The RMS Titanic was an  Olympic-class passenger liner owned by the White Star Line and was built  at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, in what is now Northern  Ireland. At the time of her construction, she was the largest passenger  steamship in the world.
 Shortly before midnight on 14 April 1912, four days into the ship's  maiden voyage, Titanic struck an iceberg and sank two hours and forty  minutes later, early on 15 April 1912. The sinking resulted in the  deaths of 1,517 of the 2,223 people on board, making it one of the deadliest peacetime maritime disasters in history. The  high casualty rate was due in part to the fact that, although complying  with the regulations of the time, the ship did not carry enough  lifeboats for everyone aboard. The ship had a total lifeboat capacity of 1,178 people, although her maximum capacity was  3,547. A disproportionate number of men died due to the women and  children first protocol that was followed.
 The Titanic was designed by some of the most experienced engineers,  and used some of the most advanced technologies available at the time.  It was popularly believed to have been unsinkable. It was a great shock  to many that, despite the extensive safety features, the Titanic sank. The frenzy on the part of the media about  Titanic's famous victims, the legends about the sinking, the resulting  changes to maritime law, and the discovery of the wreck have contributed  to the continuing interest in, and notoriety of, the Titanic.
 The Titanic was built at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast,  and designed to compete with the rival Cunard Line's Lusitania and  Mauretania. The Titanic, along with her Olympic-class sisters, the  Olympic and the soon-to-be-built Britannic (which was to be called Gigantic at first), were intended to be the largest,  most luxurious ships ever to operate. The designers were Lord Pirrie, a  director of both Harland and Wolff and White Star, naval architect  Thomas Andrews, Harland and Wolff's construction manager and head of their design department,and Alexander Carlisle, the  shipyard's chief draughtsman and general manager. Carlisle's role in  this project was the design of the superstructure of these ships,  particularly the superstructures' streamlined joining to the hulls[citation needed] as well as the implementation of an  efficient lifeboat davit design. Carlisle would leave the project in  1910, before the ships were launched, when he became a shareholder in  Welin Davit & Engineering Company Ltd, the firm making the davits.
 Construction of RMS Titanic, funded by the American J.P. Morgan and  his International Mercantile Marine Co., began on 31 March 1909.  Titanic's hull was launched on 31 May 1911, and her outfitting was  completed by 31 March the following year. Her length overall was 882 feet 9 inches (269.1 m), the moulded breadth 92 feet 0  inches (28.0 m), the tonnage 46,328 GRT, and the height from the water  line to the boat deck of 59 feet (18 m). She was equipped with two  reciprocating four-cylinder, triple-expansion steam engines and one low-pressure Parsons turbine, which combined drove three  propellers. There were 29 boilers fired by 159 coal burning furnaces  that made possible a top speed of 23 knots (43 km/h; 26 mph). Only three  of the four 62 feet (19 m) funnels were functional: the fourth, which served only for ventilation purposes, was added to  make the ship look more impressive. The ship could carry a total of  3,547 passengers and crew.
 Titanic surpassed all her rivals in luxury and opulence. The  First-class section had an on-board swimming pool, a gymnasium, a squash  court, Turkish bath, Electric bath and a Verandah Cafe. First-class  common rooms were adorned with ornate wood panelling, expensive furniture and other decorations. In addition, the Café  Parisien offered cuisine for the first-class passengers, with a sunlit  veranda fitted with trellis decorations.There were libraries and barber  shops in both the first and second-class.The third class general room had pine panelling and sturdy teak furniture. The  ship incorporated technologically advanced features for the period. She  had three electric elevators in first class and one in second class. She  had also an extensive electrical subsystem with steam-powered generators and ship-wide wiring feeding electric  lights and two Marconi radios, including a powerful 1,500-watt set  manned by two operators working in shifts, allowing constant contact and  the transmission of many passenger messages. First-class passengers paid a hefty fee for such amenities. The most expensive  one-way trans-Atlantic passage was US$4,350 (which is more than  US$95,860 in 2008 dollars).
 For her maiden voyage, Titanic carried a total of 20 lifeboats of  three different varieties:
 Lifeboats 1 and 2: emergency wooden cutters: 25'2" long by 7'2"  wide by 3'2" deep; capacity 326.6 cubic feet or 40 persons 
 Lifeboats 3 to 16: wooden lifeboats: 30' long by 9'1" wide by 4'  deep; capacity 655.2 cubic feet or 65 persons 
 Lifeboats A, B, C and D: Englehardt "collapsible" lifeboats: 27'5"  long by 8' wide by 3' deep; capacity 376.6 cubic feet or 47 persons 
 The lifeboats were predominantly stowed in chocks on the boat deck,  not connected to the falls of the davits. All of the lifeboats,  including the collapsibles, were placed on the ship by the giant gantry  crane at Belfast. Those on the starboard side were numbered 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13 and 15 from bow-to-stern, while those on  the port side were numbered 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14 and 16 from  bow-to-stern. The emergency cutters (lifeboats 1 and 2) were kept swung  out, hanging from the davits, ready for immediate use while collapsible lifeboats C and D were stowed on the boat deck  immediately in-board of boats 1 and 2 respectively. Collapsible  lifeboats A and B were stored on the roof of the officer's quarters, on  either side of number 1 funnel. However there were no davits mounted on the officer's quarters to lower collapsibles A and B  and the both of them weighed a considerable amount empty. During the  sinking, lowering collapsibles A and B proved difficult as it was first  necessary to slide the boats on timbers and/or oars down to the boat deck. During this procedure, collapsible B  capsized and subsequently floated off the ship upside down.
 At the design stage Carlisle suggested that Titanic use a new,  larger type of davit, manufactured by the Welin Davit & Engineering  Co Ltd, each of which could handle four lifeboats. Sixteen sets of these  davits were installed, giving Titanic the ability to carry 64 wooden lifeboats—a total capacity of over 4,000 people,  compared with Titanic's total carrying capacity of about 3,600  passengers and crew. However, the White Star Line, while agreeing to the  new davits, decided that only 16 wooden lifeboats (16 being the minimum required by the Board of Trade, based on the Titanic's  projected tonnage) would be carried (there were also four folding  lifeboats, called collapsibles), which could accommodate only 1,178  people (33% of Titanic's total capacity). At the time, the Board of Trade's regulations stated that British vessels over 10,000  tons must carry 16 lifeboats with a capacity of 5,500 cubic feet (160  m3), plus enough capacity in rafts and floats for 75% (or 50% in case of  a vessel with watertight bulkheads) of that in the lifeboats. Therefore, the White Star Line actually provided more  lifeboat accommodation than was legally required.
 The regulations had made no extra provision for larger ships since  1894, when the largest passenger ship under consideration was the Cunard  Line's Lucania, only 13,000 tons. Sir Alfred Chalmers, nautical adviser  to the Board of Trade from 1896 to 1911, had considered the matter "from time to time", but because he thought  that experienced sailors would have to be carried "uselessly" aboard  ship for no other purpose than lowering and manning lifeboats, and the  difficulty he anticipated in getting away a greater number than 16 in any emergency, he "did not consider it necessary to  increase our scale".
 Carlisle told the official inquiry that he had discussed the matter  with J. Bruce Ismay, White Star's Managing Director, but in his  evidence Ismay denied that he had ever heard of this, nor did he  recollect noticing such provision in the plans of the ship he had inspected. Ten days before the maiden voyage Axel Welin, the  maker of Titanic's lifeboat davits, had announced that his machinery had  been installed because the vessel's owners were aware of forthcoming  changes in official regulations, but Harold Sanderson, vice-president of the International Mercantile Marine and former general  manager of the White Star Line, denied that this had been the  intention.
 Titanic was fitted with five ballast and bilge pumps, used for  trimming the vessel, and three bilge pumps. Two 10-inch main ballast  pipes ran the length of the ship and valves controlling the distribution  of water were operated from the bulkhead deck, above. The total discharge capacity from all eight pumps operating  together was 1700 tons or 425000 gallons per hour.
 The Titanic closely resembled her older sister Olympic. Although  she enclosed more space and therefore had a larger gross register  tonnage, the hull was almost the same length as the Olympic's. Two of  the most noticeable differences were that half of the Titanic's forward promenade A-Deck (below the boat deck) was enclosed  against outside weather, and her B-Deck configuration was different from  the Olympic's. As built the Olympic did not have an equivalent of the  Titanic's Café Parisien: the feature was not added 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 register tons larger  than the Olympic and thus the largest active ship in the world during  her maiden voyage in April 1912.
