Voices from the Titanic (78 page)

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Authors: Geoff Tibballs

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Cottam, Harold Thomas
– Twenty-one-year-old Nottinghamshire-born wireless operator on the
Carpathia
(for which he was paid £4. 10s. a month plus board) and the man who took the first call for assistance from the
Titanic
. Cottam went on to serve on many other ships and renewed his friendship with
Titanic
operator Harold Bride. He died in 1984.

Crosby, Mrs Catherine
– A resident of Milwaukee, she travelled on the
Titanic
with her husband, Captain Edward Gifford Crosby, and their daughter Harriette. Their son Fred stayed behind in the US. Captain Crosby was drowned but Catherine and Harriette were rescued. Catherine Crosby died in 1920, aged seventy-one.

Daly, Eugene
– Twenty-nine-year-old steerage passenger from Athlone in Ireland who was emigrating to the US. He played ‘Erin's Lament' on his bagpipes as the
Titanic
left Queenstown and later filed a claim for $50 to cover their loss in the sinking. He settled in New York where he died in 1965.

Daniel, Robert W.
– Philadelphia banker who leapt from the sinking ship wearing only a bathrobe and lived to tell a colourful tale. Aboard the rescue ship
Carpathia
he met Mary Eloise Smith whose husband Lucien had gone down with the
Titanic
. Daniel and the newly widowed Mrs Smith struck up a romance and married within two years.

Dodge, Dr Washington
– Assessor for the port of San Francisco and a first-class passenger on the
Titanic
. He, his wife and four-year-old son – Washington Jnr – all survived. But in 1919 Dr Dodge suffered a mental breakdown and shot himself.

Douglas, Mrs Mahala
– American first-class passenger who travelled with husband Walter and her French maid Berthe Le Roy. She and the maid were rescued, but Mr Douglas was not among the survivors. She later went to live in California and died in 1945 at the age of eighty. She is buried in Cedar Rapids, Ohio.

Drew, Marshall
– The son of a Cornish marble sculptor who emigrated to the United States, Marshall was born in Suffolk County, New York. His mother died two weeks after he was born and his aunt and uncle became the boy's adoptive parents. The three sailed on the
Olympic
to England to visit his father and uncle's family, returning to America on the
Titanic
, by which time Marshall was eight years of age. Surviving the ordeal, he married in 1930 and went on to teach fine arts at a New York high school. He died in 1986 and is buried in Rhode Island where the inscription on his headstone reads: ‘Teacher, Artist, Friend – Survivor of the Titanic Disaster 15 April 1912'.

Duff Gordon, Sir Cosmo
– Eton-educated husband of international dress designer Lucy, Lady Duff Gordon, with whom he travelled on the
Titanic
under the names of Mr and Mrs Morgan. A noted fencer who represented Britain at the 1908 Olympics, allegations about his lack of bravery on the night haunted him right up until his death in 1931 at the age of sixty-eight.

Duff Gordon, Lady Lucy
– The daughter of a Toronto engineer, at eighteen she married James Wallace by whom she had a child. They were divorced in 1888, after which she found herself in dire financial straits. To support herself and her child, she set up a dressmaking business and rented a shop in London's West End – ‘Maison Lucile'. The shop became so successful that in 1897 she moved to larger premises in Hanover Square. Within three years her enterprise had turned it into one of the leading London fashion houses and branches were subsequently opened in New York and Paris. Work commitments meant that she and Sir Cosmo tended to lead separate lives but they were reunited on the
Titanic
for an urgent business trip to New York which required her to take the first available crossing. Her business hit hard times in the early 1930s and she died in 1935.

Evans, Cyril Furmstone
– Wireless operator on the
Californian
.

Fleet, Frederick –
Twenty-four-year-old lookout on the
Titanic
, the man who sent the chilling message: ‘Iceberg right ahead.' He remained at sea until the 1930s before landing a job as a shipbuilder with Harland & Wolff, the firm that built the
Titanic.
He later found work as a nightwatchman and then sold newspapers on street corners in his native Southampton. In 1965, devastated by the death of his wife, he hanged himself.

Franklin, Philip A. S.
– Forty-one-year-old American vice-president of International Mercantile Marine, the parent company of the White Star Line.

