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The RMS Titanic, a British Olympic-class ocean liner, became famous as
the largest ocean liner built in her day and also for sinking on her
maiden voyage in 1912 with a huge loss of life. The second of a trio of
superliners, the Titanic and her sisters were designed to provide a
three-ship weekly express service and to dominate the transatlantic
travel business for the White Star Line. The Titanic, and her sister
ship the Olympic were introduced to the world in a New York Times
article on April 23, 1908, almost four years before the sinking. Built
at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, Ireland, the Titanic was
the largest passenger steamship in the world at the time of her sinking.
During the Titanic's maiden voyage (from Southampton, England to
Cherbourg, France, then on to Queenstown (Cobh), Ireland and finally New
York City), she struck an iceberg at 23:40 (ship's time) on Sunday April
14, 1912, sinking two hours and forty minutes later at 02:20 on Monday
April 15, having broken into two pieces at the aft expansion joint.
The White Star line designed Titanic to compete with rival company
Cunard Line's Lusitania and Mauretania, luxurious ships and the fastest
liners on the Atlantic. Titanic and her Olympic -class sisters, Olympic
and the then upcoming Gigantic, were intended to be the largest, most
luxurious ships ever to operate (the planned name Gigantic was changed
to Britannic after the disaster). Titanic was designed by Harland and
Wolff chairman William Pirrie, head of Harland and Wolff's design
department Thomas Andrews, and general manager Alexander Carlisle, with
the plans regularly sent to the White Star Line's managing director J.
Bruce Ismay for suggestions and approval. Construction of the Titanic,
funded by the American J.P. Morgan and his International Mercantile
Marine Co., began on March 31, 1909. Titanic No. 401 was launched two
years and two months later on May 31, 1911. Titanic's outfitting was
completed on March 31 the following year.
Titanic was 882 feet 9 inches (269 m) long and 92 feet 6 inches
(28 m) at the beam. She had a Gross Register Tonnage of 46,328 tons, and
a height from the water line to the boat deck of 60 feet (18 m). Her
three propellers were driven by two four-cylinder, triple-expansion,
inverted reciprocating steam engines and one low-pressure Parsons
turbine. Steam was provided by 25 double-ended and 4 single-ended
Scotch-type boilers fired by 159 coal burning furnaces that made
possible a top speed of 23 knots (43 km/h). Only three of the four
63 foot (19 m) tall funnels were functional; the fourth, which served
only as a vent, was added to make the ship look more impressive. Titanic
could carry a total of 3,547 passengers and crew and, because she
carried mail, her name was given the prefix RMS (Royal Mail Steamer) as
well as SS (Steam Ship).
Contemporaries considered the Titanic the pinnacle of naval
architecture and technological achievement, and she was thought by The
Shipbuilder magazine to be "practically unsinkable." Titanic had a
double-bottom hull, containing 44 tanks for boiler water and ballast to
keep the ship safely balanced at sea (later ships also had a
double-walled hull). Titanic exceeded the lifeboat standard, with 20
lifeboats (though not enough for all passengers). Titanic was divided
into 15 compartments. Dividing doors were held up in the open position
by electro-magnetic latches that could be closed by a switch on the
ship's bridge and by a float system installed on the door itself.
In her time, Titanic surpassed all rivals in luxury and opulence. She
offered an onboard swimming pool, a gymnasium, a Turkish bath, libraries
for each passenger class, and a squash court. First-class common rooms
were adorned with elaborate wood panelling, expensive furniture and
other decorations. In addition, the Café Parisien offered superb cuisine
for the first-class passengers, with a sunlit veranda fitted with
trellis decorations.
The ship incorporated technologically advanced features for the
period. She had an extensive electrical subsystem with steam-powered
generators and ship-wide electrical wiring feeding electric lights. She
also boasted two wireless Marconi sets, including a powerful 1,500-watt
radio manned by operators who worked in shifts, allowing constant
contact and the transmission of many passenger messages.