 Titanic's sea trials took place shortly after she was fitted out at  Harland & Wolff shipyard. The trials were originally scheduled for  10.00am on Monday, 1 April, just 9 days before she was due to leave  Southampton on her maiden voyage, but poor weather conditions forced the trials to be postponed until the following day.  Aboard Titanic were 78 stokers, greasers and firemen, and 41 members of  crew. No domestic staff appear to have been aboard. Representatives of  various companies travelled on Titanic's sea trials, including Harold A. Sanderson of I.M.M and Thomas Andrews and  Edward Wilding of Harland and Wolff. Bruce Ismay and Lord Pirrie were  too ill to attend. Jack Phillips and Harold Bride served as radio  operators, and performed fine-tuning of the Marconi equipment. Mr Carruthers, a surveyor from the Board of Trade, was also  present to see that everything worked, and that the ship was fit to  carry passengers. After the trial, he signed an 'Agreement and Account  of Voyages and Crew', valid for twelve months, which deemed the ship sea-worthy.
 The vessel began her maiden voyage from Southampton, England, bound  for New York City, New York on 10 April 1912, with Captain Edward J.  Smith in command. As the Titanic left her berth, her wake caused the  liner SS New York, which was docked nearby, to break away from her moorings, whereupon she was drawn dangerously close  (about four feet) to the Titanic before a tugboat towed the New York  away.The incident delayed departure for about half-an-hour. After  crossing the English Channel, the Titanic stopped at Cherbourg, France, to board additional passengers and stopped again  the next day at Queenstown (known today as Cobh), Ireland. As harbour  facilities at Queenstown were inadequate for a ship of her size, Titanic  had to anchor off-shore, with small boats, known as tenders, ferrying the embarking passengers out to her. When she  finally set out for New York, there were 2,240 people aboard.
 John Coffey, a 23-year-old crewmember, jumped ship by stowing away  on a tender and hid amongst mailbags headed for Queenstown. Coffey  stated that the reason for smuggling himself off the liner was that he  held a superstition about sailing and specifically about travelling on the Titanic. He later signed on to join the crew of  the Mauretania.
 On the maiden voyage of the Titanic some of the most prominent  people of the day were travelling in first-class. Among them were  millionaire John Jacob Astor IV and his wife Madeleine Force Astor,  industrialist Benjamin Guggenheim, Macy's owner Isidor Straus and his wife Ida, Denver millionairess Margaret "Molly" Brown  (known afterwards as the 'Unsinkable Molly Brown' due to her efforts in  helping other passengers while the ship sank), Sir Cosmo Duff Gordon and  his wife, couturière Lucy (Lady Duff-Gordon), George Elkins Widener and his wife Eleanor; cricketer and businessman  John Borland Thayer with his wife Marian and their seventeen-year-old  son Jack, journalist William Thomas Stead, the Countess of Rothes,  United States presidential aide Archibald Butt, author and socialite Helen Churchill Candee, author Jacques Futrelle his wife  May and their friends, Broadway producers Henry and Rene Harris and  silent film actress Dorothy Gibson among others. J.P. Morgan was  scheduled to travel on the maiden voyage, but cancelled at the last minute. Travelling in first–class aboard the ship were White  Star Line's managing director J. Bruce Ismay and the ship's builder  Thomas Andrews, who was on board to observe any problems and assess the  general performance of the new ship
 On the night of Sunday, 14 April 1912, the temperature had dropped  to near freezing and the ocean was calm. The moon was not visible (being  two days before new moon),and the sky was clear. Captain Smith, in  response to iceberg warnings received via wireless over the preceding few days, had drawn up a new course which took the  ship slightly further southward. That Sunday at 13:45,a message from the  steamer Amerika warned that large icebergs lay in the Titanic's path,  but as Jack Phillips and Harold Bride, the Marconi wireless radio operators, were employed by Marconi and paid to relay  messages to and from the passengers, they were not focused on relaying  such "non-essential" ice messages to the bridge. Later that evening,  another report of numerous large icebergs, this time from the Mesaba, also failed to reach the bridge.
 At 23:40, while sailing about 400 miles south of the Grand Banks of  Newfoundland, lookouts Fredrick Fleet and Reginald Lee spotted a large  iceberg directly ahead of the ship. Fleet sounded the ship's bell three  times and telephoned the bridge exclaiming, "Iceberg, right ahead!". First Officer Murdoch gave the order  "hard-a-starboard", using the traditional tiller order for an abrupt  turn to port (left), and adjusted the engines (he either ordered through  the telegraph for "full reverse" or "stop" on the engines; survivor testimony on this conflicts). The iceberg brushed the ship's  starboard side (right side), buckling the hull in several places and  popping out rivets below the waterline over a length of 299 feet (90 m).  As seawater filled the forward compartments, the watertight doors shut. However, while the ship could stay afloat  with four flooded compartments, five were filling with water. The five  water-filled compartments weighed down the ship so that the tops of the  forward watertight bulkheads fell below the ship's waterline, allowing water to pour into additional compartments. Captain  Smith, alerted by the jolt of the impact, arrived on the bridge and  ordered a full stop. Shortly after midnight on 15 April, following an  inspection by the ship's officers and Thomas Andrews, the lifeboats were ordered to be readied and a distress call was sent  out.
 Wireless operators Jack Phillips and Harold Bride were busy sending  out CQD, the international distress signal. Several ships responded,  including Mount Temple, Frankfurt and Titanic's sister ship, Olympic,  but none was close enough to make it in time. The closest ship to respond was Cunard Line's Carpathia 58 miles (93 km)  away, which could arrive in an estimated four hours—too late to rescue  all of Titanic's passengers. The only land–based location that received  the distress call from Titanic was a wireless station at Cape Race, Newfoundland.
 From the bridge, the lights of a nearby ship could be seen off the  port side. The identity of this ship remains a mystery but there have  been theories suggesting that it was probably either the SS Californian  or a sealer called the Sampson.As it was not responding to wireless, Fourth Officer Boxhall and Quartermaster Rowe  attempted signalling the ship with a Morse lamp and later with distress  rockets, but the ship never appeared to respond.The Californian, which  was nearby and stopped for the night because of ice, also saw lights in the distance. The Californian's wireless was  turned off, and the wireless operator had gone to bed for the night.  Just before he went to bed at around 23:00 the Californian's radio  operator attempted to warn the Titanic that there was ice ahead, but he was cut off by an exhausted Jack Phillips, who had  fired back an angry response, "Shut up, shut up, I am busy; I am  working Cape Race", referring to the Newfoundland wireless station. When  the Californian's officers first saw the ship, they tried signalling her with their Morse lamp, but also never appeared  to receive a response. Later, they noticed the Titanic's distress  signals over the lights and informed Captain Stanley Lord. Even though  there was much discussion about the mysterious ship, which to the officers on duty appeared to be moving away, the  master of the Californian did not wake her wireless operator until  morning.
 The first lifeboat launched was Lifeboat 7 on the starboard side  with 28 people on board out of a capacity of 65. It was lowered at  around 00:40 as believed by the British Inquiry.Lifeboat 6 and Lifeboat 5  were launched ten minutes later. Lifeboat 1 was the fifth lifeboat to be launched with 12 people. Lifeboat 11 was  overloaded with 70 people. Collapsible D was the last lifeboat to be  launched. The Titanic carried 20 lifeboats with a total capacity of  1,178 people. While not enough to hold all of the passengers and crew, the Titanic carried more boats than was required by the  British Board of Trade Regulations. At the time, the number of lifeboats  required was determined by a ship's gross register tonnage, rather than  her human capacity.
