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10[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rms_titanic.png]]
11[[caption-width-right:350:''"[[BlasphemousBoast God Himself]] [[{{Irony}} cannot sink this ship]]."'']]
12
13->''"It seems to me that the disaster about to occur was the event that not only made the world rub its eyes and awake, but woke it with a start. To my mind, the world of today awoke April 15th, 1912."''
14-->-- '''Jack Thayer''', ''Titanic'' survivor
15
16The RMS ''Titanic'' was a British transatlantic liner[[labelnote:*]]Not a cruise ship, which she's often erroneously described as. An ocean liner was a ship built primarily to take people from Point A to Point B, as this was long before airplanes could make long-distance flights. Cruise ships sail around an area and then usually return to their point of origin, with the purpose being to visit nearby ports in a leisurely manner.[[/labelnote]] that sank in 1912, causing approximately 1,500 deaths. At the time of her maiden voyage, she was the largest ship to have ever sailed the seas. Construction started in March 1909 in the Harland & Wolff shipyard in Belfast, then-UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}} (now UsefulNotes/NorthernIreland) and was completed a few months before the big trip--enough time for rumors to spread about the luxurious White Star Liner being "unsinkable". Then, said ship set sail for New York, hit an iceberg on the fourth day, and sank in under three hours, and due to the ship only having 20 lifeboats (a large number of which were launched barely half full) less than a ''third'' of the people onboard survived.
17
18The sinking of the ''Titanic'' became a story of overwhelming hubris and its downfall, due in no small part to a newspaper owner at the time who had personal beef with the owners of the ship. The story then, and largely now, is that the ship's owners put too much stock in its unsinkability and claimed the ship was the fastest and most indestructible, pushing it too hard and earning their just rewards. In fact the ship's claim to fame was as the most ''luxurious'' liner at the time, rather than the fastest or largest, and on its maiden voyage it took a more southerly route to avoid icebergs and even corrected further south during the trip when they got word that the bergs were particularly bad. The accident that destroyed the ship was a tragedy the crew had tried to avoid with all due caution. All the stuff about the lifeboats was pretty much true, though.
19
20Its fate has inspired [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_films_about_the_RMS_Titanic at least 36 movies]], including a [[Film/Titanic1943 Nazi propaganda film]], an [[Film/Titanic1953 American melodrama]], a [[Film/ANightToRemember classic British docudrama]], a [[Film/RaiseTheTitanic giant]] BoxOfficeBomb about raising the wreckage which became a major CreatorKiller and FranchiseKiller, [[WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTheTitanic two]] [[WesternAnimation/TitanicTheLegendGoesOn cartoonified]] versions in which EveryoneLives (with a sequel for one of them), [[Series/Titanic1996 a 1996 miniseries]], a [[VideoGame/TitanicAdventureOutOfTime video game]], an [[Film/Titanic1997 Academy Award-winning blockbuster]] from Creator/JamesCameron and a Tony Award-winning musical ([[Theatre/{{Titanic}} no, seriously]]) both premiering in 1997, and at least [[RuleThirtyFour two porn parodies]].
21
22[[foldercontrol]]
23
24[[folder:Background]]
25Throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, as steamships reduced transatlantic crossing time from two months to two weeks, millions of European emigrants sought to go to America to start a new life, and mail services in Europe needed a swift and reliable means of transporting hundreds of thousands of letters and packages across the Atlantic, numerous shipping companies in Great Britain, the United States, France, and eventually Germany would answer the call with large, steam-driven liners. The most famous of these operators, Britain's Cunard and White Star lines, became the big dogs, fiercely competing against each other for emigrant passenger tickets (the ''real'' bread and butter of the trade, rather than first-class passengers) and the profitable license to carry mail to and from the UK. Hence the initials ''RMS'' on ships that held that license -- '''R'''oyal '''M'''ail '''S'''teamer.\
26\
27But in the late 1890s, the nascent German Empire began to enter the realm of global commerce and wished to challenge their British rivals for international prestige. The Norddeutscher Lloyd and Hamburg America Lines threatened to encroach into Cunard and White Star's competition with the launch and maiden voyages of the ''Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse'' and ''Deutschland''[[labelnote:*]]later renamed ''Viktoria Luise''[[/labelnote]], two liners of unprecedented size, speed (with ''Kaiser'' running at a then-unheard-of speed of 22.35 knots[[note]]just over 41km/h, or almost 26mph[[/note]], and ''Deutschland'' traveling even faster) and luxury. In response, the Cunard Line, which had always placed speed and ''reliability'' as paramount for their ships, produced the 787 and 790-foot long ''Lusitania''[[labelnote:*]]which infamously ended up being torpedoed and sunk by a German U-Boat in UsefulNotes/WorldWarI[[/labelnote]] and ''Mauretania'' in 1907. These liners had top speeds of over 24 knots, thanks to their four turbine engines (the first class of ocean liners to be exclusively turbine-driven, after the comparative experiment with Cunard's liners ''Carmania'' and ''Caronia'' over the cost-effectiveness of the turbine in 1905) and were the largest liners in the world both in physical size and mass[[note]]the empty shell of the ''Lusitania'' at launch outweighed the fully outfitted ''Kaiser'' by 2,000 gross tons[[/note]], as well as among the first to have elevators (or "lifts" as the British know them) for passengers.
28[[/folder]]
29
30[[folder:Building a Titan]]
31
32White Star, seeing the threat Cunard's new "Greyhounds of the Atlantic" presented to the company, quickly drafted a response. As opposed to Cunard, White Star prided itself on comfort and luxury rather than pure speed (as that tended to come at the cost of passenger capacity, and resulted in a tendency to vibrate uncomfortably). Part of this included granting modest luxuries to Third Class, such as cabins with doors that closed, lavatories with functioning toilets and bathtubs, wide-open recreational facilities and promenade spaces, dining saloons that had linens, silverware, waiters who served hot food, and free postcards on their menus, so that they could praise White Star to their friends and relatives back home for even more business. Compared to the standard of living for the working class in most European countries, if an emigrant travelled by White Star, they had ample cause to feel like royalty.[[note]]On older ships, the poorest passengers were packed into cramped and squalid dormitories, with only one bathtub for all of them and often having to bring their own food as well. These quarters were located near the ship's steering mechanism, hence the rise of the term "steerage." To show respect to emigrants, White Star did away with using steerage and only used Third Class in advertising and official company language.[[/note]] As such, they sought to build two, possibly three, liners that were at least ninety feet longer than the ''Lusitania'' and ''Mauretania'', and by far more luxurious than both put together.\
33\
34The answer was the ''Olympic''-class of ship: a trio of 46,000 gross ton, 882 foot long super-liners with the capacity for 3,000 passengers and crew, ''three'' lifts in first-class and one for second-class, and two reciprocating high-pressure engines for the two "wing" propellers, with a low-pressure turbine for the smaller, central propeller, increasing cost-effectiveness in steam economy by reusing steam wasted by the reciprocating engines. For luxury, the ships boasted promenade decks for each class; their cabins for third and second class were just as good as second and first-class cabins on other ships, and the first-class rooms were just as splendid as any suite at the best hotels in the world, with the most expensive suite of cabins went for hundreds of thousands of American dollars in 2020 money, with private baths for more first class cabins than any other ship afloat[[note]]even as late as the 1930s, most liners still required even the higher-paying passengers to share bathing facilities like in a college dorm[[/note]]. As the popular ships of the day had four funnels, a fake funnel was added on at the back; this also doubled as a large ventilator for the engineering spaces, reducing the number of ventilator cowls on deck, producing a clean outline, whereas the deckhouse roofs of the ''Mauretania'' and ''Lusitania'', with their multitude of cowls, looked cluttered in comparison.\
35\
36Safety was also considered in the design: a double-bottomed hull to contain flooding in the event of running aground; fifteen bulkheads that went two decks above the waterline (any two of which could flood with bulkheads above the floodwater to spare[[note]]The design lacked any watertight ''decks'', leaving the compartments "open-topped," so to speak. This may seem like an obvious FatalFlaw today, and contemporary warships had significantly greater watertight compartmentalization with both decks and bulkheads being watertight. But unlike warships, passenger liners were not expected to get large holes blasted in them by torpedoes and battleship shells (even if they ''were'' designed to be fitted with guns and operate as auxiliary merchant cruisers in the event of war) and at the time, any accident that would cause a sufficient loss of buoyancy to bring the top of a watertight bulkhead below the waterline and thus allow water to flood over it into the next compartment was considered such a remote possibility that it wasn't worth worrying about[[/note]] that divided the ship into sixteen watertight compartments); these compartments featured the very latest watertight doors, which were held in place by a magnetic latch and could be sealed by flipping a switch on the bridge and letting gravity do the rest; in the event of a collision, or in the impractical probability of the first four compartments flooding the ship would still float, acting as its own lifeboat until help could arrive, at which point the ship's boats would be used to shuttle passengers to the incoming rescue ships; and above all, in the event of the worst, the ships boasted a new [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davit davit]] design that could hold up to 68 lifeboats, but for various reasons (cosmetics, impracticality, cost, etc.) the number was reduced to 20, which was still four boats beyond the legally required 16 for ships 10,000 tons and over in the British Board of Trade regulations.[[note]]The common wisdom of the time was that lifeboats would be used to ferry passengers to a rescue ship rather than having to keep the entire ship's population afloat at the same time, which was seemingly confirmed when, in 1909, another White Star ship, RMS ''Republic'', was struck and took forty hours to sink. The limited lifeboats were enough to save everyone on board, with the only fatalities being those killed in the initial impact. Given that the majority of accidents took place close to shore, the North Atlantic being one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world, and the advent of wireless telegraphy making inter-ship communications possible, it seemed logical that a rescue ship would always be close by for assistance.[[/note]]\
37\
38'''Impractical''' being the operative word. Certainly, unpredictable things might happen, but as a major passenger tragedy had not befallen any White Star ship in nearly forty years[[note]]The greatest disaster for a White Star Line ship at the time was the sinking of the SS ''[[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Atlantic_(1870) Atlantic]]'' in 1873, when that ship struck underwater rocks during a storm and capsized, killing at least 535 people[[/note]], there was little reason for anyone in the shipping industry to be overly concerned beyond academics.\
39\
40And so it became known in the shipbuilding world that the ''Olympic''-class were "unsinkable", and the public bought it and ran with it. After all, in an age where men were flying, and one person communicating with someone else on the other side of the world in real time, and horses were losing buyers to the horseless carriage, the idea of a ship that could not be sunk was hardly unimaginable.\
41\
42And so the first ship, RMS ''Olympic'', set sail in 1911, and the response was so successful that White Star ordered a third ship, ''Britannic''. Harland & Wolff designers heavily studied ''Olympic's'' performance and passenger satisfaction to make improvements on the subsequent ships.