Comparisons with the Olympic
The Titanic closely resembled her older sister Olympic but there were
a few differences. Two of the most noticeable were that half of the
Titanic's forward promenade A-Deck (below the lifeboat deck) was
enclosed against outside weather, and her B-Deck configuration was
completely different from the Olympic's. The Titanic had a speciality
restaurant called Café Parisien, a feature that the Olympic did not have
until 1913. Some of the flaws found on the Olympic, such as the creaking
of the aft expansion joint, were corrected on the Titanic. The skid
lights that provided natural illumination on A-deck were round, while on
Olympic they were oval. The Titanic's wheelhouse was made narrower and
longer than the Olympic's. These,
and other modifications, made the Titanic 1,004 gross tons larger than
the Olympic.
Passengers and crew
The first-class passengers for Titanic's maiden voyage included some
of the richest and most prominent people in the world. They included
millionaire John Jacob Astor IV and his pregnant wife Madeleine;
industrialist Benjamin Guggenheim; Macy's department store owner Isidor
Straus and his wife Ida; Denver millionaire Margaret "Molly" Brown; Sir
Cosmo Duff Gordon and his wife, couturiere Lady Duff-Gordon; streetcar
magnate George Dunton Widener, his wife Eleanor and their 27-year-old
son, Harry Elkins Widener; Pennsylvania Railroad executive John Borland
Thayer, his wife Marion and their 17-year-old son, Jack; journalist
William Thomas Stead; Charles Hays, president of Canada's Grand Trunk
Railway, with his wife, daughter, her husband, and two employees; the
Countess of Rothes; United States presidential aide Major Archibald
Butt; author and socialite Helen Churchill Candee; author Jacques
Futrelle, and their friends, Broadway producers Henry and Rene Harris;
writer and painter Francis Davis Millet; pioneer aviation entrepreneur
Pierre Maréchal Sr.; American silent film actress Dorothy Gibson, White
Star Line's Managing Director J. Bruce Ismay (who survived the sinking)
and, from the ship's builders, Thomas Andrews, who was on board to
observe any problems and assess the general performance of the new ship.
Second-class passengers included Lawrence Beesley, a journalist who
wrote one of the first-hand accounts of the voyage and the sinking.
Father Thomas R.D. Byles, a Catholic priest, was on his way to America
to officiate at his younger brother's wedding. Michel Navratil, a
Frenchman, was kidnapping his two sons, Michel Jr. and Edmond, and
taking them to America. Sylvia Mae Caldwell, who later married the
founder of State Farm Insurance George J. Mecherle, was travelling with
her first husband, Albert, and their young son, Alden, to Roseville,
Illinois.
Both J. P. Morgan and Milton S. Hershey had plans to travel on the
Titanic but cancelled their reservations before the voyage.
In 2007, scientists using DNA identified the body of an unknown child
recovered shortly after the incident as Sidney Leslie Goodwin, a
19-month-old boy from England. Goodwin, along with his parents and five
siblings, boarded in Southampton, England, as third-class passengers.
Disaster
On the night of April 14, at 11:40 PM, The Titanic struck an iceberg.
Titanic sank, with great loss of life, at 2:20 AM, on April 15, 1912.
The United States Senate investigation reported that 1,517 people
perished in the accident, while the British investigation has the
number at 1,490. Regardless, the disaster ranks as one of the worst
peacetime maritime disasters in history, and is by far the best known.
The media frenzy about the Titanic's famous victims, the legends about
what happened on board the ship, the resulting changes to maritime
law, Walter Lord's 1955 non-fiction account A Night to Remember, the
discovery of the wreck in 1985 by a team led by Robert Ballard and
Jean-Louis Michel, and the box office success of the 1997 film Titanic
(the highest-grossing film in history) have sustained the Titanic's
fame.
The break-up
For 70 years after the disaster, it was widely believed that the
Titanic had sunk intact. Although there were several passengers who
insisted that the ship had broken in two as it sank (including Jack
Thayer, who even had another passenger draw a set of sketches depicting
the sinking for him), the inquiries believed the statements of the
ship's officers and first-class passengers that it had sunk in one
piece.