 Titanic was given ample stability and sank with only a few degrees  list, the design being such that there was very little risk of unequal  flooding and possible capsize. Furthermore the electric power plant was  operated by the ship's engineers until the end. Hence Titanic showed no outward signs of being in imminent danger,  and passengers were reluctant to leave the apparent safety of the ship  to board small lifeboats. Large numbers of Third Class passengers were  unable to reach the lifeboat deck through unfamiliar parts of the ship and past barriers, although some stewards such as  William Denton Cox successfully led some groups from Third Class to the  lifeboats.As a result, most of the boats were launched partially empty;  one boat meant to hold 40 people left the Titanic with only 12 people on board. With "Women and children first" the  imperative for loading lifeboats, Second Officer Lightoller, who was  loading boats on the port side, allowed men to board only if oarsmen  were needed, even if there was room. First Officer Murdoch, who was loading boats on the starboard side, let men on board if women  were absent. As the ship's list increased people started to become  nervous, and some lifeboats began leaving fully loaded. By 02:05, the  entire bow was under water, and all the lifeboats, save for two, had been launched.
 Around 02:10, the stern rose out of the water exposing the  propellers, and by 02:17 the waterline had reached the boat deck. The  last two lifeboats floated off the deck, collapsible B upside down,  collapsible A half-filled with water after the supports for its canvas sides were broken in the fall from the roof of the  officers quarters. Shortly afterwards, the forward funnel collapsed,  crushing part of the bridge and people in the water. On deck, people  were scrambling towards the stern or jumping overboard in hopes of reaching a lifeboat. The ship's stern slowly rose into the  air, and everything unsecured crashed towards the water. While the stern  rose, the electrical system finally failed and the lights went out.  Shortly afterwards, the stress on the hull caused Titanic to break apart between the last two funnels, and the bow went  completely under. The stern righted itself slightly and then rose  vertically. After a few moments, at 02:20, this too sank into the ocean.
 Only two of the 18 launched lifeboats rescued people after the ship  sank. Lifeboat 4 was close by and picked up five people, two of whom  later died. Close to an hour later, lifeboat 14 went back and rescued  four people, one of whom died afterwards. Other people managed to climb onto the lifeboats that floated off the deck.  There were some arguments in some of the other lifeboats about going  back, but many survivors were afraid of being swamped by people trying  to climb into the lifeboat or being pulled down by the suction from the sinking Titanic, though it turned out that there  had been very little suction.
 As the ship fell into the depths, the two sections behaved very  differently. The streamlined bow planed off approximately 2,000 feet  (609 m) below the surface and slowed somewhat, landing relatively  gently. The stern plunged violently to the ocean floor, the hull being torn apart along the way from massive implosions caused  by compression of the air still trapped inside. The stern smashed into  the bottom at considerable speed, grinding the hull deep into the silt.
 After steaming at 17.5 knots for just under four hours, the RMS  Carpathia arrived in the area and at 04:10 began rescuing survivors. By  08:30 she picked up the last lifeboat with survivors and left the area  at 08:50 bound for New York
 On 18 April, the Carpathia docked at Pier 54 at Little West 12th  Street in New York with the survivors. It arrived at night and was  greeted by thousands of people. The Titanic had been headed for 20th  Street. The Carpathia dropped off the empty Titanic lifeboats at Pier 59, as property of the White Star Line, before  unloading the survivors at Pier 54. Both piers were part of the Chelsea  Piers built to handle luxury liners of the day. As news of the disaster  spread, many people were shocked that the Titanic could sink with such great loss of life despite all of her technological  advances. Newspapers were filled with stories and descriptions of the  disaster and were eager to get the latest information. Many charities  were set up to help the victims and their families, many of whom lost their sole breadwinner, or, in the case of third class  survivors, lost everything they owned. The people of Southampton were  deeply affected by the sinking. According to the Hampshire Chronicle on  20 April 1912, almost 1,000 local families were directly affected. Almost every street in the Chapel district of  the town lost more than one resident and over 500 households lost a  member.
 Of a total of 2,223 people aboard the Titanic only 706 survived the  disaster and 1,517 perished. The majority of deaths were caused by  hypothermia in the 28 °F (−2 °C) water. At this water temperature, death  could be expected in less than 15 minutes.
 Men and members of the 2nd and 3rd class were less likely to  survive. Of the male passengers in second class, 92 percent perished.  Less than half of third-class passengers survived.
 6 of the 7 children in first class survived. All of the children in  second class survived, whereas less than half were saved in third  class. 4 first class women died, 86 percent of the women survived in  second class and less than half survived in third class. Overall, only 20 percent of the men survived, compared to nearly  75 percent of the women. Men in first class were four times as likely to  survive as men in second class, and twice as likely to survive as those  in third.
 Another disparity is that a greater percentage of British  passengers died than American passengers; some sources claim this could  be because many Britons of the time were polite and queued, rather than  forcing their way onto the lifeboats. The captain, Edward John Smith, shouted out: "Be British, boys, be British!" as the  ocean liner went down, according to witnesses.
 In one case in the third class, a Swedish man lost his wife, Alma  Pålsson, and his four children, all aged under 10. The father was  waiting for them to arrive at the destination. "Paulson's grief was the  most acute of any who visited the offices of the White Star, but his loss was the greatest. His whole family had been  wiped out."
 The sailors aboard the ship CS Mackay-Bennett which recovered  bodies from Titanic, who were very upset by the discovery of the unknown  boy's body, paid for a monument and he was buried on 4 May 1912 with a  copper pendant placed in his coffin by the sailors that read "Our Babe". The unknown child was later positively identified  as Sidney Leslie Goodwin. 
 One survivor, stewardess Violet Jessop, who had been on board the  RMS Olympic when she collided with HMS Hawke in 1911, went on to survive  the sinking of HMHS Britannic in 1916. 
 There are no living survivors of the Titanic disaster. The last  living survivor was Millvina Dean, who was only nine weeks old at the  time of the sinking. She died on 31 May 2009, the 98th anniversary of  the launching of the ship's hull. She lived in Southampton, England.
 There are many stories relating to dogs on the Titanic. Apparently,  a passenger released the dogs just before the ship went down; they were  seen running up and down the decks. At least two dogs survived
 Once the massive loss of life became clear, White Star Line  chartered the cable ship CS Mackay-Bennett from Halifax, Nova Scotia to  retrieve bodies. Three other ships followed in the search, the cable  ship Minia, the lighthouse supply ship Montmagny and the sealing vessel Algerine. Each ship left with embalming supplies,  undertakers, and clergy. Of the 333 victims that were eventually  recovered, 328 were retrieved by the Canadian ships and five more by  passing North Atlantic steamships. For some unknown reason, numbers 324 and 325 were unused, and the six passengers buried at sea by  the Carpathia also went unnumbered. In mid-May 1912, over 200 miles  (320 km) from the site of the sinking, the Oceanic recovered three  bodies, numbers 331, 332 and 333, who were occupants of Collapsible A, which was swamped in the last moments of the sinking.  Several people managed to reach this lifeboat, although some died during  the night. When Fifth Officer Harold Lowe rescued the survivors of  Collapsible A, he left the three dead bodies in the boat: Thomas Beattie, a first-class passenger, and two crew  members, a fireman and a seaman. The bodies were buried at sea from  Oceanic.
 The first body recovery ship to reach the site of the sinking, the  cable ship CS Mackay-Bennett found so many bodies that the embalming  supplies aboard were quickly exhausted. Health regulations permitted  that only embalmed bodies could be returned to port. Captain Larnder of the Mackay-Bennett and undertakers aboard  decided to preserve all bodies of First Class passengers, justifying  their decision by the need to visually identify wealthy men to resolve  any disputes over large estates. As a result the burials at sea were third class passengers and crew. Larnder himself claimed  that as a mariner, he would expect to be buried at sea.However  complaints about the burials at sea were made by families and  undertakers. Later ships such as Minia found fewer bodies, requiring fewer embalming supplies, and were able to limit burials at sea to  bodies which were too damaged to preserve.
 Bodies recovered were preserved to be taken to Halifax, the closest  city to the sinking with direct rail and steamship connections. The  Halifax coroner, John Henry Barnstead, developed a detailed system to  identify bodies and safeguard personal possessions. His identification system would later be used to identify victims of the  Halifax Explosion in 1917. Relatives from across North America came to  identify and claim bodies. A large temporary morgue was set up in a  curling rink and undertakers were called in from all across Eastern Canada to assist.Some bodies were shipped to be  buried in their hometowns across North America and Europe. About  two-thirds of the bodies were identified. Unidentified victims were  buried with simple numbers based on the order in which their bodies were discovered. The majority of recovered victims, 150 bodies,  were buried in three Halifax cemeteries, the largest being Fairview Lawn  Cemetery followed by the nearby Mount Olivet and Baron de Hirsch  cemeteries. Much floating wreckage was also recovered with the bodies, many pieces of which can be seen today in the Maritime  Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax.