Frauenthal, Dr Henry
– The son of German immigrants, Frauenthal was born in Pennsylvania. He qualified as a doctor in 1890 and in 1905 set up the Hospital for Joint Diseases in Madison Avenue, New York. On 26 March 1912 he married Clara Heinsheimer in Nice and two weeks later the newlyweds boarded the
Titanic
at Southampton for their return journey to the US. At Cherbourg they were joined by his brother Isaac. All three survived, but Henry's mental health began to suffer and in 1927, aged sixty-four, he committed suicide by jumping from the seventh floor of the hospital he had founded. In his will he requested that his ashes be scattered from the roof of the same hospital building on its fiftieth birthday. This ceremony was duly performed in 1955.

Frauenthal, Isaac
– Had travelled to Europe for his brother's wedding. Sailing home on the
Titanic
, he revealed a dream he had experienced shortly before boarding the liner. ‘It seemed to me that I was on a big steamship that suddenly crashed into something and began to go down. I saw in the dream as vividly as I could see with open eyes the gradual settling of the ship, and I heard the cries and shouts of frightened passengers.' So when he got out of bed on the night of 14 April and discovered that the
Titanic
had hit an iceberg, he was aware of the impending danger. While his brother insisted that the ship was too big to sink, Isaac masterminded their escape. Isaac, a lawyer, never married and died in Manhattan in 1932.

Frolicher-Stehli, Max
– In 1885 he married Margaretha, the daughter of his boss at the Swiss silk factory where he worked as managing clerk. Together they had five children and in 1912, sixty-one-year-old Frolicher-Stehli, accompanied by his wife and daughter Hedwig, sailed on the
Titanic
to visit old friends in the United States and Canada. All three were rescued but he died the following year of heart failure.

Futrelle, Jacques
– Born in Pike County, Georgia, to a family of French descent, Futrelle, thirty-seven, was a successful mystery writer when he went down with the
Titanic
. His last novel,
My Lady's Garter
, was published posthumously. Beneath his photo in the book, his wife May wrote: ‘To the heroes of the
Titanic
, I dedicate this my husband's book.'

Futrelle, Mrs May
– Wife of Jacques. Born in Atlanta, Georgia, she was thirty-five at the time of the sinking. Her son, Jacques Jnr, later became night news editor of the
Washington Post
. May Futrelle died in Massachusetts at the age of ninety-one.

Gibson, Dorothy
– twenty-two-year-old model and silent movie star from New York who, in March 1912, sailed with her mother for a holiday in Italy after completing the film
The Easter Bonnet
. But their stay was cut short when the film company wired for her to return to the US. They came home on the
Titanic
and, after escaping in lifeboat No. 7, Dorothy co-wrote and starred in the first
Titanic
movie,
Saved From the Titanic
. This was released on 14 May 1912 – just one month after the disaster – and was heavily criticized for its insensitivity at a time when so many were still coming to terms with their grief. She gave up her acting career shortly afterwards and, following a brief flirtation with marriage, she moved to Europe, dying in Paris in 1946.

Gracie, Colonel Archibald
– US historian, the author of an acclaimed book on the American Civil War. He travelled back to his Washington home on the
Titanic
having been in England conducting research into the war of 1812. The thrilling story of his escape was one of the first survivors' tales to appear in book form but Gracie did not live to reap the profits, dying barely six months after the disaster from the aftereffects of his ordeal.

Guggenheim, Benjamin
– Forty-seven-year-old American mining baron who travelled first-class while his chauffeur, René Pernot, sailed second-class. With the ship doomed, Guggenheim and his valet, Victor Giglio, appeared on deck in full evening dress with Guggenheim declaring: ‘We've dressed up in our best and are prepared to go down like gentlemen.' They did.

Harder, George
– Chairman of a foundry, the twenty-six-year-old New Yorker sailed first-class on the
Titanic
with his new bride Dorothy. Both survived. Dorothy died from kidney trouble in 1926 and George remarried – his second wife Elizabeth being fifteen years his junior. He died in 1959.

Harland & Wolff
– Belfast shipbuilding firm which built the
Titanic
. Founded in 1862 by Yorkshire engineer Edward Harland and German engineer Gustav Wolff, the Queen's Island yard quickly became a major player in international shipbuilding. In 1864 the gross tonnage of ships built at the yard was 30,000; by 1884 the figure had risen to 104,000.

