Photos of the Titanic Tragedy From 101 Years Ago

Photos of the Titanic Tragedy From 101 Years Ago



(Image Source: National Archives Online Public Access)



A Titanic Lifeboat Picked Up by the Carpathia

This photograph was taken by a passenger of the Carpathia, the ship that received the Titanic's distress signal and came to rescue the survivors. It shows survivors of the sinking of the Titanic in a notably sparse lifeboat.


 

Add New Comment


Name: (required)

Email: (required)

Comment:

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.

Comments (15)

And almost all the men from all sections. No Feminist volunteers for that glass ceiling.

survivers reports indicated that many gates from lower decks were locked causing so many third class passengers deaths

I never heard about the Bremen coming upon the wreckage and seeing frozen bodies bobbing in the water. That would be mind blowing.

Does anyone know how many of the children survived? Also, how many from third class?

Convention at the time had officers giving steering orders in terms of the tiller, not the direction of the turn. Thus, "Hard-a-starboard" meant "Push the tiller or steering oar as far as you can to starboard" and the ship would subsequently turn hard to port.

Walter Lord discusses the change of directions in 'the night lives on'. the old way meant starboard meant to port.

I understand there were a large group of passengers that were fighting the federal reserve at the time. the fight ended when they went down. Is that true? now, there is a story!

Thank you for catching the error. We've corrected the caption.

Hard a-starboard would be to the right.

The lifeboat pictured is actually a collapsible life raft and only held about half of the compliment of a lifeboat. They could have squeezed in a few more passengers, but the raft is close to the intended capacity.

Truly, these are certainly the pains that humanity bears, and so remorsefully, even to sense how such a memorial can become so precious within the sake time; and God's allowance to accept the complete burden of responsibility. For, it is primarily these such circumstances that inevitably captures the human spirit of which distinquish and credit's man of being so very sensitive to nature; and thus, all God's creatures of life. No such pains of such a magnatude within character of recognition, can ever be possibly forgotten or excused by humanity; and thus for the sake of man. Sincerely, Derek Johnson

starboard is right, port is left, maybe that was the problem. Maybe they didn't know either.

Gee, I thought starboard was to the right not left

Interesting but wonder why it has taken so many years for those photos to be shown.



Advertisement