Titanic Pages

To find out more details about my new book on the Titanic and the Californian, including ordering details, please look here.

  1. Ismay's Escape - the chairman of the White Star Line leaves the sinking Titanic in its final moments. But did he jump or was he pushed?
  2. Who really found the Titanic?- was it a French-American team in 1985, or did the Royal Navy unearth the wreck in the 1970s?
  3. Who watched the Titanic go down? - was it just the SS Californian, or were there others in the area, unknown to this day?
  4. The Olympic-Titanic switch - did it happen?
  5. The Titanic and the Californian part 1
  6. UPDATED The Titanic and the Californian part 2 - my attempt at a possible solution UPDATED
  7. UPDATED A recent essay that I wrote on the mystery of times, rockets, the first lifeboat launching and the lies of Senan Molony. UPDATED
  8. UPDATED A collection of ice warnings, and reports of wreckage and bodies from April 1912. UPDATED
  9. The Titanic, The White Star Line and The Bank of England.
  10. NEW What did Herbert Stone of the Californian see? NEW
  11. NEW Some unknown aspects of Captain Lord's life... NEW
  12. NEW The SS Birma's PV resurfaces at last NEW
  13. NEW The extremely rare BBC interview with Titanic Survivors from 1956. NEW
  14. NEW What happened to the Titanic's crow's nest? Please be patient while the javascript loads the images. NEW


A few gleanings from my archives...

  1. Some photographs of the Olympic, the Titanic's sister.


NEW My "Bouquets and Brickbats" pages often makes references to Titanic related people and news. NEW

If you're on Facebook, you might like to join I Hate The Titanic Historical Society


The Lord-Macquitty Collection

The death of Walter Lord in 2002 deprived the Titanic community of its greatest, and possibly its best loved author. In over five decades he had amassed an enormous resource of interviews, letters, newspapers, paraphernalia, many of them rare and unique. Fortunately, his collection was bequeathed to the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, Lord, as well as the Titanic related items of his friend, Bill Macquitty, who had seen the ship launched, and then, as Arthur C. Clarke once said "sank her again a second time" for the 1958 film adaptation of his friend's book, "A Night To Remember." Now, these files which helped to generate "A Night To Remember" and "The Night Lives On" are indexed and open for perusal ... at least for those of us for whom a trip to Greenwich is no problem. But what about the rest of us? Very few seem to have seen his private files, and it is the opinion of this author that the priceless information should be available to everyone, free. Hence, the purpose of this section: a transcription of Lord's, and Macquitty's, notes and letters. Although fasincating, the usual caveat should apply, viz. that the information given contemporaneously in 1912 should be regarded as more accurate than tainted or faded recollections more than 40 years after the event. Still, this does not necessarily mean that the information contained in these documents should be dismissed! They also show how some survivors were less than candid and open in their recollections, and, in a few cases, how Lord himself missed golden opportunities to further his knowledge ( see his correspondence with Sylvia Lightoller as an example ).

More accounts to come soon....


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Recommended Book(s):

Click on the image for ordering details.

Another book spitefully ignored by the Kamudas and the Titanic Hysterical Society because they "wanted to protect Ismay."


Other resources

  1. The Titanic-Californian debate gets quite heated, and often results in insults and personal attacks being tossed back and forth (witness Senan Molony's postings on the Encyclopedia-Titanica message board). Their tactics are obvious - avoid discussions of the case, describe dissenters and their work as "trash" with no justification, besmirch their reputation (and what has that got to do with the quality of their research or conclusions?), refuse to admit when they are wrong, or launch legal action to get skeptic's works suppressed. Heres a good example, courtesy of Mr.Rob Kamps from the Netherlands.
  2. George Behe's Titanic Tidbits
  3. Bill Wormstedt's excellent Titanic pages
  4. All At Sea With Dave Gittins
  5. Dave Billnitzer's pages on the Titanic-Californian controversy. Well worth reading.
  6. Sam Halpern's excellent Titanicology
  7. Roy Mengot's Titanic Wreck and modelling pages

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