In 1985, when the wreck was discovered by Jean-Louis Michel of
IFREMER, Robert Ballard and his crew, they found that the ship broke in
two as it sank. It was theorised that as the Titanic sank, the stern
rose out of the water. It supposedly rose so high that the unsupported
weight caused the ship to break into two pieces, the split starting at
the upper deck. This became the commonly accepted theory.
In 2005, new evidence suggested that in addition to the expected side
damage, the ship also had sustained damage to the bottom of the hull
(keel). This new evidence seemed to support a less popular theory that
the crack that split the Titanic in two started at the keel plates. This
proposition is supported by Jack Thayer's sketches.
Long-term implications
The sinking of the RMS Titanic was a factor that influenced later
maritime practices, ship design, and the seafaring culture. Changes
included the establishment of the International Ice Patrol, a
requirement for 24-hour radio watchkeeping on foreign-going passenger
ships, and new regulations related to lifeboats.
International Ice Patrol
The Titanic disaster led to the convening of the first International
Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) in London, on
November 12, 1913. On January 30, 1914, a treaty was signed by the
conference that resulted in the formation and international funding of
the International Ice Patrol, an agency of the United States Coast Guard
that to the present day monitors and reports on the location of North
Atlantic Ocean icebergs that could pose a threat to transatlantic sea
lane traffic. It was also agreed in the new regulations that all
passenger vessels would have sufficient lifeboats for everyone on board,
that appropriate safety drills would be conducted, and that radio
communications on passenger ships would be operated 24 hours a day along
with a secondary power supply, so as not to miss distress calls. In
addition, it was agreed that the firing of red rockets from a ship must
be interpreted as a distress signal (red rockets launched from the
Titanic prior to sinking were mistaken by nearby vessels as celebratory
fireworks, delaying rescue). This treaty was scheduled to go into effect
on July 1, 1915 but was upstaged by World War I.
Ship design changes
The sinking of Titanic changed the way passenger ships were designed.
Many existing ships, such as the Olympic, were refitted for increased
safety. Besides increasing the number of lifeboats on board,
improvements included reinforcing the hull and increasing the height of
the watertight bulkheads. The bulkheads on Titanic extended 10 feet
(3 m) above the waterline; after Titanic sank, the bulkheads on other
ships were extended higher to make compartments fully watertight. While
Titanic had a double bottom, she did not have a double hull; after her
sinking, new ships were designed with double hulls; also, the double
bottoms of other ships (including the Olympic) were extended up the
sides of their hulls, above their waterlines, to give them double hulls.
Speed
The conclusion of the British Inquiry into the sinking was “that the
loss of the said ship was due to collision with an iceberg, brought
about by the excessive speed at which the ship was being navigated." At
the time of the collision, it is thought that the Titanic was at her
normal cruising speed of about 22 knots, which was less than her top
speed of around 24 knots. It was then common (but not universal)
practice to maintain normal speed in areas where icebergs were expected.
It was assumed that any iceberg large enough to damage the ship would be
seen in sufficient time to be avoided. After the sinking, the British
Board of Trade introduced regulations instructing vessels to moderate
their speed if they were expecting to encounter icebergs. It is often
alleged that J. Bruce Ismay instructed or encouraged Captain Edward
Smith to increase speed in order to make an early landfall, and is a
common feature in popular representations of the disaster. As there is
no evidence for this having happened, many disputed the claim.
Lifeboats
The Titanic did not carry sufficient lifeboats for all of her
passengers and crew. The law at that time stipulated that a minimum of
16 lifeboats and enough places for 962 occupants were required for a
ship that weighed more than 10,000 tons. This law was issued in 1894,
when the largest emigrant steamer was the Lucania, of 12,952 tons. It
had not been updated for 18 years, and ships had increased rapidly in
size. Thus, the Titanic was only legally required to carry enough
lifeboats for 962 occupants (the ship had room for 3,547 passengers).