Harris, Henry B.
– St Louis-born Broadway producer who managed such stars of the day as Lily Langtry. After travelling to London to arrange a play for another actress client, Rose Stahl, Harris and his wife René planned to return to New York on the
Titanic
. He never made it, helping his wife into the last lifeboat before going down with the ship. He was forty-five.

Harris, Mrs René
– Thirty-five-year-old wife of Henry B. Harris (they married in 1898), she struggled to carry on his crumbling theatrical business after his death. She re-married on three occasions and died in 1969.

Hart, Eva
– Seven-year-old British girl who was travelling second-class to Winnipeg with her parents. The Harts had been due to sail on another ship – the
Philadelphia
– but were forced to switch to the
Titanic
as the result of a coal strike in Britain. Eva's mother, Esther, had grave misgivings about the new liner and declared: ‘It will never get to the other side of the Atlantic.' Even as they boarded the ship at Southampton, she begged her husband to turn back, but he refused. Reluctantly she joined him and little Eva but, convinced that disaster would strike the ship at night, opted to sleep during the day and remain awake during the hours of darkness. It was her vigilance which saved her and Eva's lives. Mr Hart was less fortunate. Eva Hart went on to become one of the last British survivors, dying in 1996.

Hartley, Wallace
– Thirty-three-year-old violinist and leader of the eight-man band on the
Titanic.
The band famously played on until the bitter end, although argument still rages as to the identity of their final tune. Hartley's funeral in his home town of Colne, Lancashire, was almost a state occasion with thousands of people turning out to pay their last respects.

Hays, Charles M.
– Illinois-born president of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railroad, the Canadian company which had recently built a bridge over the Niagara River at Niagara Falls. Keen on expanding into hotels, he travelled to London in April 1912 for a board meeting. Returning on the
Titanic
, he was relaxing in the first-class lounge with Colonel Archibald Gracie and Captain Edward Crosby on the fateful evening. An hour before the ship struck the iceberg he had expressed the view that ‘the trend to playing fast and loose with larger and larger ships will end in tragedy'. Nevertheless he did not think the liner would sink so quickly and as he put his wife Clara and daughter Margaret into a lifeboat, he assured them that the
Titanic
would stay afloat for ‘at least ten hours'. He gallantly went down with the ship, aged fifty-five. The town of Hays in Alberta is named after him.

Hichens, Robert
– Thirty-year-old Cornish quartermaster who was at the wheel of the
Titanic
when she struck the iceberg and whose surly behaviour in boat No. 6 infuriated Arthur Peuchen and ‘Molly' Brown. In 1914 he moved to South Africa to work as a harbour-master. On returning to the UK, he was sentenced to five years' imprisonment in 1933 for the attempted murder of a man in Torquay. He was killed in 1941 during a German air-raid on the south coast.

Hippach, Miss Gertrude
– Born in Chicago, sixteen-year-old Gertrude Hippach had been touring Europe with her mother Ida. They boarded the
Titanic
at Cherbourg and occupied a first-class cabin. In the years following the disaster, she married and had three children. The union ended in divorce and she settled in Massachusetts before her death in 1974.

International Mercantile Marine (IMM)
– Parent company of the White Star Line. Its proprietor was American financier John Pierpont Morgan.

Ismay, Joseph Bruce
– Forty-nine-year-old chairman and managing director of the White Star Line and president of International Mercantile Marine Company. Ismay occupied luxury suite B52 – the best on the ship – after the
Titanic
's owner, J. Pierpont Morgan, mysteriously withdrew from the trip at the last minute. Ismay's opportunist escape from the sinking ship – sneaking into a lifeboat as it was being lowered – coupled with allegations that he had demanded a transatlantic speed record from the
Titanic
and had deliberately withheld ice warnings from Captain Smith, made him the ideal scapegoat for the American press who labelled him ‘J Brute Ismay'. Although exonerated by the British Court of Inquiry, he was left a broken man. He retired as chairman of the White Star Line in 1913, later sold his country home near Liverpool and retreated to County Galway in Ireland. He died from a stroke in 1937.

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