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Through the Ages - The Titanic
Youve sung the song. Youve seen
the movie. Now its time for the tragic, true story of the RMS Titanic.
A Game of Monopoly
At the beginning of the 20th century two British shipping companiesWhite
Star and Cunardwere battling for the leading position in the passenger shipping
business.
In 1902 White Star was purchased by the American-owned
International Mercantile Marine Company (IMMC), which was attempting to eliminate
competition (yes, kids, this is a nice euphemism for a monopoly) and standardize
the costs of travel and freight shipment.
As the reputation of the British Mercantile Marine was sullied by the American
buy-out the British Government gave the Cunard Lines a $10 million incentive to
remain competitive with the White Star lines.
Without Cunard on board for a complete monopoly, the IMMC was unable to standardize
prices, and a price war broke out as the competing lines dropped their prices
continuously lower and lower in hopes of wooing purchasers. By 1908 a passenger
was able to travel from the United Kingdom to the United States for as little
as $10. Even with inflation accounted for, thats pretty incredible!
With ticket prices as low as they were, it was impossible for shipping lines to
make any money. Officials with White Star lines pushed to build larger ships that
travelled at only moderate speed. It was simply more cost-effective to move many
passengers in one craft with one crew (in much the same way that larger airplanes
are more efficient for airlines today). They began building larger, finer ships
where travel was no longer an action, but a luxury.
Safety First
The new technology that went into the construction of these large ships was intended
to increase safety. The new ships were protected with a double-bottom, and sixteen
watertight compartments formed by the bulkheads running across the ship with water-tight
doors that could be closed instantly with an electric switch. Should any two of
the largest compartments be flooded, the liner could still remain afloat indefinitely.
The only oversight was that these water-tight compartments remained open at the
top and thus, in the seemingly unlikely case that the ship became tipped over,
the compartments could fill with water from the sea like buckets tipped to their
sides, or drain water into each other like the sections in a tray of ice.
With all of these new safety features in
use, the White Star Line boasted that their new ships, the Olympic and the Titanic
were Practically Unsinkable. This advertising campaign was later distorted
into the legend of The Unsinkable Titanic.
With the creation of these mammoth-sized ships, the British Board of Trades
safety regulations were out of date, as they failed to accommodate for the increasing
number of passengers transported at once, but made lifeboat requirements based
upon the weight of the ship. Though the large White Star ships far exceeded the
lifeboat requirements as set by the Board of Trades, there were not nearly enough
lifeboats fitted to the ships to accommodate the number of passengers they were
intended to carry.
Shaky First Steps
These new ships were truly luxury cruisers, costing nearly $5,000 dollars in high
season. (Thats almost 500 times the cost of the same trip only two years
earlier!)
As the maiden voyage loomed nearer for the ill-fated Titanic, the preparations
were replete with difficulties. A coal miners strike nearly rendered the trip
impossible, as the Titanic was left without sufficient fuel to make the six-day
trip. However, as other, smaller ships were encountering the same difficulty,
they cancelled trips and passed their coal to the Titanic.
On Wednesday, 10 April, 1912, the Royal and United States Mail Steamer Titanic
took to the sea.
As the Titanic began her trip, passing the docked liner SS New York, the Titanics
huge propellers created a massive suction, which sucked the New York so strongly
that her three-inch steel ties snapped. Captain Edward J. Smith immediately ordered
the Titanics propellers to be reversed and the crew fitted the Titanic with
collision mats, thus averting a small disaster that would have prevented the Titanic
from continuing on the voyage.
She continued to pick up passengers from various ports around the United Kingdom,
her last stop in Queenstown Ireland on April 11th, with only 2,200 passengers
and crew members (compared to her 3,500 capacity).
Rough Seas
Just as airplanes have designated flight altitudes, ships had designated lanes
for travel, which were dictated by general trends in current and weather. From
January to July, ships took the Southern Track, which was 200 miles longer than
the Northern Track. After an incredibly mild winter in the Arctic, ice had flown
much further south on the Gulf Stream than was precedented, and the number of
icebergs was correspondingly high.