 In many locations there are memorials to the dead of the Titanic.  In Southampton, England a memorial to the engineers of the Titanic may  be found in Andrews Park on Above Bar Street. Opposite the main memorial  is a memorial to Wallace Hartley and the other musicians who played on the Titanic. A memorial to the ship's five  postal workers, which says "Steadfast in Peril" is held by Southampton  Heritage Services.
 A memorial to the liner is also located on the grounds of City Hall  in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
 In the United States there are memorials to the Titanic disaster as  well. The Titanic Memorial in Washington, D.C. and a memorial to Ida  Straus at Straus Park in Manhattan, New York are two examples.
 On 15 April 2012, the 100th anniversary of the sinking of Titanic  is planned to be commemorated around the world. By that date, the  Titanic Quarter in Belfast is planned to have been completed. The area  will be regenerated and a signature memorial project unveiled to celebrate Titanic and her links with Belfast, the city that  had built the ship.
 The Balmoral, operated by Fred Olsen Cruise Lines has been  chartered by Miles Morgan Travel to follow the original route of the  Titanic, intending to stop over the point on the sea bed where she rests  on 15 April 2012.
 Before the survivors even arrived in New York, investigations were  being planned to discover what had happened, and what could be done to  prevent a recurrence. The United States Senate initiated an inquiry into  the disaster on 19 April, a day after Carpathia arrived in New York.
 The chairman of the inquiry, Senator William Alden Smith, wanted to  gather accounts from passengers and crew while the events were still  fresh in their minds. Smith also needed to subpoena the British citizens  while they were still on American soil. This prevented all surviving passengers and crew from returning to the UK  before the American inquiry, which lasted until 25 May, was completed.
 Lord Mersey was appointed to head the British Board of Trade's  inquiry into the disaster. The British inquiry took place between 2 May  and 3 July. Each inquiry took testimony from both passengers and crew of  the Titanic, crew members of Leyland Line's Californian, Captain Arthur Rostron of the Carpathia and other experts.
 The investigations found that many safety rules were simply out of  date, and new laws were recommended. Numerous safety improvements for  ocean-going vessels were implemented, including improved hull and  bulkhead design, access throughout the ship for egress of passengers, lifeboat requirements, improved life-vest design, the  holding of safety drills, better passenger notification, radio  communications laws, etc. The investigators also learned that the  Titanic had sufficient lifeboat space for all first-class passengers, but not for the lower classes. In fact, most third class passengers had  no idea where the lifeboats were, much less any way of getting up to the  higher decks where the lifeboats were stowed.
 Both inquiries into the disaster found that the SS Californian and  her captain, Stanley Lord, failed to give proper assistance to the  Titanic. Testimony before the inquiry revealed that at 22:10, the  Californian observed the lights of a ship to the south; it was later agreed between Captain Lord and Third Officer C.V. Groves  (who had relieved Lord of duty at 22:10) that this was a passenger  liner. The Californian warned the ship by radio of the pack ice because  of which the Californian had stopped for the night, but was violently rebuked by Titanic senior wireless operator, Jack  Phillips. At 23:50, the officer had watched this ship's lights flash  out, as if the ship had shut down or turned sharply, and that the port  light was now observed. Morse light signals to the ship, upon Lord's order, occurred five times between 23:30 and 01:00,  but were not acknowledged. (In testimony, it was stated that the  Californian's Morse lamp had a range of about four miles (6 km), so  could not have been seen from Titanic.)[45]
 Captain Lord had retired at 23:30; however, Second Officer Herbert  Stone, now on duty, notified Lord at 01:15 that the ship had fired a  rocket, followed by four more. Lord wanted to know if they were company  signals, that is, coloured flares used for identification. Stone said that he did not know that the rockets were all white. Captain  Lord instructed the crew to continue to signal the other vessel with  the Morse lamp, and went back to sleep. Three more rockets were observed  at 01:50 and Stone noted that the ship looked strange in the water, as if she were listing. At 02:15, Lord was  notified that the ship could no longer be seen. Lord asked again if the  lights had had any colours in them, and he was informed that they were  all white.
 The Californian eventually responded. At 05:30, Chief Officer  George Stewart awakened wireless operator Cyril Evans, informed him that  rockets had been seen during the night, and asked that he try to  communicate with any ships. The Frankfurt notified the operator of the Titanic's loss, Captain Lord was notified, and the ship  set out for assistance.
 The inquiries found that the Californian was much closer to the  Titanic than the 19.5 miles (31.4 km) that Captain Lord had believed and  that Lord should have awakened the wireless operator after the rockets  were first reported to him, and thus could have acted to prevent loss of life.
 In 1990, following the discovery of the wreck, the Marine Accident  Investigation Branch of the British Department of Transport re-opened  the inquiry to review the evidence relating to the Californian. Its  report of 1992 concluded that the Californian was farther from the Titanic than the earlier British inquiry had found, and  that the distress rockets, but not the Titanic herself, would have been  visible from the Californian.
 The idea of finding the wreck of Titanic, and even raising the ship  from the ocean floor, had been around since shortly after the ship  sank. No attempts were successful until 1 September 1985, when a joint  American-French expedition, led by Jean-Louis Michel (Ifremer) and Dr. Robert Ballard (WHOI), located the wreck using  the side-scan sonar from the research vessels Knorr and Le Suroit. In  June 1985, the French ship Le Suroit began systematically crossing the  150-square-mile target zone with her deep-search sonar. Le Suroit covered 80 percent of the zone, leaving only 20 percent  for the American ship Knorr. It was found at a depth of 2.5 miles (4  km), slightly more than 370 miles (600 km) south-east of Mistaken Point,  Newfoundland at 41°43′55″N 49°56′45″W / 41.73194°N 49.94583°W / 41.73194;  -49.94583Coordinates: 41°43′55″N 49°56′45″W / 41.73194°N 49.94583°W / 41.73194;  -49.94583, 13 miles (21 km) from fourth officer Joseph Boxhall's last position reading where Titanic was originally  thought to rest. Ballard noted that his crew had paid out 12,500 feet  (3,810 m) of the sonar's tow cable at the time of the discovery of the  wreck, giving an approximate depth of the seabed of 12,450 feet (3,795 m).Ifremer, the French partner in the search,  records a depth of 3,800 m (12,467 ft), an almost exact equivalent.These  are approximately 2.33 miles, and they are often rounded upwards to 2.5  miles or 4 km. Video cameras aboard the unmanned submersible Argo were the first to document the Titanic's visual state  on the bottom of the ocean. The submersible was based on the Knorr and  the images retrieved were featured in National Geographic by December  1985.In 1986, Ballard returned to the wreck site aboard the Atlantis II to conduct the first manned dives to the wreck in  the submersible Alvin.
 Ballard had in 1982 requested funding for the project from the US  Navy, but this was provided only on the then secret condition that the  first priority was to examine the wreckage of the sunken US nuclear  submarines USS Thresher and USS Scorpion. Only when these had been photographed did the search for Titanic begin.
 The most notable discovery the team made was that the ship had  split apart, the stern section lying 1,970 feet (600 m) from the bow  section and facing opposite directions. There had been conflicting  witness accounts of whether the ship broke apart 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  that the ship did not break apart.
 The bow section had struck the ocean floor at a position just under  the forepeak, and embedded itself 60 feet (18 m) into the silt on the  ocean floor. Although parts of the hull had buckled, the bow was mostly  intact. The collision with the ocean floor forced water out of Titanic through the hull below the well deck. One of  the steel covers (reportedly weighing approximately ten tonnes) was  blown off the side of the hull. The bow is still under tension, in  particular the heavily damaged and partially collapsed decks.
 The stern section was in much worse condition, and appeared to have  been torn apart during its descent. Unlike the bow section, which was  flooded with water before it sank, it is likely that the stern section  sank with a significant volume of air trapped inside it. As it sank, the external water pressure increased but the  pressure of the trapped air could not follow suit due to the many air  pockets in relatively sealed sections. Therefore, some areas of the  stern section's hull experienced a large pressure differential between outside and inside which possibly caused an  implosion. Further damage was caused by the sudden impact of hitting the  seabed; with little structural integrity left, the decks collapsed as  the stern hit.
