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Titanic Disaster 102nd Anniversary 17,855 Page Document Compilation Published

BACM Research/PaperlessArchives.com has announced the release of a special edition compilation of 17,855 pages of historic Titanic documents.


Los Angeles,CA – WEBWIRE
Titanic Disaster 102nd Anniversary 17,855 Page Document Compilation
Titanic Disaster 102nd Anniversary 17,855 Page Document Compilation

Titanic Disaster 102nd Anniversary 17,855 Page Document Compilation Published

BACM Research/PaperlessArchives.com has announced the release of a special edition compilation of 17,855 pages of historic Titanic documents.

Early on the morning of April 15, 1912 at 2:20am the RMS Titanic sank after hitting an iceberg in the North Atlantic during her maiden voyage, taking the lives of more than 1,500 of its passengers and crew.

This special edition compilation contains five previously released Titanic document sets that cover the events before, during and the Titanic disaster.For sample images, complete descriptions, or to obtain this collection go to:

http://www.paperlessarchives.com/titanic-disaster-document-sets.html

The five collections in this compilation include:

Titanic Disaster Historical Document Archive 

12,825 pages of documents, text, newspaper articles, and photos covering the Titanic disaster. Period original source material from the National Archives, The Library of Congress, and the British National Archives.


National Archives Documents

1,175 pages of Titanic Disaster records preserved by the British National Archives.The files date from 1909 to 1925.

This collection contains records from British government agencies including the Titanic Board of Enquiry, Board of Trade, Ministry of Transport, Treasury Solicitor, Public Trustee Office, Foreign Office, Cabinet Office, National Savings Committee and Post Office Law Officers’ Department.


Titanic Disaster Newspaper Archive
 
1,200 selected complete American newspaper pages, dating from April 1, 1912 to April 14, 1922, covering the sinking of the Titanic and its aftermath.
 
American newspapers had an advantage over the British press, since survivors of the Titanic were brought to New York City. American newspapers had some of their best reporters in place when the first inquiry into the disaster was held by the U.S. Senate at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City, the day after the survivors landed.
 
Among the many Titanic subjects covered by the newspapers were: Iceberg sightings in the area of the sinking; Efforts by the Carpathia to rescue survivors and return them to land; The American enquiry into the disaster held the United States Senate, headed by Senator William A. Smith in which eighty-two witnesses were called; Accounts by survivors of the Titanic sinking; Various theories about the sinking, some which today seem laughable; The role played or not played by ships such as the Carpathia, SS Californian, Mackay-Bennett, Minia, Montmagny and the Algerine; The effort to recover Titanic victims’ bodies at sea; The British Board of Trade enquiry into the disaster; Judgments about the Titanic sinking and recommendations to prevent a similar tragedy.
 
  
Titanic Disaster Victim Recovery Documents & Medical Examiner Reports
 
1,555 pages of documents related to the recovery of Titanic victims at sea.
 
The RMS Carpathia is famous for rescuing survivors from their lifeboats in the frigid North Atlantic Ocean waters. Less famous are the CS Mackay-Bennet and CS Minia, the ships that retrieved the majority of the fatalities that could be found at sea. Two days after the sinking of the Titanic, White Star Line chartered the cable ship (CS) Mackay-Bennett, which was based in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The company soon hired additional Canadian ships, the lighthouse supply ship Montmagny, CS Minia, and the sealing vessel Algerine. To carry out its grim task, each ship was outfitted with embalming supplies, coffins, undertakers, and clergy. Out of the 333 bodies found at sea, 328 were found by these Canadian ships. The rest were found by ships passing through the North Atlantic.
 
 
 
Titanic Disaster White Star Line and Passenger Court Documents
 
1,100 pages of admiralty case files from the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, related to the RMS Titanic, specifically the petition filed by the Oceanic Steam Navigation Company, as the owner of Titanic, for limitation of liability, and responses from claimants.
 
The case files contain court papers, evidence, depositions from surviving passengers and claims of survivors and representatives of the deceased passengers. Some documents tell in the first person the story of the sinking in dramatic detail. 
 
 
Among the highlights found in the compilation includes:
 
United States Senate Hearing Transcripts
 
British Titanic Wreck Commissioner’s Court Testimony
 
Blueprints of deck plans for the Olympic and Titanic.
 
A List of passengers boarding the Titanic at Queenstown, most of these passengers are poor Irish emigrants en route to America, traveling as third class passengers.
 
List of passengers boarding at Southampton, this includes many notable names, the Countess of Rothes, Benjamin Guggenheim, the American mining millionaire, J Bruce Ismay, and Colonel Gracie, whose book “The Truth About the Titanic” was published in 1913.
 