43
44[[/folder]]
45
46[[folder:''Titanic''[='=]s maiden voyage]]
47
48It was in this environment that the middle child, ''Titanic'', rose to prominence. On her maiden voyage, starting at Southampton, England and Cherbourg, France on April 10th before going off to Queenstown (now Cobh), Ireland, she was loaded with not only hundreds of emigrants from both the Continent and the British Isles, but some of the wealthiest aristocrats, by title or by position, on both sides of the Atlantic. John Jacob Astor IV, heir to the Astor Railroad fortune and his barely 19-year old bride Madeleine were returning home from their extended honeymoon[[note]](and to wait out the scandal involving JJ's divorce and marriage to a younger woman... and to ensure that their unborn child was born on American soil).[[/note]] Also on board were the Strauses, Isidor and Ida, co-owners of the world-famous Macy's Department Store in New York, Benjamin Guggenheim, a business man from one of America's (and possibly the world's) wealthiest families, who was accompanied by his mistress Léontine Aubart, Denver socialite Margaret Brown and Archibald Butt, a friend and advisor to President UsefulNotes/WilliamHowardTaft, along with scores of other members of the 1912 rich and famous. White Star was also represented on board, with managing director J. Bruce Ismay, Harland & Wolff's head designer Thomas Andrews, and nine lucky[[note]]Well, it ''seemed'' lucky at the time. All nine were later killed.[[/note]] builders from Harland & Wolff known as the "Guarantee Group" traveling to observe the general performance of the new ship.\
49\
50And at the helm, was Captain Edward John Smith, "The Millionaire's Captain," or "EJ" to friends and family, and White Star's favorite officer, who took out every new ship of the line on her maiden voyage for the past decade and a half. At the age of 63, Smith [[{{Retirony}} planned to retire]]. If not after this voyage on ''Titanic'', then certainly after ''Britannic'''s in the spring of 1915. While the majority of the crew were hired at Southampton in the days prior to the voyage, which was a common practice at the time, Smith's officers were a handpicked collection of White Star's best. Despite Britain being in the middle of a coal strike, White Star was able to secure enough coal from berthed ships to ensure ''Titanic'' made her scheduled departure. However, with so many vessels unable to set sail, traffic on the North Atlantic routes was lighter than usual.\
51\
52''Titanic''[='=]s maiden voyage almost ended in disaster just as it was starting. As the ship was leaving Southampton, its powerful suction pulled a nearby vessel, the ''SS City of New York'', from its moorings and into ''Titanic''[='=]s path. Captain Smith quickly ordered ''Titanic''[='=]s port propeller into reverse, and the resulting wash pushed the ''New York'' away from ''Titanic'', giving several tugs time to usher it safely away. The near collision still delayed the start of ''Titanic''[='=]s journey by an hour. When the maiden voyage finally got underway, the first three days were calm and without incident. ''Titanic'' was crossing the Atlantic at a brisk pace and there was talk on board of a potential early arrival.[[note]]A common misconception is that J. Bruce Ismay was pushing the ship to arrive early in order to make headlines about the ship's speed, which never happened. The speculation comes from passengers who were noting the ship's fast speed, which was certainly impressive for her size.[[/note]]
53
54[[/folder]]
55
56[[folder:April 14, 1912]]
57
58But the winter of 1911-12 was unusually warm, and the threat of icebergs breaking off from the glaciers of Greenland and northeast Canada was more dire than usual, with a thicker density of icebergs and pack ice farther south than usual. ''Titanic''[='=]s wireless operators received a number of ice warnings, but due to the nature of their employ[[note]]They were employees of Marconi Wireless provided to White Star Lines under contract, and thus were technically not members of the ship's crew, though they still answered to the Captain while at sea[[/note]], only sent a few to the bridge. Nevertheless, enough were passed along that Captain Smith ordered a course further south to go around what he believed was the greatest concentration of ice.\
59\
60On the day of the disaster, the passengers had a very relaxing afternoon that quickly turned chilly as the ship entered a cold front. That evening, the operators were trying to clear a large backlog of messages that had accumulated as their equipment had broken down the day before. This made Senior Wireless Operator Jack Phillips a bit irritable, and when nearby ship ''Californian'' tried to warn them of an ice field right in their path and that his own ship had stopped for the night for that reason, Phillips told him to shut up and keep out, as the ''Californian'' was so close they were interfering with ''Titanic''[='=]s signal to the mainland (the ''Titanic'' also had much more sensitive radio equipment than the ''Californian'', this fact leading to dramatic rumors that the message nearly [[EarAche blew out Phillips' ear drums]]). The operator on the ''Californian'' then turned in for the night and shut down his equipment, and thus the one ship within 15 miles of the ''Titanic'' would not hear of the disaster until morning.[[note]]Cyril Evans was the ''Californian''[='=]s only wireless operator, and at the time there was no requirement for the wireless on every ship to be manned 24 hours a day. Whole volumes could be -- and ''have'' been -- written on "The ''Californian'' Incident" and what, exactly, her crew and Captain saw and did (or ''didn't'' do) on that night; best to read one of them for a clear explanation as the whole thing is well beyond the scope of this article. Suffice it to say that wireless or no wireless, her conspicuous lack of action on that night has understandably become infamous.[[/note]]\
61\
62On Sunday, April 14th, at 11:40 PM ship's time, the majority of passengers and Captain Smith had gone to bed. It was a new moon and the sea was as smooth as glass, highly unusual for the typically swell-filled North Atlantic. These circumstances made the prospect of spotting icebergs almost impossible, without the light of the moon or the whitewash of waves breaking at the waterline of the iceberg. Normally, the lookouts would be equipped with binoculars, but a last-minute change to the command structure resulted in the binoculars being misplaced at Southampton.[[note]]Regardless, there is some debate as to how much of a difference binoculars would have made. Lookouts were trained to watch with the naked eye, as binoculars limit one's field of vision. Binoculars would only have been used to more closely inspect an object once it was sighted.[[/note]] So it's a testament to Frederick Fleet's eyes and dedication that he saw the iceberg when he did (really more of a black mass where starlight ''wasn't''), his co-watchman Reginald Lee ringing the bell as Fleet telephoned the bridge.\
63\
64The officer on duty on the bridge, First Officer William Murdoch, saw the iceberg too, and ordered "Hard a-starboard" (technically to Port, or a Left Turn, but ''Titanic'' used tiller commands according to British Merchant Navy regulations and so the directions were reversed), and ordered all stop on the engines. Murdoch then ordered the turn reversed and engines stopped, bringing the bow back towards the iceberg. While seemingly counterintuitive, this order, known as "porting around," was the standard collision-avoidance maneuver for the time, reducing the ship's speed while swinging the stern away from the hazard - as an analogy, picture driving a car and having to slow down and change lanes to avoid a hazard in your current path; simply turning away could mean presenting the ship's entire side to be ripped open as her existing momentum would stretch the turning radius out to be farther than that of the ordered turn.[[note]]Some have claimed that Murdoch made a TragicMistake with his orders and that he should have just rammed the iceberg head-on, which would have crushed the ship's bow for a considerable distance, but only breached between two and four watertight compartments, allowing the ship to stay afloat and likely even sail on for repairs after the passengers had been evacuated. However, this reasoning only really works out with the benefit of hindsight; hundreds of deaths would still have resulted in this scenario, which would likely have resulted in Murdoch facing criminal charges and a prison sentence, seeing how the prevailing wisdom would have still been that the ship was practically unsinkable and should have easily withstood a glancing blow from the iceberg. Not to mention that the first instinct of any competent sailor is ''not'' to ram your ship into an obstacle.[[/note]]\
65\
66In any case, ''Titanic'' changed heading just in time to avoid a head-on collision, instead scraping her starboard side against the berg in a glancing blow. The impact caused some of the hull plates to buckle, allowing water to rush in.\
67\
68Most of the passengers never noticed the collision, or felt little more than a slight rumbling bump. The first sign to the passengers that something was amiss came minutes later, when the engines and their steady, rhythmic vibrations were suddenly stopped. Third Class passengers in the bow ''acutely'' felt the impact and soon awoke to find their cabins covered in water. Thomas Andrews, the designer, never even knew of the accident until Captain Smith ordered him to go down below to examine the damage. After midnight, Andrews returned with the news, and it wasn't good. ''Six'' compartments had been breached: the forward peak, all three cargo holds, and boiler rooms 5 and 6.[[note]]Possibly even a seventh compartment, as some of the survivors later reported seeing water entering boiler room 4 well before it started spilling over from boiler room 5, with no obvious source.[[/note]] ''Titanic'' could float with any two compartments, or the four foremost compartments, flooding. Any more, and the ship would sink. The engineers were able to fix Boiler Room 5's two or so feet of damage and began pumping, but for every gallon the engineers pumped out, ''Titanic'' took on 15 more. Andrews informed the captain that ''Titanic'' would sink in less than two hours.