 Surrounding the wreck is a large debris field with pieces of the  ship, furniture, dinnerware and personal items scattered over one square  mile (2.6 km²). Softer materials, like wood, carpet and human remains  were devoured by undersea organisms.
 Dr. Ballard and his team did not bring up any artefacts from the  site, considering this to be tantamount to grave robbing.Under  international maritime law, however, the recovery of artefacts is  necessary to establish salvage rights to a shipwreck. In the years after the find, Titanic has been the object of a number of court  cases concerning ownership of artefacts and the wreck site itself. In  1994, RMS Titanic Inc. was awarded ownership and salvaging rights of the  wreck, even though RMS Titanic Inc. and other salvaging expeditions have been criticised for taking items from the  wreck. Among the items recovered by RMS Titanic Inc. was the ship's  whistle, which was brought to the surface in 1992 and placed in the  company's travelling exhibition. It has been operated only twice since, using compressed air rather than steam, because of its  fragility.
 Approximately 6,000 artefacts have been removed from the wreck.  Many of these were put on display at the National Maritime Museum in  Greenwich, England, and later as part of a travelling museum exhibit.
 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 steel since the ship sank, but because of the extra damage visitors have caused the 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."
 Ballard's book Return to Titanic, published by the National  Geographic Society, includes photographs depicting the deterioration of  the promenade deck and damage caused by submersibles landing on the  ship. The mast has almost completely deteriorated and has been stripped of its bell and brass light. Other damage includes a  gash on the bow section where block letters once spelled Titanic, part  of the brass telemotor which once held the ship's wooden wheel is now  twisted and the crow's nest is completely deteriorated.
 Titanic's rediscovery in 1985 launched a debate over ownership of  the wreck and the valuable items inside. On 7 June 1994 RMS Titanic  Inc., a subsidiary of Premier Exhibitions Inc., was awarded ownership  and salvaging rights by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. (See Admiralty law) Since  1987, RMS Titanic Inc. and her successors have conducted seven  expeditions and salvaged over 5,500 historic objects. The biggest single  recovered object was a 17-ton section of the hull, recovered in 1998. Many of these items are part of travelling museum  exhibitions.
 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 relics recovered in 1987.
 In a motion filed on 12 February 2004, RMS Titanic Inc. requested  that the district court enter an order awarding it "title to all the  artifacts (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 objects recovered in 1987, but it did request that the district  court declare that, based on the French administrative action, "the artifacts raised during the 1987 expedition are  independently owned by RMST." Following a hearing, the district court  entered an order dated 2 July 2004, in which it refused to grant comity  and recognise the 1993 decision of the French administrator, and rejected RMS Titanic Inc.'s claim that it should be awarded title to  the items recovered since 1993 under the Maritime Law of Finds.
 RMS Titanic Inc. appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for  the Fourth Circuit. In its decision of 31 January 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  artifacts", and therefore vacated that part of the court's 2 July 2004  order. In other words, according to this decision, RMS Titanic Inc. has ownership title to the objects awarded in the  French decision (valued $16.5 million earlier) and continues to be  salver-in-possession of the 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.).
 On 24 March 2009, it was revealed that the fate of 5,900 artefacts  retrieved from the wreck will rest with a US District Judge's decision.  The ruling will decide whether the artefacts should be placed in a  public exhibit or in the hands of private collectors. The judge will also rule on the RMS Titanic Inc.'s degree of ownership  of the wreck as well as establishing a monitoring system to check future  activity upon the wreck site.
 It is well established that the sinking of the Titanic was the  result of an iceberg collision which fatally punctured the ship's front  five watertight compartments. Less obvious however are the reasons for  the collision itself (which occurred on a clear night, and after the ship had received numerous ice warnings), the  factors underlying the sheer extent of the damage sustained by the ship,  and the reasons for the extreme loss of life.
 Originally, historians thought the iceberg had cut a gash into  Titanic's hull. Since the part of the ship that the iceberg damaged is  now buried, scientists used sonar to examine the area and discovered the  iceberg had caused the hull to buckle, allowing water to enter Titanic between her steel plates.
 The steel plate used for Titanic hull was of 1 to 1½ inch (2.5 to  3.8 cm) thickness. A detailed analysis of small pieces of the steel  plating from the Titanic's wreck hull found that it was of a metallurgy  that loses its elasticity and becomes brittle in cold or icy water, leaving it vulnerable to dent-induced ruptures.  The pieces of steel were found to have very high content of phosphorus  and sulphur (4× and 2× respectively, compared with modern steel), with  manganese-sulphur ratio of 6.8:1 (compared with over 200:1 ratio for modern steels). High content of phosphorus  initiates fractures, sulphur forms grains of iron sulphide that  facilitate propagation of cracks, and lack of manganese makes the steel  less ductile. The recovered samples were found to be undergoing ductile-brittle transition in temperatures of 90 °F (32 °C) for  longitudinal samples and 133 °F (56 °C) for transversal samples,  compared with transition temperature of −17 °F (−27 °C) common for  modern steels: modern steel would only become so brittle in between −76 °F and −94 °F (−60 °C and −70 °C). The Titanic's steel, although  "probably the best plain carbon ship plate available at the time", was  thus unsuitable for use at low temperatures. The anisotropy was probably  caused by hot rolling influencing the orientation of the sulphide stringer (defect) inclusions. The steel was probably  produced in the acid-lined, open-hearth furnaces in Glasgow, which would  explain the high content of phosphorus and sulphur, even for the time.
 Another factor was the rivets holding the hull together, which were  much more fragile than once thought.[93][94] From 48 rivets recovered  from the hull of the Titanic, scientists found many to be riddled with  high concentrations of slagg. A glassy residue of smelting, slag can make rivets brittle and prone to fracture. Records  from the archive of the builder show that the ship's builder ordered  No. 3 iron bar, known as "best"—not No. 4, known as "best-best", for its  rivets, although shipbuilders at that time typically used No. 4 iron for rivets. The company also had shortages of  skilled riveters, particularly important for hand riveting, which took  great skill: the iron had to be heated to a precise colour and shaped by  the right combination of hammer blows. The company used steel rivets, which were stronger and could be installed by  machine, on the central hull, where stresses were expected to be  greatest, using iron rivets for the stern and bow.Rivets of "best best"  iron had a tensile strength approximately 80% of that of steel, "best" iron some 73%. Despite this, the most extensive  and finally fatal damage Titanic sustained at boiler rooms No. 5 and 6  was done in an area where steel rivets were used.
 Although Titanic's rudder met the mandated dimensional requirements  for a ship her size, the rudder's design was hardly state-of-the-art.  According to research by BBC History: "Her stern, with its high graceful  counter and long thin rudder, was an exact copy of an 18th-century sailing ship...a perfect example of the lack of  technical development. Compared with the rudder design of the Cunarders,  Titanic's was a fraction of the size. No account was made for advances  in scale and little thought was given to how a ship, 852 feet in length, might turn in an emergency or avoid  collision with an iceberg. This was Titanic's Achilles heel." A more  objective assessment of the rudder provision compares it with the legal  requirement of the time: the area had to be within a range of 1.5% and 5% of the hull's underwater profile and, at 1.9%,  the Titanic was at the low end of the range. However, the tall rudder  design was more effective at the vessel's designed cruising speed;  short, square rudders were more suitable for low-speed manoeuvring.
 Perhaps more fatal to the design of the Titanic was her triple  screw engine configuration, which had reciprocating steam engines  driving her wing propellers, and a steam turbine driving her centre  propeller. The reciprocating engines were reversible, while the turbine was not. According to subsequent evidence from Fourth  Officer Joseph Boxhall, who entered the bridge just after the collision,  First Officer Murdoch had set the engine room telegraph to reverse the  engines to avoid the iceberg, thus handicapping the turning ability of the ship. Because the centre turbine could not  reverse during the "full speed astern" manoeuvre, it was simply stopped.  Since the centre propeller was positioned forward of the ship's rudder,  the effectiveness of that rudder would have been greatly reduced: had Murdoch simply turned the ship while  maintaining her forward speed, the Titanic might have missed the iceberg  with metres to spare.Another survivor, Frederick Scott, an engine room  worker, gave contrary evidence: he recalled that at his station in the engine room all four sets of telegraphs had changed  to "Stop", but not until after the collision.
