The
Royal Mail Ship TITANIC was the last grand dream of the Gilded
Age. It was designed to be the greatest achievement of an era
of prosperity, confidence and propriety. Although no one knew
it, the world was about to change drastically. Radio had been
invented in 1901. The Wright Brothers' first successful flight
was in 1903. The old presumptions about class, morals, and gender-roles
were about to be shattered. If the concept of Titanic was the
climax of the age, then perhaps its sinking was the curtain that
marked the end of the old drama, and the start of a new one.
The Plan
The intensely competitive transatlantic steamship business
had seen recent major advances in ship design, size and speed.
White Star Line, one of the leaders, determined to focus on size
and elegance rather than pure speed. In 1907, White Star Line's
managing director J. Bruce Ismay and Lord James Pirrie, a partner
in Harland & Wolff (White Star Line's ship-builder since its
founding in 1869) conceived of three magnificent steam ships which
would set a new standard for comfort, elegance, and safety. The
first two were to be named Olympic and Titanic, the latter name
chosen by Ismay to convey a sense of overwhelming size and strength.
It took a year to design the two ships. Construction of Olympic
started in December, 1908, followed by Titanic in March 1909.
The Belfast shipyards of Harland & Wolff had to be re-designed
to accommodate the immense projects while White Star's pier in
New York had to be lengthened to enable the ships to dock. During
the two years it took to complete Titanic's hull, the press was
primed with publicity about the ship's magnificence, making Titanic
virtually a legend before her launch. The "launch" of
the completed steel in May, 1911, was a heavily publicized spectacle.
Tickets were sold to benefit a local children's hospital.
She
was then taken for "fitting out" which involved the
construction of the ship's many facilities and systems, her elaborate
woodwork and fine decor. As the date of her maiden voyage approached,
the completed Olympic suffered a collision and required extensive
repairs, increasing the workload at Harland & Wolff, which
was already struggling to complete Titanic on schedule. Titanic's
maiden voyage was delayed from March 20 to April 10.
The
Ship
Titanic was 883 feet long (1/6 of a mile), 92 feet wide and weighed
46,328 tons. She was 104 feet tall from keel to bridge, almost
35 feet of which were below the waterline... even so, she stood
taller above the water than most urban buildings of the time.
There were three real smoke-stacks; a fourth, dummy stack was
added largely to increase the impression of her gargantuan size
and power and to vent smoke from her numerous kitchens and galleys.
She was the largest movable object ever made by man. The ship's
immense size and complexity is illustrated by an incident recalled
by Second Officer Lightoller. There was a gangway door on the
starboard side aft "large enough to drive a horse and cart
through." Yet three officers who joined the ship during her
preparations spent a whole day simply trying to find their way
to it.
Moreover,
she was designed to be a marvel of modern safety technology. She
had a double-hull of 1-inch thick steel plates and a (heavily
publicized) system of 16 water-tight compartments, sealed by massive
doors which could be instantly triggered by a single electric
switch on the bridge, or even automatically by electric water-sensors.
The press began to call her "unsinkable."
Her
accommodations were the most modern and luxurious on any ocean,
and included electric light and heat in every room, electric elevators,
a swimming pool, a squash court (considered terribly modern),
a Turkish Bath, a gymnasium with a mechanical horse and mechanical
camel to keep riders fit, and staterooms and first class facilities
to rival the best hotels on the Continent. First class passengers
would glide down a six-story, glass-domed grand staircase to enjoy
haute cuisine in the sumptuous first class dining saloon that
filled the width of the ship on D Deck. For those who desired
a more intimate atmosphere, Titanic also offered a stately à
la carte restaurant, the chic Palm Court and Verandah restaurant,
and the festive Cafe Parisien. She offered two musical ensembles
(rather than the standard one) of the best musicians on the Atlantic,
many of them lured from rival liners. There were two libraries,
first- and second-class. Even the third class (steerage) cabins
were more luxurious than the first class cabins on some lesser
steamships, and boasted amenities (like indoor toilet facilities)
that some of Titanic's emigrant passengers had not enjoyed in
their own homes.
The
original design called for 32 lifeboats. However, White Star management
felt that the boat-deck would look cluttered, and reduced the
number to 20, for a total life-boat capacity of 1178. This actually
exceeded the regulations of the time, even though Titanic was
capable of carrying over 3500 people (passengers and crew).
The Voyage
The maiden voyage lured the "very best people:" British
nobility, American industrialists, the very cream of New York
and Philadelphia society. It also attracted many poor emigrants,
hoping to start a new life in America or Canada.
The
journey began at Southampton on Wednesday April 10, 1912 at Noon.
By sundown, Titanic had stopped in Cherbourg, France to pick up
additional passengers. That evening she sailed for Queenstown,
Ireland, and at 1:30 PM on Thursday, April 11, she headed out
into the Atlantic.
The
seasoned transatlantic passengers were deeply impressed by the
new ship. She was so massive that they barely felt the movement
of the sea at all. Her huge, powerful engines produced almost
none of the annoying vibration common on other steamers, and their
noise was barely perceptible. And she achieved this extraordinary
level of comfort while traveling at 22 knots, not the fastest
boat on the route, but certainly one of the top five.
Weather
was pleasant and clear, and the water temperature was about 55
degrees. The winter of 1912 had been unusually mild, and unprecedented
amounts of ice replica watches had broken loose from the arctic regions. Titanic
was equipped with Marconi's new wireless telegraph system and
her two Marconi operators kept the wireless room running 24 hours
a day. On Sunday, April 14, the fifth day at sea, Titanic received
five different ice-warnings, but the captain was not overly concerned.
The ship steamed ahead at 22 knots, and the line's Managing Director
J. Bruce Ismay relished the idea of arriving in New York a day
ahead of schedule.
The Night Comes
On the night of April 14, wireless operator Phillips was very
busy sending chatty passenger's messages to Cape Race, Newfoundland,
whence they could be replica watches for sale relayed inland to friends and relatives.
He received a sixth ice-warning that night, but didn't realize
how close Titanic was to the position of the warning, and put
that message under a paperweight at his elbow. It never reached
Captain Smith or the officer on the bridge.
By
all accounts, the night was uncommonly clear and dark, moonless
but faintly glowing with an incredible sky full of stars. The
stars were so bright that one officer mistook the planet Jupiter
(then rising just above the horizon) for a steamship light.
The
sea was, likewise, unusually calm and flat, "like glass"
said many survivors. The lack of waves made it even more difficult
to spot icebergs, since there was no telltale white water breaking
at the edges of the bergs.
At
11:40, a lookout in the crow's nest spotted an iceberg dead ahead.
He notified the bridge and First Officer Murdoch ordered the ship
turned hard to port. He signaled the engine room to reverse direction,
full astern. The ship turned slightly, but it was much too large,
moving much too fast, and the iceberg was much too close. 37 seconds
later, the greatest maritime disaster in history began. During
that night of heroism, terror and tragedy, 705 lives were saved,
1502 lives were lost, and many legends were born.