The White Star Line exceeded the regulations by including four
collapsible lifeboats, bringing total lifeboat capacity to 1,178.
In the busy North Atlantic sea lanes, it was expected that in the
event of a serious accident, help from other vessels would be quickly
obtained and that the lifeboats would be used to ferry passengers and
crew from the stricken vessel to her rescuers. Full provision of
lifeboats was not considered necessary for this. During the design of
the ship, it was anticipated that the British Board of Trade might
require an increase in the number of lifeboats at some future date.
Therefore, lifeboat davits capable of handling up to four boats per pair
of davits were designed by Alexander Carlisle and installed to give a
total potential capacity of 64 boats. The additional boats were never
fitted. It is often alleged that J. Bruce Ismay, the president of White
Star, vetoed the installation of these additional boats to maximise the
passenger promenade area on the boat deck. Harold Sanderson, Vice
President of International Mercantile Marine denied this allegation
during the British Inquiry.
The lack of lifeboats was not the only cause of the tragic loss of
lives. After the collision with the iceberg, one hour was taken to
evaluate the damage, recognise what was going to happen, inform
first-class passengers, and lower the first lifeboat. Afterwards, the
crew worked quite efficiently, taking a total of 80 minutes to lower all
16 lifeboats. The crew was divided into two teams, one on each side of
the ship, and an average of 10 minutes of work was necessary for a team
to fill a lifeboat with passengers and lower it.
Yet another factor in the high death toll that related to the
lifeboats was the reluctance of the passengers to board them. They were,
after all, on a ship deemed to be "unsinkable." Because of this, some
lifeboats were launched with far less than capacity, the most notable
being Lifeboat #1, with a capacity of 40, launched with only 12 people
aboard. Included in the first launched were lifeboats 6, 7, and 8, each
of which were equipped to hold 65 but evacuated the ship with only 28 on
board each boat.
The excessive number of casualties has also been blamed on the "women
and children first" policy for places on the lifeboats. Although the
lifeboats had a total capacity of 1,178 - enough for 53% of the 2,224
persons on board - the boats launched only had a capacity of 1,084, and,
altogether only 712 people were actually saved - 32% of those originally
on board. This is a result when the 1,084-person capacity of the
lifeboats actually launched had sufficient room to include all of the
534 women and children on board, plus an additional 550 men (of which
there were 1,690 on board). It has been suggested based on these figures
that allowing one man on board for each woman or child from the start
would not only have increased the number of women and children saved but
also had the added benefit of saving more lives in total. As it was, the
many desperate men had to be held off at gunpoint from boarding the
lifeboats, adding to the chaos of the scene, and there were many more
casualties - of women, children and men - than otherwise.
Use of SOS
The sinking of the Titanic was not the first time the internationally
recognised Morse code distress signal "SOS" was used. The SOS signal was
first proposed at the International Conference on Wireless Communication
at Sea in Berlin in 1906. It was ratified by the international community
in 1908 and had been in widespread use since then. The SOS signal was,
however, rarely used by British wireless operators, who preferred the
older CQD code. First Wireless Operator Jack Phillips began transmitting
CQD until Second Wireless Operator Harold Bride suggested,
half-jokingly, "Send SOS; it's the new call, and this may be your last
chance to send it." Phillips, who was to perish in the disaster, then
began to intersperse SOS with the traditional CQD call.
Titanic's turning ability
The Titanic had triple-screw engine configuration, with reciprocating
steam engines driving the wing propellers, and a steam turbine driving
her centre propeller. The reciprocating engines were reversible, while
the turbine was not. When Murdoch gave the order to reverse engines to
avoid the iceberg, he inadvertently handicapped the turning ability of
the ship. Since the centre turbine could not reverse during the "full
speed astern" manoeuvre, it simply stopped turning. Furthermore, the
centre propeller was positioned forward of the ship's rudder,
diminishing the turning effectiveness of the rudder.