 It has been speculated that the ship could have been saved if she  had rammed the iceberg head on. It is hypothesised that if Titanic had  not altered her course at all and instead collided head first with the  iceberg, the impact would have been taken by the naturally stronger bow and damage would have affected only one or  two forward compartments. This would have disabled her, and possibly  caused casualties among the passengers near the bow, but probably would  not have resulted in sinking since Titanic was designed to float with the first four compartments flooded. Instead, the  glancing blow to the starboard side caused buckling in the hull plates  along the first five compartments, more than the ship's designers had  anticipated.
 The weather conditions for the Atlantic at the time of the  collision were unusual because there was a flat calm sea, without wind  or swell. In addition, it was a moonless night. Under normal sea  conditions in the area of the collision, waves would have broken over the base of an iceberg, assisting in the location of  icebergs even on a moonless night.
 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. At the time it was  common (but not universal) practice to maintain normal speed in areas  where icebergs were expected. It was thought 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 Smith to increase speed in order to make an early landfall, and it is a common feature in  popular representations of the disaster, such as the 1997 film,  Titanic.There is little evidence for this having happened, and it is  disputed by many.
 No single aspect regarding the huge loss of life from the Titanic  disaster has provoked more outrage than the fact that the ship did not  carry enough lifeboats for all her passengers and crew. This is  partially due to the fact that the law, dating from 1894, required a minimum of 16 lifeboats for ships of over 10,000 tons.  This law had been established when the largest ship afloat was RMS  Lucania. Since then the size of ships had increased rapidly, meaning  that Titanic was legally required to carry only enough lifeboats for less than half of its capacity. Actually, the White Star  Line exceeded the regulations by including four more collapsible  lifeboats—this gave a total capacity of 1,178 people (still only around a  third of Titanic's total capacity of 3,547).
 In the busy North Atlantic sea lanes it was expected that in the  event of a serious accident to a ship, 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 its rescuers. Full provision of lifeboats was not considered necessary for  this.
 It was anticipated during the design of the ship 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 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  Merchantile Marine, rejected 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. Afterward, the crew worked quite efficiently, taking a total of 80  minutes to lower all 16 lifeboats. Since the crew was divided into two  teams, one on each side of the ship, 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.[citation  needed] The most notable being Lifeboat #1 with a capacity of 40,  launched at 00:40 with only 12 people aboard. This was partly due to at the point of launch, Titanic did not appear to be in  imminent danger and hence passengers were likely to be reluctant to  leave the apparent safety of the ship. The idea that the ship was  unsinkable is unlikely to be the reason of the low utilisation of early life boats.
 A number of alternative theories diverging from the standard  explanation for the Titanic's demise have been brought forth since  shortly after the sinking. Some of these include a coal fire aboard  ship, or the Titanic hitting pack ice rather than an iceberg. In the realm of the supernatural, it has been proposed that the Titanic  sank due to a mummy's curse.
 Contrary to popular mythology, the Titanic was never described as  "unsinkable", without qualification, until after she sank.There are  three trade publications (one of which was probably never published)  that describe the Titanic as unsinkable, prior to her sinking, but there is no evidence that the notion of the Titanic's  unsinkability had entered public consciousness until after the sinking.
 Committee, meaning that it could stay afloat with any two adjoining  out of its 16 main compartments in free communication with the sea. The  height of the bulkhead deck above the water line in flooded condition  was well above the requirements and the vessel indeed would have been able to float with three adjoining compartments  flooded in 11 out of 14 possible combinations.
 The first unqualified assertion of the Titanic's unsinkability  appears the day after the tragedy (on 16 April 1912) in The New York  Times, which quotes Philip A. S. Franklin, vice president of the White  Star Line as saying, when informed of the tragedy,
 I thought her unsinkable and I based by  opinion on the best expert  advice available. I do not understand it.
 This comment was seized upon by the press and the idea that the  White Star Line had previously declared the Titanic to be unsinkable  (without qualification) gained immediate and widespread currency.
 An often-quoted story that has been blurred between fact and  fiction states that the first person to receive news of the sinking was  David Sarnoff, who would later lead media giant RCA. In modified  versions of this legend, Sarnoff was not the first to hear the news (though Sarnoff willingly promoted this notion), but he  and others did staff the Marconi wireless station (telegraph) atop the  Wanamaker Department Store in New York City, and for three days, relayed  news of the disaster and names of survivors to people waiting outside. However, even this version lacks support in  contemporary accounts. No newspapers of the time, for example, mention  Sarnoff. Given the absence of primary evidence, the story of Sarnoff  should be properly regarded as a legend.
 Despite popular belief, the sinking of 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, then began to intersperse SOS with the  traditional CQD call.
 One of the most famous stories of Titanic is of the band. On 15  April Titanic's eight-member band, led by Wallace Hartley, had assembled  in the first-class lounge in an effort to keep passengers calm and  upbeat. Later they moved on to the forward half of the boat deck. The band continued playing, even when it became  apparent the ship was going to sink, and all members perished.
 There has been much speculation about what their last song was. A  first-class Canadian passenger, Mrs. Vera Dick, alleged that the final  song played was the hymn "Nearer, My God, to Thee". Hartley reportedly  once said to a friend if he were on a sinking ship, "Nearer, My God, to Thee" would be one of the songs he would play.  But Walter Lord's book A Night to Remember popularised wireless  operator Harold Bride's 1912 account (New York Times) that he heard the  song "Autumn" before the ship sank. It is considered Bride either meant the hymn called "Autumn" or waltz "Songe d'Automne"  but neither were in the White Star Line songbook for the band. Bride is  the only witness who was close enough to the band, as he floated off the  deck before the ship went down, to be considered reliable—Mrs. Dick had left by lifeboat an hour and 20 minutes earlier  and could not possibly have heard the band's final moments. The notion  that the band played "Nearer, My God, to Thee" as a swan song is  possibly a myth originating from the wrecking of the SS Valencia, which had received wide press coverage in Canada in 1906  and so may have influenced Mrs. Dick's recollection. Also, there are  two, very different, musical settings for "Nearer, My God, to Thee": one  is popular in Britain, and the other is popular in the U.S., and the British melody might sound like the other hymn  ("Autumn"). The film A Night to Remember (1958) uses the British  setting; while the 1953 film Titanic, with Clifton Webb, uses the  American setting.
 Another often cited Titanic legend concerns perished first class  passenger William Thomas Stead. According to this folklore, Stead had,  through precognitive insight, foreseen his own death on the Titanic.  This is apparently suggested in two fictional sinking stories, which he penned decades earlier. The first, (Pall Mall Gazette,  22 March 1886) tells of a mail steamer's collision with another ship,  resulting in high loss of life due to lack of lifeboats.
 In 1892, Stead published a story called From the Old World to the  New, in which a White Star Line vessel, the Majestic, rescues survivors  of another ship that collided with an iceberg.
 When Titanic sank, claims were made that a curse existed on the  ship. The press quickly linked the "Titanic curse" with the White Star  Line practice of not christening their ships (notwithstanding the  opening scene of the film A Night to Remember).
 One of the most widely spread legends linked directly into the  sectarianism of the city of Belfast, where the ship was built. It was  suggested that the ship was given the number 390904 which, when read  backwards, was claimed to spell "no pope", a sectarian slogan attacking Roman Catholics that was (and is) widely used  provocatively by extreme Protestants in Northern Ireland, where the ship  was built. In the extreme sectarianism of north-east Ireland (Northern  Ireland itself did not exist until 1920), the ship's sinking, though mourned, was alleged to be on account of the sectarian  anti-Catholicism of her manufacturers, the Harland and Wolff company,  which had an almost exclusively Protestant workforce and an alleged  record of hostility towards Catholics. (Harland and Wolff did have a record of hiring few Catholics; whether that was  through policy or because the company's shipyard in Belfast's bay was  located in almost exclusively Protestant East Belfast—through which few  Catholics would dare to travel—or a mixture of both, is a matter of dispute.)
 The "no pope" story is in fact an urban legend. RMS Olympic and  Titanic were assigned the yard numbers 400 and 401 respectively. The  source of the story may have been from reports by dockworkers in  Queenstown of anti-Catholic graffiti that they found on Titanic's coalbunkers when they were loading coal.
 William Thomas Stead (July 5, 1849 - April 15, 1912) was a British  journalist. He was born in Embleton, Northumberland, the son of a  Congregational minister. He died on the RMS Titanic when it struck an  iceberg and sank.
