Remembering the Titanic
Read about the tragic shipwreck in the frigid North Atlantic Ocean.
On the night of April 14, 1912, the R.M.S. Titanic chugged through the frigid waters of the North Atlantic Ocean, its over 2,200 riders unaware of the looming danger.
Less than a week earlier, the luxury steamship—at the time the largest man-made moving object in the world—left Southampton, England, for New York City. Travelers had expected a posh and comfortable ride. After all, the Titanic’s lavishly decorated first-class section featured gourmet meals, a heated pool, and squash courts. The ship even had its own onboard newspaper.
But the Titanic’s design also had major flaws. For instance, some believe that many of the bolts that held the ship together were weak. The bottom of the boat was also not built to withstand major flooding. And the steamship carried just 20 lifeboats—only enough to hold about half of the passengers.
Four days after setting sail, the Titanic struck an iceberg that tore a 300-foot gash into the ship’s hull. As it flooded, riders began a frenzied evacuation into the lifeboats. Only about 700 would survive. And the ship, which took three years to build, would sink in less than three hours. Though scientists and historians believe that the design flaws were the major factors that led to the disaster, they continue to study the famous steamship for answers. So more than a hundred years after the Titanic tragedy, its story remains afloat.
MORE TITANIC FACTS
• The most expensive tickets to travel aboard Titanic cost about $99,000 in today's money.
• The Titanic was almost as long as three football fields.
• To feed the passengers and crew, Titanic had 86,000 pounds of meat, 40,000 eggs, 40 tons of potatoes, 7,000 heads of lettuce, 3,500 pounds of onions, 36,000 apples, and 1,000 loaves of bread on board.
• Titanic was one of the first ships to have a telephone system and electric lights in all the rooms.
• Including the four smoke stacks, the Titanic was as tall as a 17-story building.
• Titanic had four elevators, a heated swimming pool, a gym, two libraries, and two barber shops.
• Each day, the passsengers and crew used 14,000 gallons of drinking water.
• Titanic's engines used more than 800 tons of coal each day. The ship's top speed was 24 knots (27 miles an hour).
• Smoke and steam made by the Titanic's boilers escaped through three stacks. Builders added a fourth stack because they thought it made the ship look better.
• Titanic could carry 3,547 passengers and crew. About 2,200 people traveled on its first voyage.