69
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:The sinking]]
73
74Over those next two hours, the crew rushed to launch the lifeboats while Senior Wireless Operator Jack Phillips and his assistant Harold Bride worked frantically to get the word out, right up to the very end. The closest ship to respond to the distress call, the Cunard Line's RMS ''Carpathia'', instantly rushed to ''Titanic''[='=]s aid,[[note]]In fact, Captain Arthur Henry Rostron [[TimTaylorTechnology ordered all non-essential power systems shut off and rerouted to the engines]]. It's widely reported that during the rush, the chief engineer took off his hat and placed it over the main steam pressure valve so the crewmen wouldn't see just ''how'' far they were pushing the engines; apparently it was far enough that the engines were [[HeroicRROD permanently damaged,]] and the ''Carpathia'' never exceeded 12 knots for the rest of her service life, a handicap that many attribute to her later being chased down and sunk by a German U-Boat during WWI.[[/note]] but was four hours away.[[note]]''Carpathia'' was not the only ship that night to respond to the distress calls, though her heroics were by far the most impressive; the ''Mount Temple'', the ''Birma'', the ''Frankfurt'', and ''Titanic'' sister ship ''Olympic'', among others, all altered course to respond, but were even farther away than the ''Carpathia'' and despite valiant efforts didn't begin arriving until morning.[[/note]] In the meantime, the lifeboat launchings were extremely chaotic and disorganized. While it was easy enough for First Class passengers to be roused and guided to the lifeboats individually, those in Second and Third Class mostly just got a hasty knock on their cabin door, a lifejacket and an order to go to the Boat Deck. However, thanks to the ship being specifically designed to keep the upper and lower classes fully separated[[note]]required by regulations, as passengers in Second and especially Third Class were generally assumed to be immigrants rather than tourists, had undergone medical screenings before embarking, and Third Class passengers needed to disembark at Ellis Island rather than New York proper[[/note]], the Boat Deck was only meant for First and Second Class outside of an emergency; thus most of the passengers travelling on the lower decks had no idea how to get there and needed directions from the equally frightened stewards. Unfortunately and inevitably, these men and women were vastly outnumbered by the people they were trying to help, a lot of whom couldn't speak or understand English and who needed to be guided through a system of maze-like corridors which Second Officer Charles Lightoller (who had served on ''Olympic'') said would take someone ''weeks'' to memorize. [[note]]However, contrary to popular belief fuelled by various retellings, and while some survivors did report that crew members tried to prevent them from getting above deck, the Third Class passengers were ''not'' deliberately locked down in the bowels of the ship by the crew to make sure that as many First and Second class passengers as possible could get to safety. More women and children from Third Class survived the disaster than men from both First and Second Class combined, though it's still a paltry number compared to the survival rate of women and children from the upper classes. The Admiralty report later stated that many of the Third Class passengers were in the part of the ship that flooded first and they never had any chance to survive. At the same time, it was alleged that the male employees of the ''À La Carte Restaurant'', located on B Deck, ''were'' locked in their quarters by the stewards to prevent them from rushing the boats, though this has never been conclusively proven. [[/note]] To make matters worse, ''Titanic'' had only had one very basic lifeboat drill when the ship was docked in Southampton [[note]]There ''had'' been a drill planned for the Sunday morning before the sinking, but Captain Smith had cancelled it for unknown reasons.[[/note]] and while the 29 able seamen who manned the deck were trained in how to use the launching equipment for the boats, the vast majority of the crew (who were stewards, kitchen staff or engineers) had barely any idea of what was expected of them in this type of emergency -- many of them had never even rowed a boat before. And even if everyone had been able to get to the Boat Deck without a problem and the crew were more aware of what they were supposed to do, there was still the little matter of the ship only having enough lifeboats to accommodate barely ''half'' of the people on board.\
75\
76Because of all the terror and confusion during the sinking, inevitably there are conflicting accounts about the actions of several people, including whether or not one of the officers shot a passenger in the chaos and then committed suicide by turning the gun on himself.[[note]]If the shooting ''did'' actually happen, Murdoch is often considered the candidate, but Lightoller claimed to have last seen him working to free one of the collapsible lifeboats; Murdoch's descendants understandably don't accept that he would have behaved in such a manner and were outraged by his portrayal in Cameron's film.[[/note]] According to some witnesses Captain Smith, upon realizing the scope of the emergency, gave vague and sometimes impractical orders and became so disconnected that he didn't bother to find out if they were being carried out; others said that he did everything in his power to prevent panic and to make sure the boats were being lowered safely. His command of "Women and children first" was interpreted by Murdoch to mean "Women and children ''first'', let men in if there's room," while Lightoller took it to mean "Women and children ''only''." Neither officer was informed of the rated capacity of the lifeboats and erred on the side of caution; furthermore, the ship did not appear to be in immediate danger, which made passengers reluctant to leave it on a small rowing boat in the middle of the freezing night, especially if it meant being separated from their loved ones. [[note]]Another crucial matter that's often overlooked when discussing who ended up in the lifeboats; unlike the far wealthier upper class passengers who could afford to replace any lost possessions, the majority of Third Class had brought ''all'' of their worldly goods with them in emigrating to America and were naturally reluctant to abandon everything they owned in leaving the ship.[[/note]] As a result boats built for 65 were often lowered only half-full and one lifeboat, #1, had only ''twelve'' people in it; all told, there were some 400-500 empty berths on the lifeboats. However, at first the passengers and crew weren't too concerned as they (mistakenly) thought help was just around the corner, since the ''Californian'' was visible on the horizon; by the time the deadliness of the situation set in and the panic really started, most of the boats had left. Due to the chaotic nature of the evacuation and the limited time in which they were launched, it has been speculated that even had there been enough lifeboats for all on board, only a small additional number of people would have been saved; particularly since most of the able seamen (again, the few individuals who were actually ''trained'' to launch and man the boats) had left early on with the first evacuees, assuming they'd be able to return later. The last boats were launched less than ten minutes before the ship went under, and the last two collapsibles -- A and B -- were never launched at all, instead being actually washed off the deck as the water swept over the bow.\
77\
78At 2:20 AM local time, ''Titanic'' broke apart and slipped beneath the waves, with the bow and stern hitting the ocean floor about five minutes afterwards located 600 meters apart from each other. The some-odd 1,500 men, women, and children left behind (or at least the ones who hadn't already drowned while trapped below decks and weren't crushed by the collapsing funnels) had to contend with the 28°F (-2°C) water; almost everyone perished within half an hour. Only three lifeboats went back to look for survivors -- another point of contention about the disaster, but it's usually agreed that so many desperate swimmers trying to climb into the lifeboats could have resulted in them capsizing, dooming even more to an icy death. Lifeboat 14 only found four men still alive in the water, one of whom died soon after he was pulled from the sea, although they were later able to save the people in the close-to-sinking Collapsible A; Lifeboats 4 and 12 managed to rescue Lightoller and the sixteen or so men who were balanced on top of the overturned Collapsible B. With little to do but wait, around 700 people were picked up by RMS ''Carpathia'' at dawn... and, on top of ''everything else'' that went wrong that night, it turned out the lifeboats were barely provisioned with emergency supplies of food, so if it had taken longer for rescue to arrive then the survivors could have been in real trouble. As it was, several of the men who had managed to get aboard the collapsible boats, even as ''Titanic'' sank from under them, still ended up dying of hypothermia before the ''Carpathia'' arrived.
