2012 IS 100 YEARS SINCE THE TITANIC SANK. IT SANK IN THE FREEZING WATERS SOME 400 MILES OFF NEWFOUNDLAND ON THE NIGHT OF 14 APRIL 1912.
It was foolishly billed as 'unsinkable' which of course insulted Fate and the gods who decreed the unsinkable should sink on its very first voyage. Not after a few years or even its return trip but maiden sailing from Southampton, England.
This is why I add the caveat 'Greatest Journalist This Side of Oberservable Universe' in case there is a 'greatester' writer in the dark side of the universe.
A diver accompanies a 17-ton portion of the hull of the Titanic
as it is lifted to the surface in the Atlantic Ocean.
Crowds gather around the bulletin board of the New York
American newspaper in New York, where the names of people rescued from the
sinking Titanic are displayed.
The
employment record for Captain John Edward Smith.
Karl Behr
and Richard Williams, who were world-class tennis players who survived the
sinking of the Titanic and and went on to win numerous major
tennischampionships on both sides of the Atlantic.
Merchant
Navy Seamen Charles Rice, who was a Fireman on the Titanic and survived.
An original
Titanic menu from April 10th 1912
This
composite image, released by RMS Titanic Inc., and made from sonar and more
than 100,000 photos taken in 2010 from by unmanned, underwater robots, shows
a small portion of a comprehensive map of the 3-by-5-mile debris field
surrounding the stern of the Titanic on the bottom of the North Atlantic
Ocean.
Belfast
Telegraph:Page One/Titanic. 16/4/1912
This is an
undated photo showing the bow of the Titanic at rest on the bottom of the
North Atlantic, about 400 miles southeast of Newfoundland. The first tourists
to see the bow up close viewed it from the portholes of a tiny submersible in
early September. (AP Photo/Ralph White)
This
composite image, released by RMS Titanic Inc., and made from sonar and more
than 100,000 photos taken in 2010 from by unmanned, underwater robots, shows
a small portion of a comprehensive map of the 3-by-5-mile debris field
surrounding the stern of the Titanic on the bottom of the North Atlantic
Ocean.
Titanic was
driven by two gigantic wing propellers measuring over 23 feet in diameter and
a center propeller spanning more than 16 feet.
A shipyard
worker's ticket to the launch of the RMS Titanic. Photograph © National
Museums Northern Ireland. Collection Ulster Folk & Transport Museum
Titanic
first class suite bedroom 'b58'. Photograph © National Museums Northern
Ireland. Collection Harland & Wolff, Ulster Folk & Transport Museum
Titanic,
port near profile during outfitting at Thompson deepwarter wharf. Photograph
© National Museums Northern Ireland. Collection Harland & Wolff, Ulster
Folk & Transport Museum
Titanic
leaving Belfast. Photograph © National Museums Northern Ireland. Collection
Harland & Wolff, Ulster Folk & Transport Museum
The wedding
ring and locket property of Carl Asplund and the wedding ring of Selma
Asplund are seen at Henry Aldridge and Son auctioneers in Devizes, Wiltshire,
England Thursday, April 3, 2008. The locket and one of the rings were
recovered from the body of Carl Asplund who drowned on the Titanic, they are
all part of the Lillian Asplund collection of Titanic related items.
A heavily
water stained leather bound journal bearing notes figures relating to the
Asplund family, the property of Carl Asplund, is seen at Henry Aldridge and
Son auctioneers in Devizes, Wiltshire, England Thursday, April 3, 2008. The
locket and one of the rings were recovered from the body of Carl Asplund who
drowned on the Titanic, they are all part of the Lillian Asplund collection
of Titanic related items.
A gold
plated Waltham American pocket watch, the property of Carl Asplund, is seen
in front of a modern water colour painting of the Titanic by CJ Ashford at
Henry Aldridge and Son auctioneers in Devizes, Wiltshire, England Thursday,
April 3, 2008. The locket and one of the rings were recovered from the body
of Carl Asplund who drowned on the Titanic, they are all part of the Lillian
Asplund collection of Titanic related items.
The crew of
the RMS Titanic, pictured just before her maiden voyage. Photograph ©
National Museums Northern Ireland. Collection Ulster Folk & Transport
Museum
Currency,
part of the artifacts collection of the Titanic, is shown as part of the
artifacts collection at a warehouse in Atlanta, Friday, Aug 15, 2008. The
5,500-piece collection contains almost everything recovered from the wreckage
of the RMS Titanic, which has sat 2.5 miles below the surface of the Atlantic
ocean since the boat sank on April 15, 1912.
The work
shirt of W. Allen, a 3rd class passenger on the Titanic, is shown as part of
the artifacts collection at a warehouse in Atlanta, Friday, Aug 15, 2008. The
5,500-piece collection contains almost everything recovered from the wreckage
of the RMS Titanic, which has sat 2.5 miles below the surface of the Atlantic
ocean since the boat sank on April 15, 1912.
Titanic
designer Thomas Andrews. Photograph © National Museums Northern Ireland.
Collection Ulster Folk & Transport Museum
The Titanic
Building will immortalise one of history's most enduring tales
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