Had Murdoch reversed the port engine, and reduced speed while
maintaining the forward motion of the other two propellers (as
recommended in the training procedures for this type of ship), experts
theorise that the Titanic might have been able to navigate around the
berg without a collision. However, given the closing distance between
the ship and the berg at the time the bridge was notified, this might
not have been possible without some sort of impact.
Additionally, Titanic experts have hypothesised that if Titanic had
not altered its course at all but reversed its engines and had run
head-on into the iceberg, the damage would only have affected the first
or, at most, the first two compartments. The liner SS Arizona had such a
head-on collision with an iceberg in 1879 and, although badly damaged,
managed to make it to St John's, Newfoundland for repairs. Some dispute
that Titanic would have survived such a collision, however, since
Titanic's speed was higher than Arizona's, her hull much larger and mass
much greater, and the violence of the collision could have compromised
her structural integrity.
Faults in construction
Though the topic is seldom discussed, there is some speculation as to
whether Titanic was constructed by methods considered sufficiently
robust by the standards of the day. In the documentary series Seconds
from Disaster, this was investigated further. Rumoured faults in the
construction included problems with the safety doors and missing or
detached bolts in the ship's hull plating. This may have been a major
contributing factor to the sinking and that the iceberg, in part with
the missing bolts and screws, eventually led to the demise of Titanic.
Possibly, if the watertight bulkheads had completely sealed the ship's
compartments (they only went 3 m above the waterline), the ship would
have stayed afloat.
However, Titanic's hull was held together by rivets, which are
intended to be a permanent way of attaching metal items together,
whereas bolts can be removed and would require periodic tightening
unless the nut and bolt are welded after being screwed together. Welding
technology in 1912 was in its infancy, so this was not done. While
issues with Titanic's rivets have been identified from samples salvaged
from the wreck site, many ships of the era would have been constructed
with similar methods and did not sink after becoming involved in
collisions. There was a claim that the rivets of the Titanic had not
been properly tempered leaving them brittle and sensitive to fracture in
the infamous collision.
Although sealing off the watertight bulkheads with watertight decks
would have increased the survivability of a vessel such as Titanic, it
would have by no means ensured the survival of a ship with as much
underwater damage as Titanic sustained in her collision with the
iceberg; it was a big iceberg. Even if the compartments themselves had
remained completely watertight, the weight of the water would still have
pulled the bow of the ship down to the point where decks above the
watertight deck would have been below the waterline. The ship would then
have flooded via the portholes and sunk anyway. It should also be noted
that watertight decks would have hampered access to the lower sections
of the ship and would have required watertight hatches, all of which
would have had to be properly sealed to maintain the barrier between the
incoming water and the rest of the ship. As the increased survivability
that such watertight decks would have offered is questionable, they are
generally considered to this day to be impractical in merchant vessels
(though some military vessels, which are exposed to much greater risk of
flooding by virtue of being targets for enemy mines and torpedoes, do
feature such decks).
Olympic, built to almost identical specifications by the same
builders as Titanic, was involved in several collisions during the
course of her operational lifetime, one of which occurred before Titanic
sank; and Olympic's hull was modified to protect her from flooding in a
fashion similar to her ill-fated sister's. None of these collisions
threatened to sink the ship, suggesting that the Olympic-class liners
were built to be sufficiently tough and did not suffer from slipshod
construction.
Alternative theories and
myths
As with many famous events, many alternative theories about the
sinking of Titanic have appeared over the years. Theories that it was
not an iceberg that sank the ship or that a curse caused the disaster
have been popular reading in newspapers and books. Most of these
theories have been debunked by Titanic experts, claiming that the
evidence on which these theories were based was inaccurate or
incomplete. Another theory is that the Titanic was sacrificed because,
once construction had been completed, she was expected to be a potential
perpetual financial loss. Supporters of this theory cite the claim that
everyone concerned, the company and the officers aboard, had received
iceberg warnings and yet the Titanic maintained a northern course
instead of sailing to the south of the warning limit.