79
80Within hours, news of the disaster started to spread to newspapers across the globe, often with confused or misleading headlines such as claiming all aboard were rescued or that the ship was being towed in. However, it would not be until the ''Carpathia'''s arrival in New York three days later that the true scope of the sinking was clear.
81
82[[/folder]]
83
84[[folder:Aftermath]]
85
86After the disaster, the United States Senate and the British Wreck Commissioner held inquiries. Both reached similar conclusions: that Captain Smith had been traveling too fast in an area with known hazards, regulations on the number of required lifeboats was outdated, and there was a lack of crew preparation and training for disaster. New legislation was passed on both sides of the Atlantic to ensure that such a tragedy couldn't happen again. This included mandating enough lifeboats for all passengers and lifeboat drills to ensure the crew knew how to use them. 24 hour radio communications became standardized. In addition, the International Ice Patrol was founded to monitor icebergs in the North Atlantic.\
87\
88As for the White Star Line itself, they did take a severe hit in the press for the tragedy, with director J. Bruce Ismay resigning after he was ripped apart by newspapers for merely surviving[[note]]Ismay had a very poor relationship with the press, stemming from a long-time rivalry with sensationalist newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst. When Hearst learned that Ismay had survived the sinking, he instantly pounced and used his papers to depict Ismay as a gutless coward who fled when so many women and children died, shattering his reputation overnight. For what it's worth, Ismay cooperated fully with both the American and British inquiries, never once trying to hide anything or shift the blame, and his participation in the latter allowed British newspapers to partly shield him, but by then, the image of him as a coward became self-sustaining and sadly persists to this day.[[/note]], but they remained a profitable company for nearly twenty more years. ''Olympic'' was a popular vessel until being retired in 1935 due to her obsolescence and subsequently scrapped. At the end of World War I, the company also received a number of German liners - including the ''Majestic'', the world's largest liner - as compensation for wartime losses. This included the ''Britannic'', as she was sunk by a mine in 1916 while serving as a hospital ship and having never carried a single passenger due to being completed just as the war began.[[note]]Both ''Carpathia'' and ''Californian'', the two other ships most connected with the tragedy, were sunk by German U-boats during the war, with the latter sinking in the same general area as ''Britannic''.[[/note]] In the 1930s, in the wake of the Great Depression devastating the global economy and the United States tightening immigration laws, impacting Third Class passengers who were the cornerstone of their business, the White Star Line was merged by the British government with their Cunard rivals, who had been suffering financially for the same reasons.[[note]]Cunard, and thus what is left of White Star's legacy, is now part of the Carnival Corporation, the world's largest cruise company, and is running the only true ocean liner in existence, the RMS ''Queen Mary 2''. She still runs the same Southampton-New York route that White Star used.[[/note]] The builders of ''Titanic'', Harland & Wolff, continued to be a major shipyard for ocean liners and the Royal Navy.[[note]]One of H&W's warships was the light cruiser HMS ''Belfast'', which was the command ship during the D-Day landings in 1944 and is now a museum ship in London.[[/note]] While the rise of air travel in the 1950s would severely cut into their business and all but eliminate ocean liners as a means of transportation, H&W is still in operation today, now focusing on offshore construction projects such as wind farms.\
89\
90Though several accounts of immense gallantry emerged in the aftermath -- husbands placing their families in lifeboats and calmly bidding them goodbye, gentlemen escorting solitary women to the Boat Deck to help them find a seat, wealthier passengers giving up their chance of survival to those less fortunate, couples refusing to part and choosing to die together, the officers and crew remaining at their posts until the very end -- the disaster also shone a spotlight on the massive social inequality not just aboard the ship but in Edwardian society in general. Barely a ''quarter'' of both Third Class and the ship's crew survived, compared to slightly under half of Second Class and near to three quarters of First Class. [[note]] Percentage wise, Third Class had a 25% survival rate, the crew 24%, Second Class 41% and First Class 62%.[[/note]] While the Third Class passengers had far outnumbered the other classes, it still wasn't a great look if you were highly privileged and had apparently saved yourself while leaving hundreds of desperate women and children to die; besides Ismay, several other people who made it into the lifeboats were also plagued by the controversy for the rest of their lives. [[note]]This included Sir Cosmo and Lady Lucy Duff-Gordon, who were in the aforementioned and notorious Lifeboat #1; when Lady Lucy remarked to her secretary 'There is your beautiful nightdress gone', one of the firemen in the boat angrily remarked that though the couple could easily replace all their belongings, he and other members of the crew had lost everything they owned. Sir Cosmo offered each of the men in the boat £5 to help them until they received new assignments, but this generous act was twisted into gossip that the Duff-Gordons had bribed the lifeboat crew not to return to pick up survivors from the freezing water for fear of being swamped. Yeah. Absolutely ''terrible'' look.[[/note]] At the same time, the tragedy delivered a solid gut punch to the supposed triumph of man-made technology against the power and threats of the natural world. A ship believed to be unsinkable had failed to live up to that promise, and not even all their money or influence could save some of the world's richest men from an awful death. [[note]]However, this is not to say that their deaths were inevitable; mostly they were due to more examples of gallantry. John Jacob Astor ''had'' asked if there was room in a lifeboat so that he and Madeleine, who was five months pregnant, could stay together -- but he had the incredibly bad luck to be asking Lightoller, who said that "no man is allowed on this boat or any of the boats until the ladies are off"; Murdoch or Wilde might well have been more lenient, especially since (according to Madeleine's later account) there was apparently room in the boat for at least fifteen more people. Still, Astor seemed to have accepted the denial and his fate calmly, merely asking what number the lifeboat was so he could find Madeleine later. Isidor Straus refused the offer to get into a lifeboat while there were still women and children on the ship, and Ida refused to leave him, saying "We have lived together for many years. Where you go, I go." Benjamin Guggenheim and his valet, realising that rescue wasn't going to come near quick enough to save the people still trapped on the ship, changed into evening wear to meet their deaths and remarked "We've dressed up in our best and are prepared to go down like gentlemen."[[/note]] While not precisely the EndOfAnAge ([[UsefulNotes/WorldWarI considering a certain conflict that would erupt and engulf much of the world just two years later]]), the sinking of ''Titanic'' was a massive blow to those who constantly preached the superiority of Western society and innovation; [[NotSoInvincibleAfterAll a reminder that they were]] ''[[NotSoInvincibleAfterAll not]]'' [[NotSoInvincibleAfterAll all-powerful]].
