The Titanic By Phoebe. Contents Page 3- Construction Page 4- Facilities Onboard Page 5- Maiden...

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The Titanic By Phoebe

Transcript of The Titanic By Phoebe. Contents Page 3- Construction Page 4- Facilities Onboard Page 5- Maiden...

Page 1: The Titanic By Phoebe. Contents Page 3- Construction Page 4- Facilities Onboard Page 5- Maiden Voyage Page 6- The Sinking Page 7- Aftermath Page 8- Thank.

The Titanic

By Phoebe

Page 2: The Titanic By Phoebe. Contents Page 3- Construction Page 4- Facilities Onboard Page 5- Maiden Voyage Page 6- The Sinking Page 7- Aftermath Page 8- Thank.

Contents

• Page 3- Construction

• Page 4- Facilities Onboard

• Page 5- Maiden Voyage

• Page 6- The Sinking

• Page 7- Aftermath

• Page 8- Thank You

Page 3: The Titanic By Phoebe. Contents Page 3- Construction Page 4- Facilities Onboard Page 5- Maiden Voyage Page 6- The Sinking Page 7- Aftermath Page 8- Thank.

Construction• The Titanic was built

by ‘Harland and Wolff’ in Belfast between 1909 and 1912.

• It was built for ‘White Star Line’ They also built 2 other ships just like the Titanic.

• Harland and Wolff was owned by Lord Pirrie, friend of Bruce Ismay, manager of ‘White Star Line’.

• Chief designer, Thomas Andrews supervised every detail of the construction.

Page 4: The Titanic By Phoebe. Contents Page 3- Construction Page 4- Facilities Onboard Page 5- Maiden Voyage Page 6- The Sinking Page 7- Aftermath Page 8- Thank.

Facilities Onboard• If you were 1st class then you

were treated to luxury and comfort.

• Decorations in the Lounge were modelled on the Palace of Versailles in Paris and were adorned with: ornate wooden panelling, expensive furniture and other decorations.

• Other luxuries include:• 3 Electric lifts,• A heated swimming pool,• A gymnasium,• A swimming pool,• A Turkish bath,• A squash court,• An authentic Parisian cafe

with French waiters,• A sunlit veranda cafe with

live palm trees,• a fully equipped darkroom for

amateur photographers to try their skills.

Page 5: The Titanic By Phoebe. Contents Page 3- Construction Page 4- Facilities Onboard Page 5- Maiden Voyage Page 6- The Sinking Page 7- Aftermath Page 8- Thank.

Maiden Voyage• The Titanic began it’s

Maiden Voyage from Southampton, bound for N.Y.C on 10th April 1912

• The Captain Edward J.Smith was in command, his last planned job before retirement.

• After crossing the English Channel the boat Cherbourg, France, to board additional passengers and stopped again the next day at Queenstown, Ireland before steaming out to the Atlantic

• There was about 2,201 passengers and crew onboard by now.

Page 6: The Titanic By Phoebe. Contents Page 3- Construction Page 4- Facilities Onboard Page 5- Maiden Voyage Page 6- The Sinking Page 7- Aftermath Page 8- Thank.

The Sinking• Sunday 14th April 1912, the

weather was very unusual because the water was calm, flat sea without wind or swell.

• At 11:39pm the lookout spotted a monster iceberg about 20ft above water level. They immediately sounded the warning bell and telephoned bridge with the message ‘Iceberg-RIGHT AHEAD!’.

• First Officer Murdoch, who was in charge at that point, ordered the ship to turn "hard-a-starboard" - the traditional order for a quick turn to port (left) and so away from the iceberg. The helmsman spun the ship's wheel as fast as it would go and the engines were stopped before going into reverse.

• The Titanic did begin to turn but after only 37 seconds since being sighted, the iceberg still managed to strike its starboard bow (front-right), buckling the hull and letting seawater come into the ship. The impact, although jarring to the crew at the front, was not noticed by many of the passengers.

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Aftermath• After receiving Titanic's

distress signals, RMS Carpathia arrived at 4:10am to rescue any survivors, just under two hours after Titanic had sunk.

• At 8:50am she left the area, having picked up 706 survivors and their lifeboats. They were all: cold, damp and very upset at what had happened.

• Many people were shocked that the Titanic could sink with such a great loss of life despite all of her technological advances - 706 survivors is is just 31% of the 2,223 people who were on board. 1,517 people had died.

• At 9pm on the 18th April 1912 the Carpathia arrived in New York. As she passed the Statute of Liberty, thousands of people were there to watch.

Page 8: The Titanic By Phoebe. Contents Page 3- Construction Page 4- Facilities Onboard Page 5- Maiden Voyage Page 6- The Sinking Page 7- Aftermath Page 8- Thank.