There is a minor school of thought that it was not Titanic that sank
but Olympic. Conspiracy theorists cited evidence in favour, including
the Hawke incident, which seriously damaged Olympic. This supposedly
motivated management to scuttle Olympic/Titanic and file an insurance
claim. The two ships were dry-docked at the same yard at the same time
(making a switch possible), and cosmetic changes were made, presumably
to make the two ships more similar. Primary evidence against lies in the
surveys made by the British government of Olympic from shortly after the
sinking of Titanic to shortly before Olympic's scrapping which show
artefacts of her 1911 collision damage. Titanic also possessed many
design features Olympic did not, such as enlarged B-deck suites. Both
vessels, additionally, were underinsured relative to their value and
sinking either would cause a substantial loss, far greater than the
operating costs of repairing Olympic, to say nothing of the lost revenue
resulting from loss of confidence in the company after the loss at sea
of their flagship.
A similar legend states that the Titanic was given hull number 390904
(which, when seen in a mirror or written using mirror writing, looks
like "NO POPE"). This is a myth. Titanic's yard number was 401;
Olympic's was 400. Another myth states that Titanic was carrying a
cursed Egyptian mummy, often named Princess of Amen-Ra. The mummy,
nicknamed Shipwrecker after changing hands several times and causing
many terrible things to happen to each of its owners, exacts its final
revenge by sinking the famous ship. There was no mummy on board, only a
coffin lid. Another myth says that the bottle of champagne used in
christening Titanic did not break on the first try, which in sea lore is
said to be bad luck for a ship. In fact, Titanic was not christened on
launching, as it was White Star Line's custom not to do so.
Rediscovery
The idea of finding the wreck of Titanic and even raising the ship
from the ocean floor had been perpetuated since shortly after the ship
sank. No attempts even to locate the ship were successful until
September 1, 1985, when a joint French-American expedition, led by
Jean-Louis Michel of IFREMER and Dr Robert Ballard of the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution, sailing on the Research Vessel Knorr,
discovered the wreck using the video camera sled Argo. It was found at a
depth of 12,536 feet (3,821 m), south-east of Newfoundland at 41°43′32″N, 49°56′49″W,
13 nautical miles (24 km) from where Titanic was originally thought to
rest.
The most notable discovery the team made was that the ship had broken
in two, the stern section lying 1,970 feet (600 m) from the bow section
and both facing in opposite directions. There had been conflicting
witness accounts of whether the ship broke apart on the surface or not,
and both the American and British inquiries found that the ship sank
intact. Up until the discovery of the wreck, it was generally assumed
the ship did not break apart. In 2005, a theory was presented that a
portion of Titanic's bottom broke off right before the ship broke in
two. The theory was conceived after an expedition sponsored by The
History Channel examined the three hull pieces.
The bow section had embedded itself more than 60 feet (18 m) into the
silt on the ocean floor. Although parts of the hull had buckled, the bow
was mostly intact, as the water inside had equalised with the increasing
water pressure. The stern section was in much worse condition. As the
stern section sank, water pushed out the air inside tearing apart the
hull and decks. The speed at which the stern hit the ocean floor caused
even more damage. Surrounding the wreck is a large debris field, with
pieces of the ship (including a large amount of coal), furniture,
dinnerware and personal items scattered over one square mile (2.6 km²).
Softer materials, like wood and carpet, were devoured by undersea
organisms, as were human remains.
Later exploration of the vessel's lower decks, as chronicled in the
book Ghosts of the Titanic by Charles Pellegrino, showed that much of
the wood from Titanic's staterooms was still intact. A new theory has
been put forth that much of the wood from the upper decks was not
devoured by undersea organisms but rather broke free of its fixings and
floated away. This is supported by some eyewitness testimony from the
survivors.
Ownership and litigation
Ballard and his crew did not bring up any artefacts from the wreck.
Upon discovery in 1985, a legal debate began over ownership of the wreck
and the valuable artefacts inside. On June 7, 1994, RMS Titanic Inc. was
awarded ownership and salvaging rights of the wreck by the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. (See Admiralty law)
RMS Titanic Inc., a subsidiary of Premier Exhibitions Inc., and its
predecessors have conducted seven expeditions to the wreck between 1987
and 2004 and salvaged over 5,500 objects. The biggest single recovered
artefact was a 17-ton section of the hull, recovered in 1998. Many of
these artefacts are part of travelling museum exhibitions.