 He attended Silcoates School in Wakefield, but was early  apprenticed in a merchant's office at Newcastle-on-Tyne. He soon  gravitated into journalism, and in 1871 became editor of the Darlington  Northern Echo. In 1880 he went to London to be assistant editor of the Pall Mall Gazette under John Morley. When Morley was elected to  Parliament, he became editor (1883-1889).
 He made a feature of the Pall Mall extras, and his enterprise and  originality exercised a potent influence on contemporary journalism and  politics. He also introduced the interview, creating a new dimension in  British journalism when he interviewed General Gordon in 1884. He distinguished himself for his vigorous handling of  public affairs, and his brilliant modernity in the presentation of news.  However he is also credited as originating the modern journalistic  technique of creating a news event rather than just reporting it, as his most famous 'investigation', the Eliza  Armstrong case was to demonstrate.
 In 1885, Stead entered upon a crusade against child pros  titution  by publishing a series of articles entitled The Maiden Tribute of Modern  Babylon. In order to demonstrate the truth of his revelations, he  arranged the 'purchase' of the thirteen-year-old daughter of a chimney sweep, Eliza Armstrong.
 Though his action is thought to have furthered the passing of the  Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885, it made his position on the paper  impossible. In fact, his successful demonstration of the trade's  existence led to his conviction and a three-month term of imprisonment at Coldbath Fields and Holloway prisons. He was  convicted on grounds that he had failed to first secure permission for  the "purchase" from the girl's father.
 In 1886, he started a campaign against Sir Charles Dilke, 2nd  Baronet over his nominal exoneration in the Crawford scandal. The  campaign ultimately contributed to Dilke's misguided attempt to clear  his name and consequent ruin.
 On leaving the Pall Mall he founded the monthly Review of Reviews  (1890), and his abundant energy and facile pen found scope in many other  directions in journalism of an advanced humanitarian type.
 He started cheap reprints (Penny Poets and Prose Classics, etc.),  conducted a spiritualistic organ, called Borderland (1893-1897), in  which he gave full play to his interest in psychical research; and  became an enthusiastic supporter of the peace movement, and of many other movements, popular and unpopular, in which he  impressed the public generally as an extreme visionary, though his  practical energy was recognized by a considerable circle of admirers and  pupils.
 With all his unpopularity, and all the suspicion and opposition  engendered by his methods, his personality remained a forceful one both  in public and private life. He was an early imperialist dreamer, whose  influence on Cecil Rhodes in South Africa remained of primary importance; and many politicians and statesmen, who on most  subjects were completely at variance with his ideas, nevertheless owed  something to them. Rhodes made him his confidant, and was inspired in  his will by his suggestions; and Stead was intended to be one of Rhodes's executors. At the time of the Second Boer War he  threw himself into the Boer cause and attacked the government with  characteristic violence. His name was struck out (see his Last Will and  Testament of C. J. Rhodes, 1902).
 The number of his publications gradually became very large, as he  wrote with facility and sensational fervour on all sorts of subjects,  from The Truth about Russia (1888) to If Christ Came to Chicago! (1894),  and from Mrs Booth (1900) to The Americanization of the World (1902).
 Stead was a true pacifist and campaigner for peace. He extensively  covered the Hague Peace Conference of 1899 and 1907 (for the last he  printed a daily paper during the four month conference). He has a bust  at the Peace Palace in The Hague. Stead was an Esperantist, and often supported the language in a monthly column in  Review of Reviews
 Stead claimed to be in receipt of messages from the spirit world,  and to be able to produce automatic writing. His spirit contact was  alleged to be a girl named Julia. In 1909 he established Julia's Bureau  where inquirers could obtain information about the spirit world from a group of resident mediums. In many of his  spiritualist lectures and writings Stead sketched pictures of ocean  liners and himself drowning.
 After his death, a group of his admirers founded a Spiritualist  organization in Chicago, Illinois called the William T. Stead Memorial  Center. The resident Pastor and Medium was Mrs. Cecil M. Cook. Most of  the many books published by the Center were written by the Wisconsin-born journalist and author Lloyd Kenyon Jones.
 Stead boarded the RMS Titanic for a visit to the USA to take part  in a peace congress at Carnegie Hall at the request of William Howard  Taft. After the ship struck the iceberg, Stead helped several women and  children into the lifeboats. After all the boats had gone, Stead went into the 1st Class Smoking Room, where he was last  seen sitting in a leather chair and reading a book.
 A later sighting of Stead, by survivor Philip Mock, has him  clinging to a raft with John Jacob Astor IV."Their feet became frozen,"  reported Mock, "and they were compelled to release their hold. Both were  drowned." William Stead's body was not recovered.
 Stead had made two possible premonitions concerning the Titanic. On  22 March 1886, he published an article named "How the Mail Steamer Went  Down in Mid-Atlantic, by a Survivor", where a steamer collides with  another ship, with high loss of life due to lack of lifeboats. Stead had added "This is exactly what might take  place and will take place if liners are sent to sea short of boats". In  1892, Stead published a story called From the Old World to the New,in  which a White Star Line vessel, the Majestic, rescues survivors of another ship that collided with an iceberg.
 In 2001, The W.T. Stead Resource Site, a not-for-profit reference  website devoted to the study of W.T. Stead was launched to encourage and  advance debate on both Stead himself and the issues in which he became  embroiled. It is currently the largest online database of material on W.T. Stead. The site is utilised by a wide  variety of learning institutions, including libraries, colleges and  universities within the UK and around the world.
 In 2009, the British Library selected the W.T. Stead Resource Site  as a suitable candidate for its web archiving programme, in which  websites that are considered a valuable contribution to UK documentary  heritage are permanently archived for future generations.
 The SS Valencia was an iron-hulled passenger steamer wrecked off  the coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia in 1906. Built in 1882  by William Cramp and Sons, she was a 1,598 ton vessel, 252 feet (77 m)  in length. Some consider the wreck of the Valencia to be the worst maritime disaster on the southwest coast of Vancouver  Island, an area so treacherous it was known to mariners as the Graveyard  of the Pacific.
 The Valencia normally served the California–Alaska route. She was  not equipped with a double bottom and, like other early iron steamers,  her hull compartmentalization was primitive.In January 1906, however,  she was temporarily diverted to the San Francisco–Seattle route to take over from the SS City of Puebla, which was undergoing  repairs in San Francisco. The weather in San Francisco was clear, and  the Valencia set off on January 20 at 11:20 AM with nine officers, 56  crew members and at least 108 passengers aboard.As she passed by Cape Mendocino in the early morning hours of January 21,  the weather took a turn for the worse. Visibility was low and a strong  wind started to blow from the southeast.
 Unable to make celestial observations, the ship's crew was forced  to rely on dead reckoning to determine their position. Out of sight of  land, and with strong winds and currents, the Valencia overshot the  entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca by more than 20 miles (30 km). Shortly before midnight on January 22, she struck  a reef near Pachena Point on the southwest coast of Vancouver Island.
 Immediately after the collision, the captain ordered her engines  reversed. As soon as she was clear of the rocks, crew members reported a  large gash in the hull into which water was pouring rapidly. To prevent  her from sinking, the captain ordered her run aground, and she was driven into the rocks again. She was left  stranded in sight of the shore, separated from it by 50 metres of heavy  surf.
 In the ensuing confusion, six of the ship's seven lifeboats were  lowered into the water against the captain's orders, all of them  improperly manned. Three flipped while being lowered, spilling their  occupants into the ocean; of the three that were successfully launched, two capsized and one disappeared. The scene at the wreck was  horrific, as one of the few survivors, Chief Freight Clerk Frank Lehn  recounted:
 "Screams of women and children mingled in an awful chorus with the  shrieking of the wind, the dash of rain, and the roar of the breakers.  As the passengers rushed on deck they were carried away in bunches by  the huge waves that seemed as high as the ship's mastheads. The ship began to break up almost at once and the women and  children were lashed to the rigging above the reach of the sea. It was a  pitiful sight to see frail women, wearing only night dresses, with bare  feet on the freezing ratlines, trying to shield children in their arms from the icy wind and rain".
