling trend: The wreck of the Titanic as landmark tourist attraction, available to gawk at to anyone with $36,000 singeing a hole in their pocket. (Leibowitz won a competition run by diving company Subsea Explorer, who then offered to finance the costs of their wedding and honeymoon.)

            As opprobrium mounted, particularly from those whose relatives had died aboard the ship, a Subsea representative told the press: “What’s got to be remembered is that every time a couple gets married in church they have to walk through a graveyard to get to the altar.” Was the Titanic no more than an ordinary cemetery? The event focused attention on a predicament with no single answer: Who did the wreck belong to, what was the “right” thing to do to it, and what was the point of a landmark that almost no one could visit?

            A crowd gathering outside of the White Star Line offices for news of the shipwreck.
            A crowd gathering outside of the White Star Line offices for news of the shipwreck. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS/LC-DIG-GGBAIN-10355
            People had been wrestling with earlier forms of these questions for decades, long before the nonprofit Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution discovered the Titanic wreck in 1985. The most prominent of these earlier dreamers was Briton Douglas Woolley, who began to appear in the national press in the 1960s with increasingly harebrained schemes to find, and then resurface, the ship. One such scheme involved him going down in a deep-sea submersible, finding the ship, and then lifting it with a shoal of thousands of nylon balloons attached to its hull. The balloons would be filled with air, and then rise to the surface, dragging the craft up with them. As Walter Lord, author of Titanic history bestseller The Night Lives On, ponders, “How the balloons would be inflated 13,000 feet down wasn’t clear.”


            Next, Woolley coaxed Hungarian inventors aboard his project. The newly incorporated Titanic Salvage Company would use seawater electrolysis to generate 85,000 cubic yards of hydrogen. They’d fill plastic bags with it, they announced—and presto! But this too was a wash. They had budgeted a week to generate the gas; a scholarly paper by an American chemistry professor suggested it might take closer to 10 years. The company foundered and the Hungarians returned home. (In 1980, Woolley allegedly acquired the title to the Titanic from the ship and insurance companies—his more recent attempts to assert ownership have proven unsuccessful.)

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            Woolley might not have raised the Titanic from the depths, but he had succeeded in winching up interest in the vessel, and whether it might ever see the light of day again. In the following decade, some eight different groups announced plans to find and explore the ship. Most were literally impossible; some were practically unfeasible. One 1979 solution involving benthos glass floats was nixed when it became clear that it would cost $238,214,265, the present day equivalent of the GDP of a small Caribbean nation.

            Anchor chains, winches and capstans on the bow of the <em>Titanic</em>, photographed in 1985, as part of Robert Ballard's expedition.
            Anchor chains, winches and capstans on the bow of the Titanic, photographed in 1985, as part of Robert Ballard’s expedition. KEYSTONE PICTURES USA/ALAMY
            In the early 1980s, various campaigns set out to find the ship and its supposedly diamond-filled safes. But as they came back empty-handed, newspapers grew weary of these fruitless efforts. When the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution set sail in 1985 with the same objective, it generated barely a media ripple. Their subsequent triumph in early September made front page news: the New York Times proclaimed tentatively: “Wreckage of Titanic Reported Discovered 12,000 Feet Down.”

            Within days of its discovery, the legal rights to the ship began to be disputed. Entrepreneurs read the headlines and saw dollar signs, and new plans to turn the Titanic into an attraction began to bubble up to the surface. Tony Wakefield, a salvage engineer from Stamford, Connecticut, proposed pumping Vaseline into polyester bags placed in the ship’s hull. The Vaseline would harden underwater, he said, and then become buoyant, lifting the Titanic up to the surface. This was scarcely the least fantastical of the solutions—others included injecting thousands of ping pong balls into the hull, or using levers and pulleys to crank the 52,000-ton ship out of the water. “Yet another would encase the liner in ice,” Lord writes. “Then, like an ordinary cube in a drink, the ice would rise to the surface, bringing the Titanic with it.”

            The cover of the <em>New York Herald</em> and the <em>New York Times</em>, the day of and the day after the sinking, respectively.
            The cover of the New York Herald and the New York Times, the day of and the day after the sinking, respectively. PUBLIC DOMAIN
            Robert Ballard, the young marine geologist who had led the successful expedition, spoke out against these plans. The wreck should not be commercially exploited, he said, but instead declared an international memorial—not least because any clumsy attempt to obtain debris from the site might damage the ship irreparably, making further archeological study impossible. “To deter would-be salvagers,” the Times reported, “he has refused to divulge the ship’s exact whereabouts.”