Beginning in 1987, a joint American-French expedition, which included
the predecessor of RMS Titanic Inc., began salvage operations and,
during 32 dives, recovered approximately 1,800 artefacts which were
taken to France for conservation and restoration. In 1993, a French
administrator in the Office of Maritime Affairs of the Ministry of
Equipment, Transportation, and Tourism awarded RMS Titanic Inc's
predecessor title to the artefacts recovered in 1987.
In a motion filed on February 12, 2004 RMS Titanic Inc. requested
that the District Court enter an order awarding it "title to all the
artefacts (including portions of the hull) which are the subject of this
action pursuant to the Law of Finds" or, in the alternative, a salvage
award in the amount of $225 million. RMS Titanic Inc. excluded from its
motion any claim for an award of title to the 1987 artefacts, but it did
request that the district court declare that, based on the French
administrative action, "the artefacts raised during the 1987 expedition
are independently owned by RMST." Following a hearing, the district
court entered an order dated July 2, 2004, in which it refused to grant
comity and recognize the 1993 decision of the French administrator, and
rejected RMS Titanic Inc's claim that it should be awarded title to the
artefacts recovered since 1993 under the Maritime Law of Finds.
RMS Titanic Inc. appealed to the United States Court of Appeals. In
its decision of January 31, 2006 the court recognised "explicitly the
appropriateness of applying maritime salvage law to historic wrecks such
as that of Titanic" and denied the application of the Maritime Law of
Finds. The court also ruled that the district court lacked jurisdiction
over the "1987 artefacts", and therefore vacated that part of the
court's July 2, 2004 order. In other words, according to this decision,
RMS Titanic Inc. has ownership title to the artefacts awarded in the
French decision (valued $16.5 million earlier) and continues to be
salvor-in-possession of Titanic wreck. The Court of Appeals remanded the
case to the District Court to determine the salvage award ($225 million
requested by RMS Titanic Inc.).
Condition of the wreck
Many scientists, including Robert Ballard, are concerned that visits
by tourists in submersibles and the recovery of artefacts are hastening
the decay of the wreck. Underwater microbes have been eating away at
Titanic's iron since the ship sank, but because of the extra damage
visitors have caused, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
estimates that "the hull and structure of the ship may collapse to the
ocean floor within the next 50 years." Several scientists and
conservationists have also complained about the removal of the crow's
nest on the mast by a French expedition.
Ballard's book, Return to Titanic, published by the National
Geographic Society, includes photographs showing the deterioration of
the promenade deck and damage caused by submersibles landing on the
ship. The mast has almost completely deteriorated, and repeated
accusations were made that it had been stripped of its bell and brass
light by salvagers. Ballard's own original discovery images however,
clearly showing that the bell was never actually on the mast - it was
recovered from the sea floor. The French submersible Nautile allegedly
is responsible for crashing into the crow's nest and causing it to fall
from the mast. Even the memorial plaque left by Ballard on his second
trip to the wreck was alleged to have been removed; Ballard replaced the
plaque in 2004. Recent expeditions, notably by James Cameron, have been
diving on the wreck to learn more about the site and explore previously
unexplored parts of the ship before Titanic decays completely.
Popular culture
The sinking of Titanic has been the basis for many novels describing
fictionalised events on board the ship. Many reference books about the
disaster have also been written since Titanic sank, the first of these
appearing within months of the sinking. Several films and TV movies were
produced, the first being In Nacht und Eis as early as 1912. The 1997
film Titanic, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet was a critical
and commercial hit, winning eleven Academy Awards and holding the record
for the highest box office returns of all time.
Living survivors
There only one survivor of the Titanic still living although, she has
actual no memories of the sinking.
- Millvina Dean; 95 years old and lives in Southampton, England.
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