I must be the only one to whom this whole thing feels rather morbid.![]()
It was a landmark event in history. Just as when we study the Civil War here in the U.S., we learn the lessons from these tragedies, and the details that surround them are fascinating to study. Those people are long since dead, even the survivors have now all passed on. There is nothing morbid about it, really. It has become our history, and it is wise to study that history.
I must be the only one to whom this whole thing feels rather morbid.![]()
It was a landmark event in history. Just as when we study the Civil War here in the U.S., we learn the lessons from these tragedies, and the details that surround them are fascinating to study. Those people are long since dead, even the survivors have now all passed on. There is nothing morbid about it, really. It has become our history, and it is wise to study that history.
Studying history is one thing. I think we should do that. It just feels like it's been romanticized to a point where I don't think the approach a lot of people take to it is really history anymore.
I must be the only one to whom this whole thing feels rather morbid.![]()
It was a landmark event in history. Just as when we study the Civil War here in the U.S., we learn the lessons from these tragedies, and the details that surround them are fascinating to study. Those people are long since dead, even the survivors have now all passed on. There is nothing morbid about it, really. It has become our history, and it is wise to study that history.
Studying history is one thing. I think we should do that. It just feels like it's been romanticized to a point where I don't think the approach a lot of people take to it is really history anymore.
All these times I have are adjusted from "Titanic Time" (the time on the ship as determined by sun/celestial navigation) to modern day time, including DST. Times are Eastern Daylight Time.
April 14, 1912:
11:07 PM - Titanic's lookouts spot the iceberg, the order is given to "port 'round" the iceberg but it still hits and the ship begins to take on water.
11:52 PM -After a ship inspection by officers and the ship's architect it's determined the ship will sink, orders are given to start evacuation.
April 15, 1912
12:12 AM - The first signal rocket is launched along with the first lifeboat (#7) there are 28 people, the boat can support 65.
12:22 AM - Lifeboats #5 and #6 (41 and 28, respectively in 65-person capacity boats.)
12:27 AM - Lifeboat #3 (40/65)
12:37 AM - Lifeboat #8 (35/65)
12:39 AM - Lifeboat #1 (12/40)
12:47 AM - Lifeboats #9 (56/65),#10 (55/65). Last distress rocket launched.
12:51 AM - Lifeboats #11 (70/65), #12 (43/65), #14 (60/65)
12:57 AM - Lifeboats #13 (65/65), #15 (70/65)
01:02 AM - Lifeboat #16 (56/65)
01:07 AM - Collapsible Lifeboat C launches. 40 of possible 47 on board.
01:12 AM - Lifeboat #2 (25/40)
01:22 AM - Lifeboat #4 (40/65)
01:32 AM - Collapsible D (44/47). Water is at the bridge.
01:37 AM - Last distress signal is sent, essentially saying it's every man for himself.
01:44 AM - Collapsibles A and B float off the ship. A's sides aren't properly raised and is swamped. 30 people would attempt to survive on it and 12 would make it. B floats off the ship upside-down, dozens of people would climb on it and attempt to stay there until dawn when rescue arrived, 28 would survive.
01:45 AM - Titanic's lights flicker and finally go off for good just before the #1 funnel breaks off. The ship's stern continues to rise before the stress on the keel is too much and the ship breaks in two.
April 15, 1912 - 1:46 AM EDT (Adjusted/estimated from "Titanic Time" in 1912.) Titanic has sunk and is making its way to the ocean floor where she will not be discovered until September 1, 1985. 1,557 men, women, and children would succumb to exposure due to the frigid waters of the North Atlantic within minutes. The 705 people in the boats (or rescued from the water/overturned boats) would be picked up by the Carpathia and arrive in New York City three days later.
It was a landmark event in history. Just as when we study the Civil War here in the U.S., we learn the lessons from these tragedies, and the details that surround them are fascinating to study. Those people are long since dead, even the survivors have now all passed on. There is nothing morbid about it, really. It has become our history, and it is wise to study that history.
Studying history is one thing. I think we should do that. It just feels like it's been romanticized to a point where I don't think the approach a lot of people take to it is really history anymore.
But if the romantic aspect of the storytelling attracts people who might not normally take an interest in a serious, clinical retelling of the sinking of the Titanic, and if even a small percentage of those people are encouraged to learn more on their own about Titanic's history, isn't that better than those people not taking an interest at all?
Plus, it's been a hundred years. What's the appropriate length of time when you can start romanticizing stories set amidst deadly or controversial historical events? Thermopylae (300)? The Third Servile War (Spartacus)? The First War of Scottish Independence (Braveheart)? The Burning of Atlanta (Gone With the Wind)?
Isn't it kind of fetishizing history and limiting your fictional possibilities to say that anything where numerous people died or places were destroyed can only be treated with the utmost seriousness and accuracy indefinitely from the time of the event?
the last Titanic survivor who'd have any memories of the night died in 2005 -she was 5 when the ship sank.
the last Titanic survivor who'd have any memories of the night died in 2005 -she was 5 when the ship sank.
I have sod all memories of when I was five. I think my first day of school would be the only surviving memory (that I can place in that year).
Then again, something as traumatic as that would likely leave a lasting memory, especially with people hammering you about it year after year.
(the Titanic, not my first day of school...)
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