91
92[[/folder]]
93
94[[folder:The wreck]]
95
96The ''Titanic'' became another piece of pop culture, including the subject of a number of films, and expeditions searched the bottom of the Atlantic for the ship, with the more fanciful ones believing they could somehow recover the ship entirely. In 1985, a joint French and American team found the wreckage, and the following year the Woods-Hole Oceanographic Institute sent a team, led by discoverer Dr. Robert "Bob" Ballard, to dive and photograph the wreck. Curiously, the wreck was discovered a considerable distance from ''Titanic''[='=]s last distress position, some 13 miles away.[[note]]In the 1980s, Ballard was contracted by the US Navy to survey the wrecks of the nuclear submarines ''Thresher'' and ''Scorpion'', in exchange for the resources he would need to look for ''Titanic''. While examining the wrecks, he discovered that as they imploded and sank, they spilled debris over a wide area. Ballard then adjusted his approach to look for the debris field rather than the wreck itself, and ultimately succeeded when they came across one of the ship's distinctive boilers. [[/note]]\
97\
98Today, the wreck lies in two big chunks, with smaller chunks consisting of the middle section over a 15mi[[superscript:2]] area. The bow is mostly intact and still resembles a ship, whereas the stern is a jumbled mess of decking and hull plating.[[note]]This is due to the way both sections reached the bottom. The bow, streamlined and filled with water, gently descended until it struck the ocean floor, whereas the stern, mostly filled with air, violently spiraled and imploded on its way down.[[/note]] A vast debris field of personal artifacts, large machinery and wreckage from when ''Titanic'' broke up lies scattered around the site. [[note]] Some of the notable debris includes the remains of ''Titanic's'' four funnels, the number one cargo hatch located north of the bow, the boilers and other machinery equipment located near the stern, and to the far east of the stern lies three large missing chunks of '' Titanic's'' missing middle section where the ship broke in half on the surface. [[/note]] The wreck itself is being consumed by iron-eating bacteria, and, assuming that those don't finish her off, recent sonar scans show that dunes that dwarf the ship are slowly being blown her way by the currents, ensuring that the whole site will eventually be buried.\
99\
100There is much controversy concerning the near-constant dives on the wreck and the issue of salvaging artifacts from the site. Moreover, some visits to the wreck have also caused more damage to it (the team that retrieved the ship's bell destroyed the crow's nest while doing so, which until then had been virtually whole and intact; and on one of the dives with the Russian Mir, a sub accidentally damaged a deckhouse with its propeller). Some, including Ballard himself, equate the salvaging with GraveRobbing, and that the ship should be left to ([[AccidentalPun no pun intended]]) rust in peace. When Ballard found the wreck of the scuttled Nazi battleship ''Bismarck'' a few years after the ''Titanic'' discovery, he refused to publicize its location to prevent it from meeting a similar fate. Others claim that such comparisons are invalidated by the treatment of similar legendary disaster sites such as Pompeii, and that it is important to document the wreck site as clearly and thoroughly as possible while the ship still exists, both to ensure the stories of her passengers and crew continue to be told and that the scientific understanding of the tragedy is fully understood.
101
102[[/folder]]
103
104[[folder:''Titanic'' today]]
105
106Current international legislation prohibits tampering with the wreck of the ship itself, but the debris field containing thousands of artifacts ranging from pots and pans to shoes to tableware to dolls to wreckage is more or less free rein from which the Salvor-in-Possession ''Titanic'', Inc. (now Premier Exhibitions) is able to collect items, which can be seen in museums and traveling exhibitions the world over.\
107\
108There are a number of museum exhibits and traveling exhibits all over the world, but the most poignant ones are located in the cities directly connected with ''Titanic''. The ''Titanic'' museum in Belfast, Northern Ireland, overlooks the very shipyard where she and her big sister ''Olympic'' were built side by side. The museum's four exterior corners are built to the exact size and shape of the ship's hull. The exhibits focus on the construction of the ship and life in Belfast at the time she was being built, as well as the actual disaster and the events which followed; permanently docked just outside the building is the SS ''Nomadic'', the much smaller vessel which transported first- and second-class passengers to the ship in Cherbourg.[[note]]The ''Olympic''-class liners were too big to enter the harbour proper, so ''Nomadic'' and her running mate ''Traffic'' -- designated for third-class passengers and baggage -- were built to service the sisters as tenders.[[/note]] Southampton, England, where ''Titanic'' embarked on her journey, has an exhibit at the local maritime museum and a number of monuments dedicated to the crew, many of whom were natives of the city. Meanwhile in Cobh, Ireland, her last port of call, a ''Titanic'' "trail" guides visitors around the city to important locations connected with the ship, such as the former White Star Line office, and the city garden includes a large memorial. Finally, the Luxor Hotel & Casino in UsefulNotes/LasVegas has an artifact exhibit which features "The Big Piece," the largest section of ''Titanic's'' hull that was successfully recovered in 1998.\
109\
110The last survivor, Millvina Dean (2 months old at the time of the sinking), passed away on 31 May 2009.
111[[/folder]]
112
113[[folder:The ''Titan'' tragedy]]
114
115On Sunday, 18 June 2023, the ''Titan'', a commercial submersible operated by the private company [=OceanGate=] that provided tours of the ''Titanic'' wreckage, suffered a catastrophic implosion during its descent in the water column, instantly killing the five passengers within, including Stockton Rush, the company's founder and CEO.[[note]]Rush, incidentally, was married to Wendy Weil, the great-great-granddaughter of Isidor and Ida Straus, two of the more famous people who died in the original disaster[[/note]] The remnants and debris field of the ''Titan'' submersible was found to be located 500 meters north of ''Titanic's'' bow five days later. The tragic incident garnered international attention and raised more concerns about treating the site as a tourist attraction, with families of ''Titanic'' survivors and victims arguing the site should be ruled out of bounds to future tourism ventures. Creator/JamesCameron, who's very much an expert on the matter as he did 33 dives down to the ''Titanic'' wreckage after directing the hugely successful 1997 film, [[https://abcnews.go.com/US/james-cameron-compares-submersible-tragedy-titanic-sinking-im/story?id=100314415 found similarities between the two tragedies]]. Cameron further explained that the ''Titan'' and ''Titanic'' wrecks both represented the nature of human recklessness and the disregard of caution which led to both of the incidents occurring. Ballard also remarked that, like the ''Titanic'', the aftermath of the ''Titan'' implosion would lead to stricter and more refined regulations for future submersible dives to prevent history from repeating itself.[[note]]The ''Titan'' was quite [[UnfinishedUntestedUsedAnyway haphazardly conceived and built]]: the hull and window could not sustain the pressure at such depth, the submarine had no navigation instruments and was steered using a Logitech video game controller (which is common in military use, but is usually picked for being cheap and easily replaceable, qualities that are detrimental for a submersible), the ballasts were construction pipes bought from a camping supply store, and so on and so forth. Rush considered too much safety a "waste" and once condemned the 1993 Passenger Vessel Safety Act for "needlessly prioritiz[ing] passenger safety over commercial innovation". [[/note]] A French leading expert on the ''Titanic'' and friend of Cameron, Paul-Henri Nargeolet, was one of the passengers who died in the tragedy.
116
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Works Set aboard RMS ''Titanic'']]
120Too many to list here, but there a few noteworthy works:
121----
122* ''Saved from the Titanic'' (1912): Released just 31 days after the disaster. It starred actress and model Dorothy Gibson, who ''actually was on the ship'' and ''wore the clothes she wore on the ship'' when making the movie. The prints were destroyed in a fire in 1914 and the film is lost. Gibson, still recovering from her [[ShellShockedVeteran traumatic experience]], was reluctant to do the project, but was coerced into it by her manager. Contemporary critics noted that the actress looked strained and on edge throughout the film, and some have criticised the film for cashing in on the tragedy so soon. Dorothy Gibson was so traumatized by the sinking and her subsequent appearance in ''Saved from the Titanic'' that she retired from show business after the movie was completed.
123* ''In Night and Ice'': (1912): Originally titled ''In Nacht und Eis'', an early example of a "mockumentary," reenacting the ship's crossing, iceberg collision, and sinking aboard the German luxury liner ''Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria'', along with some laughable by today's standards model footage shot in the Baltic Sea. Unlike the Dorothy Gibson film made a few months prior, this film survives. A copy was rediscovered in 1998 and preserved by the F.W. Murnau Foundation.
124* ''Atlantic'' (1929): A very early talkie and one of the first sound British films. The film is a very loose adaptation of the sinking, based on a contemporary play titled ''The Berg''. Due to a threatening letter from White Star Line, the original studio that released the film changed the ship's name (and subsequently the film's title) to a fictional "SS Atlantic."[[note]]Ironically, the greatest disaster for the White Star Line prior to the loss of ''Titanic'' had been in 1873... when the SS ''Atlantic'' sank off the coast of Nova Scotia with over 500 casualties. The filmmakers were apparently unaware of this ship and her fate.[[/note]] The film, while a bit primitive and sloppily made on a low budget, can be seen as a very early prototype of the DisasterMovie sub-genre, [[TropeMaker establishing various tropes and clichés]] that would be imitated by subsequent films in the decades to follow. Like many talkies of the time, this film was shot in three separate languages; English, German, and French, each version utilizing a different cast of actors. This was common before dubbing came to popularity as a more cost-effective way to release sound films internationally.
