I Went To The World’s Greatest Titanic Museum And Here Are 21 Incredible Things I Learned
Last month my family and I went on a dream trip to Ireland!
In addition to enjoying impossibly green landscapes at every turn...
...we also got the opportunity to visit what is undisputedly the world's greatest Titanic museum, Titanic Belfast!
Yes, the museum is shaped to look like the Titanic itself!
Here are some of the incredible things we saw...and truly astonishing facts we learned:
1.First, if you're wondering why the ultimate Titanic museum is in Belfast, it's because James Cameron's favorite ship was built there!
2.The museum stands directly next to where the Titanic (and its sister ship, The Olympic) were assembled between 1909 and 1911. In fact, if you tour the museum, you'll visit a room with floor-to-ceiling windows that lets you look out at the slipways where the ships were built.
What you see on the window above is an etching that depicts what the ships looked like during their construction.
3.Here's the wildest fact I learned about the ship's construction in Belfast: Supervisors from the shipbuilding company took to wearing top hats for protection while walking the site. Why? Because — when the bigwigs passed by — disgruntled workers tended to "accidentally" drop rivets from the top of the ship.
The 15,000 people who worked on the ship were unhappy for a number of reasons, including long hours and dangerous working conditions, which led to the death of eight workers.
One of the coolest things about Titanic Belfast is how many relics from the actual ship it has. Other Titanic museums and collections tend to mainly have items from the sister ship, The Olympic, or ones that were meant to be on the Titanic but weren't. For example, a past collection I saw had an extra menu they printed for the trip but left back in England.
4.But Titanic Belfast has a first-class menu that was on the actual voyage! After the ship's final lunch, steward Frederick Dent Ray signed the menu and gave it as a souvenir to passenger Dr. Washington Dodge, with whom he'd struck up a friendship. Dodge gave the menu to his wife who put it in her purse. Later, after Dodge's wife and son were safely in a lifeboat, Dent escorted Dodge to safety in lifeboat number 13.
If you look closely, you can see Dent underlined "R.M.S. Titanic" and the date of the last lunch. On the back he wrote "With compliments & best wishes from Frederick Dent Ray. 56 Palmer Park, Reading, Berks."
5.This deck chair from the Titanic was floating in the water when the Liner RMS Carpathia arrived at the scene and commenced rescuing 700 people. One of its crewman saw the chair and fished it out!
6.This fur coat belonged to Mabel Bennett, a first-class stewardess, who threw it over her nightgown before escaping in a lifeboat. In the late '60s, she gave the coat to her great-niece who had it slightly altered to be more modern. WHO ALTERS A FREAKING RELIC FROM THE TITANIC?!
I forgot to mention the museum has Mabel's flask, too. Mabel seems like she was fun!
7.And this life vest is one of only six (out of an original 3,500) that still exists in the world today. It was recovered from the field of debris by Robert Edwards, quartermaster of a ship chartered by the White Star Line to search for bodies.
8.Another fascinating item on display is this letter that was composed on the ship (the very day it went down) by Esther Hart and her seven-year-old daughter, Eva.
The letter — intended to be sent to Esther's mother — was written on letterhead that reads: "Onboard the R.M.S. Titanic." It begins with a lengthy summation from Esther about their journey...
...and ends with a message from young Eva in her little kid scrawl: "Heaps of love and kisses to all. Eva. XXXXXXX."
The letter survived because Eva's dad Benjamin placed the letter in his jacket pocket for safekeeping, then, as the ship went down, put his jacket on Eva to keep her warm on the lifeboat. Tragically, that was the last Eva ever saw of her father. (Eva, however, lived to age 95 and was awarded a Member of the Order of the British Empire in 1971.)
9.The most amazing artifact on display — and easily one of the most iconic items of the 20th century — has to be this violin belonging to Wallace Hartley, one of the legendary "And the band played on..." musicians who continued to play on the deck even as the ship went down. While Hartley didn't survive, his violin was later found floating atop the water, safely stowed in its case.
A gift from Hartley's fiancée Maria, the violin is engraved with the words: "For Wallace on the occasion of our engagement from Maria." It was later returned to Maria.
10.As you can see, the museum takes great pains to honor the human stories behind all of the people on the ship. One story that really caught my family's attention was of this six-year-old boy named Robert, who survived the Titanic only to be hit and killed by a car two years later.
Robert's story:
"Six year old Robert Douglas Spedden was the only child of Frederic and Daisy Spedden, a wealthy couple from New York who were returning home after a long vacation. Robert was cared for by his nanny Margaret Burns, whom he called 'Muddie Noons' because he could never quite pronounce her name.Following the collision with the iceberg, Douglas was woken and dressed by Muddie, who told him they were ‘taking a trip to see the stars.’ The Spedden party made their way to the boat deck where they boarded lifeboat number 3. After all the available women and children had been loaded, Frederick and about twenty other men were allowed to board.As they rowed to safety, Douglas slept through the night with his beloved teddy bear ‘Polar’ by his side. When he woke up, he saw the icebergs around and exclaimed: 'Oh, Muddie, look at the beautiful North Pole with no Santa Claus on it!'Although the Speddens survived the Titanic, tragedy struck two years later when young Robert was playing football near the family summer home in Maine and was hit by a speeding car driving on the wrong side of the road."
11.Speaking of each person's story, there are touch screens at the museum that allow you to search the names of everyone who was on the boat...and see if they lived or died.
As you can see, Miss Melinger, 13 at the time of the sinking, survived.
And in the category of "details maybe I shouldn't mention," my 10-year-old son searched to see if anyone was on the ship with the last name of "Butts". Turns out there was! There was a "Butt" too. (The more you know!)
12.Another unforgettable fact we learned is that the ship offered first-class passengers a very popular perk — the ability to send messages via telegraph back to people on land! Unfortunately, the passengers were obsessed with this proto-texting and kept wireless operator Jack Phillips so busy sending "HAVING A GREAT TIME ON THE BOAT, OLD PAL!" messages that he missed some key warnings about icebergs.
13.In fact, he was so overwhelmed by the endless messages passengers wanted to send that, when nearby ship The Californian sent the warning "WE ARE STOPPED AND SURROUNDED BY ICE," Phillips replied, "SHUT UP! YOU ARE JAMMING MY SIGNAL!"
As you see above, Phillips also wrote "I AM WORKING CAPE RACE." Cape Race is a location in Newfoundland that would accept telegraphs from passing ships and relay them to New York.
14.The Californian's only wireless operator, Cyril Evans, soon went to bed — perhaps put off by the response from Phillips. But this meant that, after the Titanic hit the iceberg and Phillips began desperately messaging for help, there was no way to contact The Californian which was only 11 miles away!
The first ship to arrive and rescue passengers — The Carpathia — was 58 miles away upon receiving the distress message — and therefore took five times as long to get there as it would have taken The Californian.