Passengers were too caught up in the luxurious setting to notice the cancellation
of the lifeboat drill on April 14th, a non-mandatory safety measure. The crew
also failed to do their routine lifeboat provisions and parts check, for unknown
reasons.
The Titanic was fitted with another fairly new technology: wireless telegraphy,
which allowed the ship to communicate rapidly with other ships, or to send messages
to land. In addition to its use as a device for the crew of the ship, the telegram
was marketed for passenger use. After the machine broke down on Saturday night,
the operator was struggling to catch up on a backlog of such passenger messages
when he received an incoming message (1:40pm on Sunday, 14 April) warning the
captain of the exact location of a dangerous ice field. This message was handed
directly to the captain, rather than being posted in the charts room where the
hazard could be noted on the map.
The ship received several such messages from other ships, most noting that there
was ice around 41-42 degrees N, 49-50 degrees W. In the chaos of sending the back-logged
messages, many of these critical warnings were set aside and never delivered.
As the ship headed into the danger zone, the sea calmed down. It was a clear,
moonless night.
Though it seems like a smoother ride would aid the Titanic in the dangerous seas,
the calm actually made it more difficult to spot icebergs, as there would be no
breaking waves and white foam to draw attention to the base of the iceberg. With
no moonlight and no clouds to reflect the light back from the ship, the night
was incredibly dark, further obscuring icebergs. The crewmen in the crows
nest were instructed to be incredibly vigilant and look out carefully for ice.
When the wireless operator received yet another ice warning, along with a request
that he stand by for further updates, he forwarded the message but ignored the
request to stand by, continuing to send backlogged outgoing messages (he was paid
on commissionbased on the number of passenger messages he sent).
Ice
At 11:40 pm, after Captain Smith had retired for the evening, the crewmen in the
crows nest spotted ice directly ahead. The crew played a rapid game of telephone,
relaying the iceberg, right ahead message, until the First Officer
turned the engine to Stop, then Full Speed Astern and
ordered hard a starboard. The orders came too late, and the ship turned
too slowly.
The iceberg struck below the waterline, causing massive leakage. The First Officer
flipped a switch, closing off the water-tight doors separating the ship into its
16 compartments.
Captain Smith rushed up to the bridge.
The damage assessment found that the first 6 of the ships water-tight compartments
had been penetrated, and were flooding uncontrollably. The weight of the water
on this side of the ship drew the Titanics bow down, allowing water to enter
the un-flooded compartments through their open tops, making the foundering of
the Titanic a certainty.
First class passengers on the far side of the ship were unaware of the danger
and were reluctant to leave the warmth and seeming safety of their cabins when
instructed to do so.
Closer to the danger, the second and third class passengers began to panic, but,
due to US immigration regulations, the third class passengers were not allowed
to mix with the first class passengers, and thus, many stewards kept them below
deck until they received word otherwise.
By the time third class passengers were allowed on deck, most of the lifeboats
were already gone.
As the crew was loading their lifeboats, they failed to load them to capacity,
for fear that the boats would buckle in the air under the weight of so many passengers.
The first boat, with a capacity for 65 adults was loaded with only 27 people on-board.
This practise led to 500 unnecessary deaths.
Varying understandings of the rule of the
sea women and children first led to some officers refusing all men
entry to a lifeboat, leaving a man on one side of the ship 5 times more likely
to be allowed onto a boat than a man on the other side.
At 12:10am, Captain Smith had ordered the wireless operator to send out a distress
signal. By 2:10 am, help had still not arrived.
The ships stern poked out of the water at a 90-degree angle. As the entire contents
of the ship slid downward, the ship screamed out into the night. Finally, the
ship snapped in half, The bow sank immediately as the stern settled back into
the water for a few minutes, before tipping vertically again, and slipping into
the water, leaving a huge suction in her wake.
Although there was ample room in the lifeboats, only two boats (of 18 total) immediately
made rounds to collect people from the water. The other boats rowed away, fearing
that the drowning masses would pull them all under.
The first ship to arrive in response to Captain Smiths distress call did
not arrive until 4am. Most of the people left in the water died of hypothermia
waiting for their rescue.
Of the 2,200 who boarded the ship, only 706 people survived.
Join us soon for another Through the Ages
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