125* ''Film/{{Titanic|1943}}'': A 1943 drama film made in [[ThoseWackyNazis Nazi Germany]] as an anti-British propaganda piece. However, the film was promptly censored and withdrawn after scenes of disaster and panic turned out to be a hot bed for UnfortunateImplications and it was banned in Germany by Joseph Goebbels. Taking cues from the earlier 1929 version, this film [[TropeCodifier further established and cemented]] many conventions and tropes that were followed up by future ''Titanic'' films, like interweaving a fictional love story amongst real historical events and [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade portraying J. Bruce Ismay as the villain]]. It also takes some weird liberties with the facts for the sake of propaganda--in this film ''Titanic'' is the fastest ship in the world, [[RaceLift John Jacob Astor is a British Lord]] who is plotting a hostile takeover of White Star Line, and Ismay pushes Capt. Smith to go faster than necessary as a publicity stunt for the company in an attempt to raise White Star stock prices to fight off the takeover. The ship's sole German crew member, the righteous and incorruptible (and entirely fictional) First Officer Petersen, tries in vain to prevent [[ForegoneConclusion the inevitable disaster]]. The special effects footage, using a model 6 meters long, were good enough to be reused in ''A Night to Remember'' however.
126* ''Film/{{Titanic|1953}}'': "They just didn't care" would be a good way to describe this 1953 Clifton Webb and Creator/BarbaraStanwyck movie, which concerns itself more with a fictional custody battle between two catty first class passengers than the actual ship and the subsequent disaster.
127* ''Film/ANightToRemember'': (1958) A docu-novel and later film that has aged remarkably well, and even today is considered one of the most accurate portrayals of the sinking put to film. The largest error is that this film shows ''Titanic'' sinking whole, [[DatedHistory which was the prevailing theory until the actual wreck was discovered in 1985]].
128* "The Sinking of the Titanic": (1975) A experimental-classical musical piece composed by Gavin Bryers, which takes the legend of the ''Titanic'''s band playing until the very end and imagines the band's final performance reverberating throughout the waters of the Atlantic as the ship goes under.
129* ''S.O.S. Titanic'': (1979) a British/American co-production miniseries using the same docudrama template as ''A Night to Remember'', but covering the ship's entire voyage. Its historical authenticity is marred by lousy special effects, recycled stock footage from the 1958 film and some wildly inaccurate filming locations, which consisted mostly of the very art-deco liner RMS ''Queen Mary'' and a couple of luxury hotels in England. The fact that many actors are wildly miscast and look distinctly like they're from TheSeventies doesn't help the matters either. The film was aired on American television in its entire 144 minute length (excluding commercials) and was released theatrically in Europe as a 100 minute feature.
130* ''Film/RaiseTheTitanic'': (1980) Based on the Creator/CliveCussler novel of the same name. Against the backdrop of the UsefulNotes/ColdWar, a team led by Dirk Pitt sets out to find and raise the ship, believing a [[{{Unobtainium}} rare mineral]] to be on board. The film was one of the most notorious [[BoxOfficeBomb financial and critical flops]] of the 1970s/1980s, sunk producer Lew Grade, the director of the movie, and ITC Entertainment, and led to an embargo from Cussler regarding his novels until ''Film/{{Sahara|2005}}'', which had an even worse reaction from him. This is the final film about the ''Titanic'' made and released before the wreck was discovered.
131* "[[http://www.chick.com/reading/tracts/0048/0048_01.asp Titanic]]": This 1983 ComicBook/{{Chick Tract|s}} is set aboard the famous ship, and concerns a man named Chester who wants to get rich and is hostile towards efforts to convert him to Christianity.
132* ''Titanica'': (1992) An IMAX documentary by Stephen Low and originally narrated by Creator/LeonardNimoy, this was also the second ever IMAX exclusive film, done when the format was in complete infancy. This film features how the deep-dives to the ''Titanic'' work, and also features interviews from survivors Frank Goldsmith and Eva Hart. This is also the first of several films featuring the ''Titanic'' to also feature the research vessel ''Akademik Mstislav Keldysh'', which is one of the primary vessels dealing with the ''Titanic'' wreck and would be featured again in both of James Cameron's ''Titanic'' films: the 1997 smash, and Disney's ''Ghosts of the Abyss''.
133* ''VideoGame/TitanicAdventureOutOfTime'': (1996) A video game about a British agent who had a failed mission aboard the ship. After he's killed in the [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarII London Blitz]], he's somehow sent back in time to the night of the sinking and given a chance to complete his mission, with the possibility of changing history. Notable for its graphics capturing every detail of the ship, to the point that several documentaries of the late 90s used the game to depict the sinking. Because it was released a few weeks prior to the 1996 miniseries below, this game holds the honor of being the first fictional work to show ''Titanic'' splitting in two.
134* ''Series/{{Titanic|1996}}'': (1996) Another "they just didn't care" version (this time a TV miniseries) which features historical inaccuracies in nearly every scene, removing several figures from the sinking, and have completely out-of-left-field scenes such as Creator/TimCurry raping a young Third Class passenger. Noteworthy for being the first live-action production to show the ''Titanic'' splitting in two before the sinking.
135* ''Film/{{Titanic|1997}}'': (1997), Creator/JamesCameron's multi-billion blockbuster that launched Creator/LeonardoDiCaprio and Creator/KateWinslet into super stardom. Unlike other films, which generally use an existing ocean liner for the set, Cameron worked to [[ShownTheirWork literally build the ship itself and get every possible detail right]], from the layout of the boat deck to the patterns on the fine china. Currently rivals ''A Night to Remember'' as the most accurate depiction of the sinking, as it includes the ship visibly breaking in two. The second of at least 3 films about the ''Titanic'' to use the research/submersible vessel ''Akademik Mstislav Keldysh''; like ''Titanica'', deep dives are shown in detail at the very beginning of the movie, and the main character retells her story on board the ''Keldysh''. Unfortunately, Cameron [[ArtisticLicenseHistory/Titanic1997 wasn't one to let the facts get in the way of a good story]] - while no one can accuse him and his creative team of not doing the research at all, many liberties were taken, including the erroneous portrayal of Murdoch. Nevertheless, this was the highest grossing film of all time for over a decade, and currently holds a three-way tie for the most Oscars won by a single film (along with ''[[Film/BenHur1959 Ben-Hur]]'' and ''Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheReturnOfTheKing'').
136* The ''Series/NewsRadio'' episode "Sinking Ship" (aired 1998) is a non-canonical WhatIf episode throwing the cast aboard the ''Titanic'' in an obvious parody of the Cameron film, including the obligatory references to the "King of the world" and nude portrait scenes. (Several props were apparently reused from the movie, at least according to the DVDCommentary.) As one might expect from a one off BizarroEpisode of a comedy series, it runs largely on RuleOfFunny instead of any kind of serious historical accuracy - though the set design, special effects, and costuming are actually quite impressive for a multi-cam sitcom. (Said costuming even won the show's only Emmy award.) It's also used as something of a sly metaphor for the show itself, as the declining ratings [[ScrewedByTheNetwork and shoddy treatment by NBC]] left the staff convinced that the show was likely on the way out and wouldn't get a fifth season. (It ultimately did.) So they saw the show itself as a "sinking ship", so to speak.
137* ''WesternAnimation/TitanicTheLegendGoesOn'': ''One'' of the cartoonified versions, featuring a gender-flipped version of the 1997 film's romance, [[StockFootage recycled animation]], and '''a rapping dog'''. ''Seriously''. Also ripped off a bunch of Franchise/DisneyAnimatedCanon films in the character designs.
138* ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTheTitanic'': ''Another'' cartoonified version, featuring another ripoff romance, singing mice, a giant octopus who saves the ship, [[ArtisticLicenseHistory and everyone lives]]. And it has a sequel, ''In Search of the Titanic''. You can't make this stuff up. All three movies earned scathing reviews from WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic, with Website/{{Youtube}} personality WebVideo/AniMat giving ''The Legend of the Titanic'' his "Seal of Garbage".
139* And from [[Series/SaturdayNightLive SNL's]] TV Funhouse, ''Titey'', the purported [[http://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live/video/tv-funhouse-titey/2870442?snl=1 Disney version]].
140* ''VideoGame/{{Titenic}}'' (yes that's how its spelled), a BeatEmUp (!!!) action game made to cash in on the James Cameron movie. It's also {{unlicensed|game}}, unsurprisingly.
