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Old 04-14-2012, 03:22 AM   #1
T@T
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Default 100 years ago today. april 14th-1912...

The unsinkable...sank

With 1500 people aboard lost

Not the worst maritime disaster but without doubt the most famous.
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Old 04-14-2012, 05:41 AM   #2
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Wasn't it on April 15th?

Looking @ wiki I guess it depends how you look @ it. It hit the iceberg on the 14th, officially became sank (is that even a proper sentence?) on the 15th
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Old 04-14-2012, 06:47 AM   #3
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Maybe it was overnight
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Old 04-14-2012, 07:00 AM   #4
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Originally Posted by T@T View Post
The unsinkable...sank

With 1500 people aboard lost

Not the worst maritime disaster but without doubt the most famous.
So which one was the worst for loss of life? Google is giving me conflicting results.

Holy crap was it the Wilhelm Gustloff (war time):

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The German KdF flagship, constructed by the Blohm & Voss shipyard, sank after being hit by three torpedoes fired by the Soviet submarine S-13 on 30 January 1945, with the loss of over 9,000 lives – the greatest loss of life in maritime history. Most of those killed were civilians, military personnel, and Nazi officials surrounded by the Red Army in East Prussia

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Old 04-14-2012, 07:05 AM   #5
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I will be adding an ice cube to all my cocktails today, as a reminder.
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Old 04-14-2012, 07:56 AM   #6
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One day early, but I watched a show on the iceberg. It was made 15,000 years ago on the Greenland shelf and was believed to have calved during the early building of the Titanic then took years to reach its date with destiny. The 'berg is thought to have fully melted within two weeks of the sinking. Fascinating story. Some of the water you drink today could have been part of that 'berg.
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Old 04-14-2012, 08:06 AM   #7
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Maybe it was overnight
11:40pm from the Wiki thing. Crazy that a hundred years ago and they can still mark the time the incident happened.
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Old 04-14-2012, 08:46 AM   #8
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The Onion, April 16, 1912

World's Largest Metaphor Hits Ice-berg

Titanic, Representation of Man's Hubris, Sinks in North Atlantic
1,500 Dead in Symbolic Traged
y
New York, April 15 -- Officials of the White Star Line have confirmed the sinking, during her maiden voyage, of the R.M.S. Titanic, the world's largest symbol of man's mortality and vulnerability.

First reports of the calamity were received Monday at the London telegraph office of the White Star Line, which owns the nautical archetype.

Message from the Carpathia

At 4:23 a.m. Greenwich Standard Time, the following message was received from the rescue ship Carpathia:

Titanic struck by icy representation of nature's supremacy STOP insufficient lifeboats due to pompous certainty in man's infallibility STOP Microcosm of larger society STOP

Indifference


It is believed at this time that upwards of 1,500 passangers aboard the metaphor may have perished in the imperturbable liquid immensity that, irrespective of mankind's congratulatory "progress," blankets most of the globe in its awful dark silence. Seven hundred more passengers survived to objectify human insignificance in the face of the colossal placidity of the universe.

Among the prominent passengers ironically missing and believed perished are New York millionaire John Jacob Astor, mining tycoon Benjamin Guggenheim, railroad president Charles Melville Hays, and presidential military aide Major Archibald Butt, providing further example of man's inability to cavort with God, no matter how wealthy or powerful he may be, as well as the vast indifference of the universe toward even the grandest of human achievement. Late word indicates, however, that the well-to-do and the privileged constitute a great majority of the living. It could not yet be determined whether this betokens a form of maritime social Darwinism or a particularly overt form of social injustice.

Irony

Although unconfirmed as of press-time, it is rumored that the Titanic was proceeding at a rapid pace through ice-berg-laden waters in order that her captain might flaunt the ship's great speed, making all the more ironic the demise of this paramount symbol of man's hubris.

An architect from the firm of Harland & Wolff, which constructed the great metaphor, was stunned and aggrieved by the significance of the tragic event.

"I spent the better part of two years re-drawing the marble on the grand staircase at the first-class entrance until it represented absolutely the right dimensions for showing off the daintily luxurious evening wear of the wives of the industrial millionaires. Now that staircase will provide an entrance only for the plankton, moss, and other marine life that inhabits the frigid North Atlantic seabed. I dare say that is ironic."

Hyperbole

"Let us take a step back from the horror of the tragedy," said Lord Peter Hothcrofte, a British naval historian, "and view it in terms of its grander significance. Simply put, the Titanic was more than a gigantic crystallization of the accumulated triumphs of 200 years of Western industrialization wedded to the firm but icy hand of Science triumphant. It was a ship larger than any ship need be, which therefore also make it somewhat of a hyperbole."

------

I like the side headlines too.... Spaniards ruled out in placement of iceberg and 3rd class passengers asked to drown. The actual Onion book has more, but that's all I can bring up online.

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Old 04-14-2012, 09:56 AM   #9
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the most overhyped disaster ever
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Old 04-14-2012, 10:41 AM   #10
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Thoughts and prayers
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Old 04-14-2012, 11:38 AM   #11
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Apparently a first class ticket cost $70,000 and a 3rd class ticket cost $800 in todays currency.

Overhyped? Yeah, probably. But it's a good commentary on humanity and a fantastical mystery all at the same time.
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Old 04-14-2012, 11:52 AM   #12
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the most overhyped disaster ever
I think the hype and mythology about the Titanic was because for over 70 years they couldn't find the damn thing.
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Old 04-14-2012, 06:05 PM   #13
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the most overhyped disaster movie ever
fyp
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Old 04-14-2012, 06:10 PM   #14
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#### i thought it was just a movie.
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Old 04-14-2012, 06:35 PM   #15
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the most overhyped disaster ever
I can think of another, but I might get lynched if I mentioned it.
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Old 04-14-2012, 06:38 PM   #16
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I can think of another, but I might get lynched if I mentioned it.
Don't tease us like that. Spill it.
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Old 04-14-2012, 08:11 PM   #17
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I was commenting to the wife today that every time I watch something on the titanic I keep expecting rose and jack to pop up in the scene....

The carpathia really did not send this did they?

Titanic struck by icy representation of nature's supremacy STOP insufficient lifeboats due to pompous certainty in man's infallibility STOP Microcosm of larger society STOP

That is pretty wordy......
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Old 04-14-2012, 08:17 PM   #18
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That was an Onion article dude.
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Old 04-14-2012, 08:29 PM   #19
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Still haven't seen the movie.
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Old 04-14-2012, 08:44 PM   #20
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"in 1607, we sailed the ocean sea, for glory god and gold for the Vir-gin-ia Com-pany.

For the new world is like heaven, and we'll all be rich and free
or so we have been told by the Vir-gin-ia Com-pany"

~Fin
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