Correspondence dealing with the original plans of the Titanic, showing the ship was originally to be fitted with 32 life boats. This would have given capacity for over 2,000 people, significantly greater than the 1,178 that were ultimately provided for.
 
Correspondences showing that the British Government was opposed to the United States holding an inquiry into the Titanic disaster.
 
Documents dealing with the efforts to identify the mystery ship, seen from the sinking Titanic and by the SS Mount Temple. An account of a letter written by the SS Californian’s carpenter saying that the “Californian did not render help to Titanic although distress signals were observed.”
 
A letter from Stanley Lord, captain of the SS Californian, to the Board of Trade complaining of the public odium he is suffering and pleading that “something be done to put my conduct on the night in question in a more favorable light to my employers and the general public.”
 
Wireless messages passing between various ships in the North Atlantic in mid April 1912.
 
Copies of telegrams sent to the SS Birma by the Titanic.
 
Information about ice warnings.
 
A handwritten account by Titanic first class passenger survivor Alfred Omont of events before and after the iceberg crash.
 
Transcript of an account by Arthur Rostron, the captain of the SS Carpathia, of the ship’s high-speed trip, navigating through icebergs, to reach the Titanic survivors.
 
A letter filed by Sir Alfred Chalmers, the board of Trade member responsible for lifeboat requirements for passenger ships, arguing that more lifeboats would not have saved more lives on the Titanic.
 
Documents concerning the British International Pictures production “Atlantic” of 1929, which was based on the sinking of the Titanic. Germany was quick to use the German language version of the film as anti-British propaganda, claiming that if the ship had been German, the disaster would never have happened.
 
Documents show the efforts of the British Chamber of Shipping to stop Alfred Hitchcock from making a film about the Titanic disaster.
 
Diagrams of Titanic’s bulkheads.
 
Chart of ice reported near the Titanic.
 
Chart of ships’ positions near the Titanic.
 
Pages from the diary of Frederick A. Hamilton, cable engineer, written whilst aboard the CS Mackay Bennett, recovering corpses after the loss of the Titanic.
 
Deposition of Emily Ryerson - Emily Ryerson (August 10, 1863 - December 28, 1939) was a first-class passenger who survived the sinking of RMS Titanic. In her deposition she talks about her experience in getting off the Titanic: "...Stout, the second steward; he was at the foot of the stairs as we came from the boat deck, and he put his hand in front of my little boy, who is 13, and said ’He can’t go.’ My husband said ’Of course that boy goes with his mother.’ The man said ’Very well, sir, but no more boys.’ And some woman rushed forward and took her hat off and put it on her little boy’s head, so he could go as a little girl, Mrs. Carter, I think.
 
 
Deposition of William Thomas Turner - William Turner (October 23, 1856 - June 23, 1933) was the captain of the RMS Lusitania when it was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine in May 1915. In this extremely unique document the captain of the Lusitania is being interviewed about the Titanic disaster, seven days before the Lusitania will be destroyed. On the day before the Lusitania left on its final voyage, April 30, 1915, Captain Turner was at the New York City offices of Hunt, Hill & Betts. He had been asked to testify by lawyers involved in the limitation of liability case related to the Titanic disaster, which was dragging into its third year. He was asked a series of questions about the size and design of ships on the Cunard Line, the difficulty of sighting icebergs, and his reaction to iceberg warnings. These questions were important because the ship he was commanding, RMS Mauretania, in April 1912 was sailing only a few days behind the Titanic. 
 
Examination of White Star managing director J. Bruce Ismay - Ismay was chairman and managing director of the White Star Line. He came to international attention as the highest-ranking White Star official among the 712 survivors. In June 1914, White Star Line’s Ismay was questioned about the speed of the Titanic, its lifeboats, the lookout, and other issues that may have contributed to the disaster. Throughout his testimony, Ismay restated many of the same opinions given during the congressional hearing that all decisions were made by Captain Edward Smith.
 
 
For sample images, complete descriptions, or to obtain this collection go to:
 
http://www.paperlessarchives.com/titanic-disaster-document-sets.html
 
 
  
About BACM Research
 
BACM Research through PaperlessArchives.com publishes documentary historical research collections.
 
Materials cover Presidencies, Historical Figures, Historical Events, Celebrities, Organized Crime, Politics, Military Operations, Famous Crimes, Intelligence Gathering, Espionage, Civil Rights, Civil War, World War I, World War II, Korean War, Vietnam War, and more.
 
Source material from Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), National Security Agency (NSA), Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), Secret Service, National Security Council, Department of Defense, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Department of Justice, National Archive Records and Administration, and Presidential Libraries.
 
http://www.paperlessarchives.com


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