141* ''Ghosts Of The Abyss'': (2003) A follow-up by James Cameron on the ''Titanic'' (this one was done by Creator/{{Disney}} rather than Paramount or Fox), once again operating from the ''Keldysh'', which was his base of operations for ''Titanic 1997'' regarding dives (and was featured in the film) and had previously been the base of operations for ''Titanica'' 5 years earlier. This one also had a dive on DistancedFromCurrentEvents/SeptemberEleventh, which got woven into the film.
142* ''Literature/{{Titanic}}'', a 2011 trilogy of young adult books by Creator/GordonKorman about four kids whose stories intersect aboard the liner.
143* ''Series/{{Titanic|2012}}'': A 2012 miniseries by Creator/JulianFellowes to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the sinking. It's essentially "''Series/DowntonAbbey'' [[RecycledInSpace at Sea]]." Aired in four parts, the series pretty much rehashes all the other fictional accounts of the ''Titanic'' disaster, filled with fictional characters, melodramatic intrigue, painful historical inaccuracies, and shallow caricature portrayals of actual historical persons onboard. It is also noted for a bizarre and unnecessary RashomonStyle narrative.
144* ''Titanic: Blood and Steel'': A 2012 12-part TV series also made to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the sinking, which focuses on ''Titanic's'' construction at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, Ireland. Filled with {{Foreshadowing}} as to ''Titanic's'm eventual fate, the series follows metallurgist Dr. Mark Muir as he helps build the ''Titanic'' in the face of White Star's (unsubstantiated [[RealityIsUnrealistic accusations]] [[VindicatedByHistory of]]) cost-cutting measures, Belfast's class, political and religious divides, and his own past with the city.
145* ''Film/SavingTheTitanic'' deviates from the usual ''Titanic'' formula by dramatizing the efforts of the engineering and boiler room crews on board as the ship sank.
146* ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBCSNNHFi1g&t=563s The Last Signals]]'' is an independently produced Youtube film about the ship's two wireless operators, Jack Phillips and Harold Bride, and their increasingly frantic efforts to alert nearby ships for help. Despite its low budget, it was well-received for its historical accuracy and showing the desperation of the two men.
147* ''SOS: The Titanic Inquiry'' is a 2012 BBC TV movie which is a bit of a variant as it is a dramatization of the British Board of Trade inquiry of the disaster in which the crew of the ''Californian'' were grilled about their actions that night.
148* ''Titanic: Honor and Glory'': A video game [[{{Vaporware}} currently stuck in development]]. The original concept was to feature a story arc in which the protagonist must solve a crime he didn't commit, and also serve as a learning tool capturing every detail of the ship. The creators have been conducting exhaustive research into the sinking, even creating a [[https://youtu.be/rs9w5bgtJC8 real-time video]] of the sinking using the game's engine. Their Website/YouTube [[https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCX99blR1pC2290NcBa_FsPA channel]] is an absolute gold mine of information about the ship, the sinking, and the history around the same in the form of both informational videos and podcasts. However, after internal strife, the project is currently being reevaluated, now being focused on a virtual tour. A side project ''VideoGame/BritannicPatronessOfTheMediterranean'' has been released, in which players can tour ''Titanic'''s doomed sister ''Britannic'', both as a hospital ship and in her intended White Star Line configuration.
149* ''Theatre/{{Titanic}}'': [[TheMusical a musical]] with music and lyrics by Maury Yeston and a book by Peter Stone. It opened on Broadway in 1997 (incidentally, the same year as [[Film/{{Titanic1997}} James Cameron's take]]) and swept that year's Tony Awards, winning all five categories it was nominated for (including Best Musical and Best Score).
150* ''Titanic -- In Her Own Words'' is a 2014 BBC Radio documentary that takes the transcriptions of the Morse Code messages sent to and from the ship during the disaster, as well as the Morse traffic that happened around it, and uses voice synthesis technology to present the messages as a conversation between all the different ships and the Cape Race Lighthouse. The [[https://youtu.be/DqstKa3qcTw result]] is both heart-rending and chilling.
151* ''Literature/TheSherlockHolmesStoriesOfEdwardDHoch'': In "The Adventure of the Dying Ship", Franchise/SherlockHolmes is travelling aboard the ''Titanic'' and solves a murder as the ship is sinking. He also witnesses the last moments of HistoricalDomainCharacter Jacques Futrelle: a mystery author who perished in the sinking.
152* ''The Titanic'', a 2017 children's book which is part of [[Literature/AmericanGirlsCollection American Girl]]'s ''Real Stories From My Time'' series of historical novels where facts and historical photos from different time periods are interspersed with fictional stories involving American Girl's historical characters. In ''The Titanic'', Samantha, now in her teens, anxiously learns of the tragedy that befell the ocean liner--especially as her best friend Nellie and her Aunt Cornelia are onboard, coming home after a trip to Nellie's native Ireland.
153* ''White Star Liner'', a 2018 album by Music/PublicServiceBroadcasting, tells the story of the ship from construction to wreckage.
154* The aptly titled ''Voyage of Despair'' revolves around four robbers attempting to steal a strange artifact. This wouldn't be anything that interesting... if it weren't for the fact that this is a ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyZombies'' map. Needless to say, [[OurZombiesAreDifferent the cause of the sinking is very much different.]]
155[[/folder]]
156
157[[folder:References in Other Works]]
158* The ''Titanic'' is what set off the plot of ''Series/DowntonAbbey'': Lord Robert's two closest heirs were on board and died in the sinking, leaving the next possible heir to his title and estates (and more importantly, his wife's money) a distant cousin who works as a solicitor.
159* The ''Series/DoctorWho'' ChristmasSpecial "[[Recap/DoctorWho2007CSVoyageOfTheDamned Voyage of the Damned]]" takes place on board [[SpaceSailing a spaceship modeled on the ''Titanic'']], built by an alien race to experience "primitive cultures" like ours, with the rationale for the design being that ''Titanic'' is "the most famous vessel of the planet Earth". The Doctor lampshades the inherent TemptingFate - "Did they tell you ''why'' it was famous?". Naturally, it meets with disaster, though it's closer to ''Film/ThePoseidonAdventure'' than the actual disaster or any of the works based on it.
160** The ''Titanic'' is alluded to twice in the Ninth Doctor's tenure: in his first episode he appears in a picture with a family that were due to be on the ship but mysteriously canceled their trip at the last minute, and indirectly in the next episode, where the Doctor claims to have been on the voyage himself.
161--->'''Doctor:''' I was onboard another ship once. They said ''that'' was unsinkable. I ended up clinging to an iceberg. Wasn't half cold!
162* Chapters 35 and 36 of ''VideoGame/GardensOfTime'' revolve around the ''Titanic''.
163* ''Film/GhostbustersII'': PlayedForLaughs when a ghostly version of the ship arrives in New York in 1989, and ghosts start disembarking. "It's some dock supervisor down at Pier 34 on the Hudson. The guy's going nuts." "What's the problem?" "He says the ''Titanic'' just arrived." Made even funnier by the dock supervisor being played by [[Creator/CheechAndChong Cheech Marin]]. *shrug* "Better late than never!"
164* The heroine of the Creator/DanielleSteel novel ''No Greater Love'' takes charge of her younger siblings after surviving the disaster but losing her parents and fiance. The 1995 TV film adaptation reuses footage from ''S.O.S. Titanic'', which in turn includes footage that ''S.O.S. Titanic'' reused from ''A Night to Remember''.
165* The VisualNovel ''VisualNovel/NineHoursNinePersonsNineDoors'' is set on the restored ''Britannic'' (though it's identified by the alternative name "Gigantic"). [[spoiler:Actually, while a backstory event takes place on the actual restored ''Britannic'', the events of the game take place in a replica built in a building in the desert of Nevada.]] References to the ''Titanic''[='=]s sinking as well as the ''Britannic''[='=]s own are prevalent, including correctly identifying the roles of ''Carpathia'' and ''Mackay-Bennett'' and mentioning an urban legend that it was actually ''Olympic'' that sank.
166* ''From Time to Time'', sequel to ''Literature/TimeAndAgain'', has the protagonist aboard the ''Titanic'' to try to [[spoiler:prevent the collision. Another time agent's actions cause it.]]
167* In ''Literature/Millennium1983'' (written in 1983, [[DatedHistory two years before the wreck was found]]), co-protagonist Louise says the wreckage was never found because the whole ship was brought forward in time.