            Somehow, the coordinates got out. Ballard’s wishes were ignored altogether: in the years that followed, team after team visited the wreck, salvaging thousands of objects and leaving a trail of destruction in their wake. Panicked by the potential for devastation, Ballard urged then-chairman of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, Congressman Walter B. Jones, Sr., to introduce the RMS Titanic Maritime Memorial Act in the United States House of Representatives. The Act would limit how many people could explore and salvage the wreck, which would remain preserved in the icy depths of the Atlantic.

            <em>Titanic</em> victims in sacks piled three high on the deck of the CS Mackay-Bennett, before being tipped overboard as the ship's priest conducts a service.
            Titanic victims in sacks piled three high on the deck of the CS Mackay-Bennett, before being tipped overboard as the ship’s priest conducts a service. HENRY ALDRIDGE AND SON/PRESS ASSOCIATION IMAGES
            Despite being signed into law by President Ronald Reagan in October 1986,* the Act proved utterly toothless. The Titanic site is outside of American waters, giving the U.S. government little jurisdiction over its rusty grave. In 1998, the Act was abandoned altogether.

            In the meantime, visits to the site had continued. In 1987, Connecticut-based Titanic Ventures Inc. coupled with the French oceanographic agency IFREMER to survey and salvage the site. Among their desired booty was the bell from the crow’s nest, which had sounded out doom to so many hundreds of passengers. When pulled from the wreck, the crow’s nest collapsed altogether, causing immense damage to the site. People began to question whether it was right for people to be there at all, let alone looting what was effectively a mass grave. Survivor Eva Hart, whose father perished on the ship, decried Titanic visitors as “fortune hunters, vultures, pirates!”—yet the trips continued. A few years later, director James Cameron’s team, who were scoping out the wreck for his 1997 blockbuster, caused further accidental damage.

            A view of the bathtub in Capt. Smith's bathroom, photographed in 2003. Rusticles are growing over most of the fixtures in the room.
            A view of the bathtub in Capt. Smith’s bathroom, photographed in 2003. Rusticles are growing over most of the fixtures in the room. PUBLIC DOMAIN/LORI JOHNSTON, RMS TITANIC EXPEDITION 2003, NOAA-OE
            Gradually, researchers realized that nature, too, had refused to cooperate with the statute introduced above the surface. “The deep ocean has been steadily dismantling the once-great cruise liner,” Popular Science reported in July 2004. One forensic archaeologist described the decay as unstoppable: “The Titanic is becoming something that belongs to biology.” The hulking wreck had become a magnet for sea life, with iron-eating bacteria burrowing into its cracks and turning some 400 pounds of iron a day into fine, eggshell-delicate “rusticles”, which hung pendulously from the steel sections of the wreck and dissolved into particles at the slightest touch. Molluscs and other underwater critters chomped away at the ship, while eddies and other underwater flows have broken bits off the wreck, dispersing them back into the ocean.

            A century after the Titanic sunk in 1912, over 140 people had visited the landmark many believe should have been left completely alone. Some have had government or nonprofit backing; others have simply been wealthy tourists of the sort who accompanied Leibowitz and Miller to their underwater wedding. With its centenary, the ship finally became eligible for UNESCO protection, under the 2001 UNESCO Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage. Then-Director General Irina Bokova announced the protection of the site, limiting the destruction, pillage, sale and dispersion of objects found among its vestiges. Human remains would be treated with new dignity, the organization announced, while exploration attempts subject to ethical and scientific scrutiny. “We do not tolerate the plundering of cultural sites on land, and the same should be true for our sunken heritage,” Bokova said, calling on divers not to dump equipment or commemorative plaques on the Titanic site.

            Second-class luggage label recovered from the wreck of the <em>Titanic</em>.
            Second-class luggage label recovered from the wreck of the Titanic. VERONIKA PFEIFFER/ALAMY
            The legal protections now in place on the Titanic wreck may have been hard won, but they’re bittersweet in their ineffectiveness. The Titanic has been protected from excavation, but it’s defenseless against biology. Scientists now believe that within just a few decades, the ship will be all but gone, begging the question of precisely what the purpose of these statutes is.