 Only 12 men made it to shore, and of those three were washed away  by the waves after landing. The remaining nine men scaled the cliffs and  found a telegraph line strung between the trees. They followed the line  through thick forest until they came upon a lineman's cabin, from which they were able to summon help. These nine  men, who became known as the 'Bunker' Party, after the survivor Frank  Bunker, eventually received much criticism for not attempting to reach  the top of the nearby cliff, where they might have received and made fast, the cable fired from the Lyle gun on board  the Valencia.
 Meanwhile, the ship's boatswain and a crew of volunteers had been  lowered in the last remaining lifeboat with instructions to find a safe  landing place and return to the cliffs to receive a lifeline from the  ship. Upon landing, they discovered a trail and a sign reading "Three miles to Cape Beale." Abandoning the original  plan, they decided to head toward the lighthouse on the cape, where they  arrived after 2 ½ hours of hiking. The lighthouse keeper phoned  Bamfield to report the wreck, but the news had already arrived and been passed on to Victoria.This last group of survivors was  "well-nigh crazed" by their last sight of the remaining stranded  passengers
 "the brave faces looking at them over the broken rail of a wreck  and of the echo of that great hymn sung by the women who, looking death  smilingly in the face, were able in the fog and mist and flying spray to  remember: Nearer, My God, to thee."
 Once word of the disaster reached Victoria, three ships were  dispatched to rescue the survivors. The largest was the passenger liner  SS Queen; accompanying her were the salvage steamer Salvor and the tug  Czar. Another steamship, the SS City of Topeka, was later sent from Seattle with a doctor, nurses, medical supplies,  members of the press, and a group of experienced seamen. On the morning  of January 24, the Queen arrived at the site of the wreck, but was  unable to approach due to the severity of the weather and lack of depth charts. Seeing that it would not be possible to  approach the wreck from the sea, the Salvor and Czar set off to Bamfield  to arrange for an overland rescue party.
 Upon seeing the Queen, the Valencia's crew launched the ship's two  remaining life rafts, but the majority of the passengers decided to  remain on the ship, presumably believing that a rescue party would soon  arrive. Approximately one hour later, the City of Topeka arrived and, like the Queen, was unable to approach the wreck.  The Topeka cruised the waters off the coast for several hours searching  for survivors, and eventually came upon one of the life rafts carrying  18 men. No other survivors were found, and at dark the captain of the Topeka called off the search. The second life  raft eventually drifted ashore on an island in Barkley Sound, where the  four survivors were found by the island's First Nations and taken to a  village near Ucluelet.
 When the overland party arrived at the cliffs above the site of the  wreck, they found dozens of passengers clinging to the rigging and the  few unsubmerged parts of the Valencia's hull. Without any remaining  lifelines, however, they could do nothing to help the survivors, and within hours a large wave washed the wreckage  off the rocks and into the ocean. Every remaining passenger drowned.
 Within days of the disaster, the US Marine Inspection Service  launched an investigation into the incident. A second investigation was  launched by President Theodore Roosevelt. Its purpose was twofold: one,  to determine the causes of the disaster, and two, to recommend how to avoid such loss of life in the future.
 The investigation ran from February 14 to March 1, 1906, and the  final report was published on April 14, 1906. The reports agreed on the  causes of the disaster – navigational mistakes and poor weather. Safety  equipment was, for the most part, in working order, but lifeboat drills had not been carried out. According to the  report, the crew of the rescuing vessels did as much to help the  Valencia as could be expected under the circumstances.
 The loss of life was attributed to a series of unfortunate  coincidences, aggravated by a lack of lifesaving infrastructure along  Vancouver Island's coast. The federal report called for the construction  of a lighthouse between Cape Beale and Carmanah Point, and the creation of a coastal lifesaving trail with regularly spaced  shelters for shipwrecked sailors. It also recommended that surfboats be  stationed at Tofino and Ucluelet and that a well-equipped steamboat be  stationed at Bamfield. The Canadian government immediately set to work building a lighthouse and trail; in 1908, the  Pachena Point Lighthouse was lit, and in 1911 work on the trail – later  known as the West Coast Trail – was completed.
 Estimates of the number of lives lost in the disaster vary widely;  some sources list it at 117, while others claim it was as high as  181.According to the federal report, the official death toll was 136  persons. Only 37 men survived, and every woman and child on the Valencia died in the disaster.
 In 1933, 27 years after the disaster, the Valencia's lifeboat #5  was found floating in Barkley Sound. Remarkably, it was in good  condition, with much of the original paint remaining. The boat's  nameplate is now on display in the Maritime Museum of British Columbia.
 The Valencia's dramatic end has made it the subject of several  local rumours and ghost stories. Five months after the incident, a local  fisherman claimed to have seen a lifeboat with eight skeletons in a  nearby sea cave, but the party dispatched to investigate was unable to locate the cave.
 In 1910, the Seattle Times reported that sailors claimed to have  seen a phantom ship resembling the Valencia near Pachena Point.
 Sidney Leslie Goodwin (9 September 1910 – 15 April 1912) was a  19-month-old English boy who died during the sinking of the RMS Titanic.  His unidentified body was recovered after the sinking, and for decades  referred to as the unknown child; the body was identified as that of Goodwin in 2007. He is the only member of his  family whose body has been recovered and subsequently identified.
 Sidney Leslie Goodwin was born on 9 September 1910 in Melksham,  Wiltshire, England. He was the youngest child born to Frederick Joseph  Goodwin and his wife Augusta (née Tyler). He had older siblings named  Lillian Amy, Charles Edward, William Frederick, Jessie Allis, and Harold Victor
 Frederick's brother, Thomas, had already left England and was  living in Niagara Falls, New York. Thomas wrote to his brother, telling  him about the opening of a power station there. It has been speculated  that the famed Schoellkopf Hydroelectric Power Station (station A), due to open in 1912, would have been Frederick's  employer had he lived. Frederick, an electrician, packed up his wife and  six children, Lillian, 16; Charles, 14; William, 11; Jessie, 10;  Harold, 9 and Sidney, 19 months, to prepare for the move. They booked third class passage on a small steamer out of  Southampton, but due to the coal strike that year, the voyage was  cancelled and the family was transferred to the RMS Titanic. The family  boarded the Titanic in Southampton as third-class passengers.
 Not much is known about the family's activities during the voyage,  except that the family was separated by sax in opposite ends of the  ship, Frederick and his older sons in the bow, and Augusta with Sidney  and the girls in the stern. Harold Goodwin also met and spent some time with Frank Goldsmith. Frank Goldsmith survived.
 By the time the family received a warning about the iceberg  collision, all the lifeboats had been launched. The entire family  perished in the sinking.
 In his book, The Night Lives On, historian Walter Lord devoted a  chapter ("What Happened to the Goodwins?") to the family, using the fact  that the Goodwins were English to challenge the White Star Line's  implication that such high numbers of third class passengers perished because they could not understand the English  language
 The body of a fair-haired toddler was the fourth pulled from the  ocean by the recovery ship CS Mackay-Bennett, on 17 April 1912. The  description read:
 The sailors aboard the Mackay-Bennett, who were very upset by the  discovery of the unknown boy's body, paid for a monument and he was  buried on 4 May 1912 with a copper pendant placed in his coffin by  recovery sailors that read "Our Babe."Before 2002 (when he was first, though mistakenly, identified through DNA testing) he was  known simply as "The Unknown Child". The body, identified as that of a  child around two years old, was initially believed to be that of either a  two-year-old Swedish boy, Gösta Pålsson; or a two-year-old Irish boy, Eugene Rice, two other fair-haired toddlers  who perished in the disaster.
 The American PBS television series Secrets of the Dead initially  identified the body as Eino Viljami Panula, a 13-month old Finnish baby,  based on dental records; however, Canadian researchers at Lakehead  University in Thunder Bay discovered a test on the child's HVS1, a type of mitochondrial DNA molecule, did not match  the Panula family.DNA extracted from the exhumed remains and DNA  provided by a surviving maternal relative helped positively match the  remains to Goodwin, and the re-identification was announced on 30 July 2007.
 Although the bodies of two other children, both older boys, were  recovered, it was Goodwin who came to be a symbol of all the children  lost in the disaster. He is buried in Fairview Cemetery, Halifax, Nova  Scotia. A pair of his shoes were donated to Halifax's Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in 2002 by the descendants of a Halifax  police officer who guarded the bodies and clothing of Titanic victims.
  

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