168* ''WesternAnimation/WhereOnEarthIsCarmenSandiego'': During their first clash ten years before the events of the show, [[KnightOfCerebus Dr. Maelstrom]]'s end goal was to float and steal the sunken ship, while Carmen (an ACME agent at the time) worked frantically to catch up to and stop him before he succeeded. The wreck was mentioned to have been found by Dr. Ballard the day after Maelstrom's arrest.
169* Lady Marjorie of ''Series/UpstairsDownstairs'' is revealed to have perished in the disaster.
170* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'': In "My Heart Will Go On", Balthazar (off-screen) travels back in time and prevents the ''Titanic'' from sinking, creating an alternate timeline where the Earth's population is bigger because the people who would have died didn't and had descendants, plus other differences like Music/CelineDion [[RichardNixonTheUsedCarSalesman never became famous and is nothing but a destitute lounge singer]] because the 1997 film was never made. Balthazar claims he did it because [[EvilIsPetty he hated the 1997 movie and Celine Dion]], which may be true, but the real reason was that Castiel wanted to increase Earth's population so that there would eventually be more souls to bolster Heaven in its war against Hell. Atropos forces them to go back and ensure the ''Titanic'' sinks, restoring the timeline.
171* ''Anime/YuGiOhZEXAL'': Umimi Habera ([[DubNameChange Brooke Walker]]) has a monster card called Supercolossal, Unsinkable Superliner - Elegant Titanic ([[DubNameChange Unsinkable Titanica]]). Despite its name and appearance, it doesn't get destroyed.
172* ''Film/TimeBandits'': Kevin and the titular bandits briefly visit the ship right before it hits the iceberg. This is PlayedForLaughs, as Randall asks for champagne with plenty of ice.
173* One chapter of ''VideoGame/{{Jigsaw}}'' puts you on board, right at the crucial moment.
174* The 1.5 Mod for ''VideoGame/EmpireEarthII'' lets you build the ''Titanic'' from the Modern Age onward. It's the biggest unit in the game and has a carrying capacity of 500 (the last transport can carry less than 30), but has no defenses. And instead of voicelines, it plays snippets of "My Heart Will Go On".
175* ''ComicBook/JustAPilgrim'': Set in a world where the oceans have dried up due to the sun expanding sooner than predicted (as in, several billion years ahead of schedule), the pilgrim and the refugees he's accompanying come across the wreck of the ''Titanic'' and use it as an improvised fortress against wasteland raiders.
176* ''ComicBook/JourJ'': One story sees the ''Titanic'' saved because a young boy was looking through his telescope and spotted the iceberg in time. The boy would later become a journalist who exposed Al Capone meeting with criminals (preventing Prohibition). World War II is prevented when the ''Titanic'' ''still'' sinks sometime in the 30s, taking two men named Einstein and Hitler with it. The journalist ends up as President but uses ever more extremist means to preserve his utopia, and when he voluntarily euthanizes himself at age 100 on a space station, the Earth is on the brink of a medical disaster due to the population being unable to resist antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
177* In ''Film/{{Cavalcade}}'', Robert and Jane Marryot's son Edward honeymoons on the ''Titanic'', and doesn't survive. It's the first major tragedy for the family in the film, the second being UsefulNotes/WorldWarI.
178* ''Series/TheTimeTunnel'': The first episode has them travel back in time using the titular time tunnel to the ''Titanic''. The last episode also has them go to the ''Titanic'' at the very end after they just did their latest adventure so it would lead to summer reruns. (The exterior ship footage is recycled from the 1953 film version.)
179* The ship makes an anachronistic appearance in ''Film/HolmesAndWatson'', where it is the site of an attempted assassination of Queen Victoria, who died eleven years before the ''Titanic'' set sail.
180* In ''Literature/GoodbyeMrChips'', one scene has the school learning about the sinking of the ''Titanic'', and that the father of one of the students was on board. The whole school celebrates when the news comes through that he got off safely. (In a sobering epilogue to the scene, the narrator adds that in the end, due to the war that broke out a few years later, the father outlived his son.)
181* At the end of ''Literature/AScholarOfMagics'', set in an alternate history, one of the characters travels to America on the ''Titanic''. It's mentioned in passing that this is not the ship's first voyage and that the crew are hoping to break their own speed record.
182* ''Literature/WolfInShadow'' is set after a great cataclysm greatly altered the shape of the Earth and crashed civilization. Just how much alteration the cataclysm caused is underlined when the protagonist comes across the wreck of the ''Titanic'' in the middle of the desert he's crossing.
183* ''Film/TheBigBus'': The oil tycoon known as Ironman is part of a conspiracy to discredit any source of energy other than oil. He mentions his grandfather causing the ''Titanic'' disaster.
184* ''Series/NightGallery'': In "Lone Survivor", a ship picks up an amnesiac man in a lifeboat labeled from the ''Titanic'', even though it has been three years since it sank. Eventually, the man remembers his past. He was a crewmember on the ''Titanic'' who cowardly got on the lifeboat by disguising himself as a woman, but when he jumped in, his weight made the lifeboat's ropes come loose and it fell into the water. While he was able to hold on, everyone else fell out and died. He found out that for his cowardice, he was damned into a form of the FlyingDutchman to float on the ocean forever and only be picked up by ships doomed to sink. The ship that picked him up is revealed to be the RMS ''Lusitania''. It gets sunk by the German U-boats and the man is cast adrift in a lifeboat again, [[HereWeGoAgain only to be picked up]] by the SS ''Andrea Doria''.
185* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'': The episode "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS13E7StewieChrisAndBriansExcellentAdventure Stewie, Chris, & Brian's Excellent Adventure]]" features Stewie and Brian taking Chris back in time in an attempt to help him with a history test. At one point, they end up on the ''Titanic''. The ship is inaccurately depicted leaving London rather than Southampton, and the iceberg collision occurs during dinner rather than late at night.
186* Briefly referred to on ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'' when Tom Paris comes up with a way to upgrade ''Voyager''[='=]s internal defenses based on ''Titanic''[='=]s design. Captain Janeway points out that ''Titanic'' sank.
187* Canadian paranormal-themed TV shows ''Creepy Canada'' and ''Ghostly Encounters'' both had episodes about hauntings that take place at the Five Fishermen restaurant in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The restaurant is often featured in anthologies of Canadian ghost stories as well. The alleged reason for the hauntings is that the building used to be a funeral home and received several victims from the sinking of the ''Titanic''.[[note]]The funeral home also received many victims of the Halifax Explosion in 1917, though, so ''Titanic'' victims are probably not the only ghosts in the place.[[/note]]
188* ''ComicBook/TheLifeAndTimesOfScroogeMcDuck'': Surviving the sinking ([[ItMakesSenseInContext and finding himself still pursued by a voodoo zombie over the frozen Atlantic]]) is one of the many historical-domain events in Scrooge's ExpansionPackPast.
189* ''WebVideo/TastingHistoryWithMaxMiller'' has a short series on the stories and foods of the ''Titanic'', a subject Max is fascinated by.[[note]]No big surprise, as besides his interest in Edwardian culture and love of sappy movies like the 1997 film, Max has actually worked at sea, having been a cast/crewmember on a Disney Cruise Line ship.[[/note]] Interestingly, the series is timed to end the week of the 110th anniversary of the sinking.
190* The 1960 musical ''Theatre/TheUnsinkableMollyBrown'' and its 1964 film adaptation is a highly fictionalised account of ''Titanic'' survivor Margaret Brown's life. The ''Titanic'' scenes in the film consist of stock footage from both 1953's ''Titanic'' and 1958's ''A Night to Remember''.
191* The 17th book of the ''[[Recap/TheMagicTreeHouse Magic Tree House]]'' series, ''Tonight on the Titanic'', features Jack and Annie visiting the ship on the night of the sinking.
192* In "Literature/KidStuff", the {{Ultraterrestrial}} antagonist states that their HiddenElfVillage island was struck by the ''Titanic''. The whole population working together managed to get the proper PerceptionFiter in place.
193* "Titanic" is one of the houses on ''VideoGame/{{Glider}} PRO CD'', and the ExcusePlot here is to make it off the cruise ship onto the dock. The ship hasn't left yet, but it's shown that parts have already started to flood.
194[[/folder]]
195----
196->''Here is a gray lady, an elegant lady, the queen of the deep.''\
197''A sad lady, a silent lady, are you now asleep?'' \
198''Can we learn from your sorrow to share?'' \
199''Teach us to understand and certainly to care.'' \
200''That never again will there ever be a gray lady, an elegant lady,''\
201''Slip unwillingly into the sea.''

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