Authors: Deborah Hopkinson
COVER
FRONTISPIECE
TITLE PAGE
DEDICATION
FOREWORD
DIAGRAM OF THE SHIP
CHAPTER ONE — Setting Sail
CHAPTER TWO — A Floating Palace
CHAPTER THREE — A Peaceful Sunday
CHAPTER FOUR — “Iceberg Right Ahead.”
CHAPTER FIVE — Impact!
CHAPTER SIX — In the Radio Room: “It’s a CQD OM.”
CHAPTER SEVEN — A Light in the Distance
CHAPTER EIGHT — Women and Children First
CHAPTER NINE — The Last Boats
CHAPTER TEN — In the Water
CHAPTER ELEVEN — “She’s Gone.”
CHAPTER TWELVE — A Long, Cold Night
CHAPTER THIRTEEN — Rescue at Dawn
CHAPTER FOURTEEN — Aftermath: The End of All Hope
EPILOGUE — Discovering the
Titanic
GLOSSARY
PEOPLE IN THIS BOOK
OTHER FAMOUS
TITANIC
FIGURES
SURVIVOR LETTERS FROM THE
CARPATHIA
TITANIC
TIMELINE
BE A
TITANIC
RESEARCHER: FIND OUT MORE
TITANIC
FACTS AND FIGURES
FROM THE BRITISH WRECK COMMISSIONER’S FINAL REPORT, 1912
TITANIC
: THE LIFEBOAT LAUNCHING SEQUENCE REEXAMINED
TITANIC
Statistics: Who Lived and Who Died
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
SOURCE NOTES
PHOTO CREDITS
INDEX
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ALSO BY THIS AUTHOR
COPYRIGHT
(Preceding image)
The wreck of the
Titanic
.
At 2:20 a.m. on Monday, April 15, 1912, the RMS
Titanic
, on her glorious maiden voyage from Southampton to New York, sank after striking an iceberg in the North Atlantic, killing 1,496 men, women, and children. A total of 712 survivors escaped with their lives on twenty lifeboats that had room for 1,178 people. There were 2,208 on board.
The loss of life was heartbreaking. It seems unbelievable even today. How did this magnificent ship, the largest and most luxurious in the world, simply disappear in a matter of hours?
Now, in the twenty-first century, the
Titanic
— the ship itself, as well as her passengers and crew, the wreck, and every last detail of the sinking — continues to fascinate us. Perhaps no other disaster in history has been so closely examined, studied by scientists, mariners, and those who research social behavior. It is the subject of websites, articles, discussion boards, films, scientific expeditions, and yes, books like this.
Maybe the
Titanic
makes us all historians. We can’t help being curious: What happened? Why? Who said what and when? What did it mean? And, of course, what if?
This book is an introduction to the disaster and to just a few of the people who survived — a stewardess, a nine-year-old boy, a science teacher, a wealthy gentleman, a brave seaman, an American high school senior, a young mother on her way to start a new life, and more.
I hope their stories and voices remind you, as they do me, that our lives are fragile and precious. And I hope they make you wonder, as I do, what it would have been like to be on the
Titanic
that night so long ago. . . .