            In its present location, protections or no, Titanic’s destruction seems assured. It’s likely, but not certain, that moving the ship would damage it, yet keeping it in place makes its erosion a certainty. A few days after the wreck was found in 1985, competing explorer and Texan oilman Jack Grimm announced his own plans to salvage the ship, rather than let it be absorbed by the ocean floor. “What possible harm can that do to this mass of twisted steel?” he wondered. Grimm, and many others, may have been prevented from salvaging the site for its own protection—but simply leaving it alone has doomed it to disappear.

            *Correction: We originally said that Reagan signed the Act into law in 1996. That’s clearly not possible.
            »
            © 2018 Atlas Obscura. All rights reserved.
            Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
            ---------------
            Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
            ---------------

            Comment


            • I was looking for the best single volume on the Titanic that I could find among the numerous books written on the subject. Something that covered all bases but one that didn’t presume a lifetime’s study of all things nautical. Sometimes when you’re looking for this ‘greatest hits’ type of book on a subject you either get lucky with your choice or you don’t. I certainly did with this one.

              The book is ‘On A Sea Of Glass: The Life & Loss Of The RMS Titanic’ by Tad Fitch, J. Kent Layton and Bill Wormstedt. What a book. It goes from conception to aftermath and misses nothing in between. It’s double columned with brilliant photographs all the way through then a mid-section colour section. I like the way it discusses the disputed and controversial aspects of the case with admirable balance giving the authors verdict on each even when it’s a verdict of “we just don’t know.” Books like this can sometimes be heavy going for the non-specialist but this certainly isn’t. It’s as readable as a good novel but as informative as a quality encyclopaedia full of fascinating facts.

              If you need advice on buying a book on the Titanic then of course you’re better off getting advice from a Titanic expert (which certainly isn’t me.) But in the absence of one I’ll offer my own. I recommend this book 100% Its superb. If you want to buy a book on the Titanic this is it

              Comment


              • Great recommendation. 'On a Sea of Glass' is widely considered the best book on the subject.
                I'll throw out there 'Down with the Old Canoe: A Cultural History of the Titanic Disaster' by Steven Biel. Its a examination of a vast array of cultural responses to the sinking, from the days immediately after the event up to the mid-nineteen nineties. I happen to love books like these...which is why Odell's 'Ripperology: A Study of the World's First Serial Killer and a Literary Phenomenon' is probably my favorite Ripper book.
                Unfortunately, 'Down with the Old Canoe' was published the year before Cameron's movie was released, so an updated edition would be great.
                Still, its an excellent book that I'm sure you'd enjoy.

                JM

                Comment


                • Strangely enough, I was having this exact quandary not long ago. There's so many books, I didn't buy anything in the end. Thanks guys!
                  Thems the Vagaries.....

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by jmenges View Post
                    Great recommendation. 'On a Sea of Glass' is widely considered the best book on the subject.
                    I'll throw out there 'Down with the Old Canoe: A Cultural History of the Titanic Disaster' by Steven Biel. Its a examination of a vast array of cultural responses to the sinking, from the days immediately after the event up to the mid-nineteen nineties. I happen to love books like these...which is why Odell's 'Ripperology: A Study of the World's First Serial Killer and a Literary Phenomenon' is probably my favorite Ripper book.
                    Unfortunately, 'Down with the Old Canoe' was published the year before Cameron's movie was released, so an updated edition would be great.
                    Still, its an excellent book that I'm sure you'd enjoy.

                    JM
                    Thanks Jon

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes View Post
                      Strangely enough, I was having this exact quandary not long ago. There's so many books, I didn't buy anything in the end. Thanks guys!
                      Ive just checked on 123 Al. On A Sea Of Glass is available for £12.56 but Jon’s choice, ‘Down With The Old Canoe’ is going for £2.79!

                      I paid around £13.50 for mine (well, I would have done if I hadn’t got an Amazon voucher)

                      Comment


                      • "A Night to Remember" by Walter Lord is still a great book, which sparked interest again in the great disaster, over 40 years after it had been largely forgotten. All other books really flow from this one.

                        Probably the last to interview adult survivors and crew (even though at least one was a con, who probably never was on the ship !)

                        An unputdownable read, like you were actually there in real time on that sloping deck...


                        Another great book is "Forgotten Empress", about the 1914 Empress of Ireland disaster, which in some ways was worse than the Titanic.
                        Last edited by RodCrosby; 01-11-2021, 07:08 PM.

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