R.M.S. Titanic – The Lure of a Legend.

Ninety-seven years ago, a ship sailed off into history. Ninety-seven years ago, it left the port of Southampton, England, on a sunny, April day at twelve noon. Ninety-seven years ago on the 10th of April, 1912 at midday, the R.M.S. Titanic steamed off into history, carrying 2,228 passengers and crew on a transatlantic crossing which has fascinated the world ever since.

In many respects, the R.M.S. Titanic was like any other ship on the high seas, during the period known as the ‘Belle Epoque’, which is a French term meaning ‘Beautiful Era’. In many respects, the Titanic differed very little from other ships then ploughing through the waves around the world. She was made of iron, she was held together by a hefty three million rivets, she was steam-powered, with coal-fired boilers and she carried all kinds of passengers, both rich and poor. Her sinking was no more interesting than any other sinking, one could argue. The Titanic isn’t even the ship with the highest death-rate from a single sinking! Indeed, when the Titanic set sail on the 10th of April, most people didn’t really see it as anything remarkable or special. The RMS Olympic, the Titanic’s older sister was seen as something special, because she was the first of a new class of ocean-liners. Not many people other than those who made the Titanic, really thought that it should be given any more attention than any other ship. Why then do we, nearly a full century after it vanished under the sea, still continue to hold a fascination with what is now a rusting hull stuck two and a half miles down at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean? There are thousands, millions of articles, books, novels, magazines and films about this ship, but why?

The Lure of the Titanic.

In its day, the Titanic was not seen as something amazingly special. And even now, after all the media hype, some people still don’t see what all the fuss is about, and yet there is still another group of people who won’t shut up about it. Why?

The Titanic fascinates so many people, entrances them, excites them and interests them so deeply purely because of what the ship…was!

In many respects, the R.M.S. Titanic was the embodiment of the Edwardian Age, all hammered, beaten and riveted into reality. The Titanic reflected life as it really was back in the early 1910s. Sailing onboard her decks, sleeping in her cabins and eating in her dining-rooms was a layer-cake slice sample of Edwardian society. Filling the ship’s rooms, offices and running through the walls, under the floors and over the ceilings, were all the latest inventions which had flowered at the start of the 20th century. The Titanic catered for everyone and boasted of everything. In a day and age when most people still sent letters, the Titanic had telephones and a switchboard. In a day when the speed of a train was the fastest way a message got from A to B, wireless radio could send messages across the ocean in a matter of seconds! When previously it took a month to sail across the Atlantic, it now took one week. When most people were still using gas lighting, the Titanic had fully-operational electric lights in every single room and cabin. The ship was seen as the total embodiment of all that was advanced and magnificent. It was proof to everyone that the Edwardian Era had reached a scientific and technological peak, never before seen by humankind.

What the Titanic Represented.

To the people who built her, who fitted her out, who booked cabins on her, who walked her decks, the Titanic represented…progress. Progress in science, arts, engineering, culture and technology. Unfortunately, it also represented stereotypical Edwardian-era arrogance. The arrogance of mankind, as it was thought back then, that they had triumphed over everything, that they had triumphed over nature, and that they had now created something which was truly indestructable. The ship was modern, fast, luxurious, comfortable and unsinkable.

Well no.

The Titanic’s designers, shipbuilders or owners never actually said that the Titanic was unsinkable. It’s never mentioned anywhere. The claim of ‘usinkability’ came from a popular magazine of the period known as ‘The Shipbuilder’. The Shipbuilder, as the name suggests, followed all the major shipping-news, much like how a magazine like ‘Wheels’ or ‘Top Gear’ would follow all the latest automobile news today. The Shipbuilder toted the Titanic as ‘practically unsinkable’. Practically. Not literally, practically. Unfortunately, the ocean-going public of 1912 took the ‘practically unsinkable’, removed the ‘practically’ and changed it for ‘literally’.

High-Tech Titanic.

One of the biggest lures of the Titanic was the technology and the passenger ammenities that were available onboard. The Titanic boasted electric lights in all her cabins, it boasted electric heaters in all the staterooms. It had a 5 kilowatt wireless radio-system capable of transmitting messages to a radius of 400 miles. On a clear night, this range could triple to 1,200 miles! The Titanic boasted a 50-telephone switchboard, a state-of-the-art infirmary with an operating-theatre and four…yes four elevators! Three were allowed to be used by first class passengers, and one by second class passengers. Third class passengers would have to leg it. The Titanic also featured a full gymnasium and a fully-equipped darkroom, for any amatuer photographers onboard.

A Slice of Life.

If the Titanic said anything about society in the 1910s, it showed that the strict class-divisions which had been a key part of life during the Georgian and Victorian eras, was still well alive in the 20th century. The Titanic’s passengers were a real cross-section of Edwardian society. You had everyone from wealthy industrialists and businessmen such as John Jacob Astor, Benjamin Guggemheim and the Strauses, you had well-to-do gentlemen like Lawrence Beesley, then a young teacher and author in his mid 30s and you had poor, humble passengers travelling across a vast ocean to start a new life, like the Goldsmith Family, with Mr. Frank Goldsmith Snr., his wife and his little boy, also named Frank, who was aged just nine.

 

6 thoughts on “R.M.S. Titanic – The Lure of a Legend.

  1. minkit says:

    I loved the titanic article. That ship was always a favorite subject of mine– I have read many books and seen several of the movies based on her. I just have a few questions—

    1. Do you know how much a first-class passenger paid for their cabins?

    2. Back then, why was it neccessary to split passengers into classes? (1st, 2nd, 3rd)

    all in all, job well done!!

     
    • scheong says:

      Hey Minkit,

      I’ll be writing more stuff on the Titanic in the near future. Keep reading! Also, it wasn’t ‘necessary’ to segregate everyone. It was merely how society acted at the time.

       
  2. Webber says:

    The few most exclusive suites in first class cost over $4,000. They had two bedrooms, two dressing rooms, a parlor, private bath and private deck. There was a range of prices for other types of first-class accommodations, depending on their size, amenities, etc.

    Also, there is always a range of classes in different modes of travel, even today. It’s just a matter of common sense, to allow people on different budgets to book what they can afford. Think economy, business, and first class airline bookings. Also, various classes of tickets is common in railway travel all over Europe, Asia, and US. As they say, you get what you pay for and naturally the more you can pay the better you get. The Titanic was offering the opportunity to all classes of people and even its third class was far beyond what would normally be considered third class. It was actually like first class in many other ships of the era.

     
  3. Webber says:

    Just wanted to also note a couple of small errors in your articles here:

    1. The New Jersey town off the coast of which the Morro Castle burned is called ASBURY Park, not ASHbury Park. Having lived there many years, I know for certain this is the case. You can also look it up on google.

    2. In your Titanic timeline above under Sunday, April 14, 10pm, you say it was the end of the fourth day of the voyage. But actually it was the FIFTH day, since Titanic left Southampton, England, on Wed., April 10. It went to Queenstown, Ireland, and left from there on Thursday. But most people did get on the ship and begin their journey on Wed.

     
    • scheong says:

      Hi Webber, thanks for your reply. I will fix the errors as soon as I can, but that will have to wait a few days at the moment. I’ll refer back to your comment later when I have more time to spare, and fix them.

       
  4. Julian says:

    I loved the article. Thank you for writing that tremedous amount of information so everybody could read. I also liked the article of the Titanic.

     

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