Learning from Other Writers: Observing the Titanic: Past and Present

Observing the Titanic: Past and Present

Multiple Editors

Visual Essay

On its maiden voyage from Southampton, United Kingdom, to New York, United States, in April 1912, the RMS Titanic hit an iceberg off Newfoundland and sank within three hours, killing more than 1,500 people. Approximately 700 passengers and crewmembers were rescued. Seventy-three years later, in 1985, the wreck was discovered lying two and a half miles beneath the Atlantic’s surface, by a U.S.-French team led by Robert Ballard of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Many explorers and scientists have visited the Titanic since, including filmmaker James Cameron. Click through the photos to observe scenes of the luxurious ocean liner, then and now, and then answer the questions below.

The Titanic on trial run, 1912.
© The Mariners’ Museum/CORBIS
Over 300 people aboard the Titanic were travelling first class, which granted them spacious private suites such as the ones shown here, and access to other elegant amenities, including a special dining area, promenade, Turkish bath, and gymnasium. Well known passengers included real estate tycoon John Jacob Astor IV and his new wife Madeleine; Isidor Straus, the owner of Macy’s, and his wife Ida; Benjamin Guggenheim, heir to a mining fortune; the influential English journalist William Thomas Stead; and Dorothy Gibson, an American singer and silent film actress. The Titanic carried an inadequate number of lifeboats (20 instead of the planned 64), so as the disaster unfolded, its policy of saving “women and children first” meant that almost all the well to do wives and their sons and daughters were rescued. Among the men in first class, two-thirds died, including Astor, Straus, Guggenheim, and Stead.
The Illustrated London News Picture Library, London, UK / The Bridgeman Art Library
Emory Kristof/National Geographic /Getty Images
The Titanic’s Atlantic crossing was planned to take between six and seven days. (On the night it went down, the ocean liner was an estimated two days from its New York destination.) To feed the 2,223 passengers and crewmembers for a week, the ship carried large amounts of fresh and canned provisions, drinking water, milk, and bottled drinks, including 1,500 wine bottles and 20,000 bottles of beer. The price of meals was included in each passenger’s ticket. Predictably, those travelling first-class were offered an elegant, varied menu, prepared by a well-paid chef. But travelers of all classes reported food on board the Titanic to be good and plentiful and meal times to be pleasantly sociable occasions. In addition to vast food supplies, the ship was equipped with a large number of pots, pans, dishes, cups, glasses, and cutlery. A pre-departure inventory noted that the ship carried 127,000 pieces of tableware. Somehow, stacks of white bowls survived the tumult of the wreck and the crushing water pressure at that depth (6,000 pounds per square inch), though the wooden shelves rotted away.
The Illustrated London News Picture Library, London, UK / The Bridgeman Art Library
© Ralph White/CORBIS
Captain Edward J. Smith (right) and another of the ship’s officers, purser Hugh Walter McElroy, stand on the deck of the Titanic near the beginning of its voyage. Captain Smith was an experienced and well-respected sea commander who had presided over many successful Atlantic crossings. Eyewitnesses and historians have debated his level of responsibility for the collision, his effectiveness in supervising the sinking ship’s evacuation, and his last words. He died when the ship went down, and his body was never found. He had been in charge of a giant ship weighing more than 46,000 tons that had taken 10,000 men almost four years to build, at nearly immeasurable cost. To its wealthy investors and owners, the Titanic had been a proud symbol of the future and of the new 20th century’s confidence — in the power of developing technology, the might of industry, and human ingenuity. In the end, it became something else. And the tragedy led directly to the passing of strict new safety measures and regulations governing lifeboats, evacuation drills, searchlights, lookout schedules, routes, and radio contact.
© Ralph White/CORBIS
NOAA / Institute for Exploration / University of Rhode Island

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