Sinking Of The Titanic And Great Sea Disasters by Logan Marshall (best reads of all time txt) π
Another Triumph Set Down To Wireless Telegraphy--
The World Goes To Sleep Peacefully--The Sad Awakening.
Like A Bolt Out Of A Clear Sky Came The Wireless Message
On Monday, April 15, 1912, That On Sunday Night
The Great Titanic, On Her Maiden Voyage Across The
Atlantic, Had Struck A Gigantic Iceberg, But That All The
Passengers Were Saved. The Ship Had Signaled Her Distress And
Another Victory Was Set Down To Wireless. Twenty-One
Hundred Lives Saved!
Additional News Was Soon Received That The Ship Had Collided
With A Mountain Of Ice In The North Atlantic, Off Cape Race,
Newfoundland, At 10.25 Sunday Evening, April 14th. At
4.15 Monday Morning The Canadian Government Marine
Agency Received A Wireless Message That The Titanic Was Sinking
And That The Steamers Towing Her Were Trying To Get Her Into
Shoal Water Near Cape Race, For The Purpose Of Beaching Her.
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- Author: Logan Marshall
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Played In The Rowing Is As Follows:
"There Were Thirty-Five Persons In The Boat In Which The
Captain Placed Me. Three Of These Were Ordinary Seamen,
Supposed To Manage The Boat, And A Steward.
Chapter 9 Pg 68"One Of These Men Seemed To Think That We Should Not
Start Away From The Sinking Ship Until It Could Be Learned
Whether The Other Boats Would Accommodate The Rest Of The
Women. He Seemed To Think That; More Could Be Crowded
Into Ours, If Necessary.
" `I Would Rather Go Back And Go Down With The Ship Than
Leave Under These Circumstances.' He Cried.
"The Captain Shouted To Him To Obey Orders And To Pull
For A Little Light That Could Just Be Discerned Miles In The
Distance. I Do Not Know What This Little Light Was. It May Have
Been A Passing Fishing Vessel, Which, Of Course Could Not Know
Our Predicament. Anyway, We Never Reached It.
"We Rowed All Night, I Took An Oar And Sat Beside The Countess
De Rothes. Her Maid Had An Our And So Did Mine. The
Air Was Freezing Cold, And It Was Not Long Before The Only Man
That Appeared To Know Anything About Rowing Commenced
To Complain That His Hands Were Freezing: A Woman Back Of
Him Handed Him A Shawl From About Her Shoulders.
"As We Rowed We Looked Back At The Lights Of The Titanic.
There Was Not A Sound From Her, Only The Lights Began To Get
Lower And Lower, And Finally She Sank. Then We Heard A
Muffled Explosion And A Dull Roar Caused By The Great Suction
Of Water.
"There Was Not A Drop Of Water On Our Boat. The Last
Minute Before Our Boat Was Launched Captain Smith Threw
Aboard A Bag Of Bread. I Took The Precaution Of Taking A Good
Drink Of Water Before We Started, So I Suffered No Inconvenience
From Thirst."
Mrs. Lucien Smith, Whose Young Husband Perished, Was
Another Heroine. It Is Related By Survivors That She Took
Turns At The Oars, And Then, When The Boat Was In Danger Of
Sinking, Stood Ready To Plug A Hole With Her Finger If The Cork
Stopper Became Loose.
In Another Boat Mrs. Cornell And Her Sister, Who Had A
Slight Knowledge Of Rowing, Took Turns At The Oars, As Did
Other Women.
The Boat In Which Mrs. J. J. Brown, Of Denver, Col., Was
Saved Contained Only Three Men In All, And Only One Rowed.
He Was A Half-Frozen Seaman Who Was Tumbled Into The Boat
At The Last Minute. The Woman Wrapped Him In Blankets
And Set Him At An Oar To Start His Blood. The Second Man
Was Too Old To Be Of Any Use. The Third Was A Coward.
Strange To Say, There Was Room In This Boat For Ten Other
People. Ten Brave Men Would Have Received The Warmest
Chapter 9 Pg 69Welcome Of Their Lives If They Had Been There. The Coward,
Being A Quartermaster And The Assigned Head Of The Boat,
Sat In The Stern And Steered. He Was Terrified, And The Women
Had To Fight Against His Pessimism While They Tugged At The
Oars.
The Women Sat Two At Each Oar. One Held The Oar In Place,
The Other Did The Pulling. Mrs. Brown Coached Them And
Cheered Them On. She Told Them That The Exercise Would
Keep The Chill Out Of Their Veins, And She Spoke Hopefully Of
The Likelihood That Some Vessel Would Answer The Wireless Calls.
Over The Frightful Danger Of The Situation The Spirit Of This
Woman Soared.
The Pessimist
And The Coward Sat In His Stern Seat, Terrified, His Tongue
Loosened With Fright. He Assured Them There Was No Chance
In The World. He Had Had Fourteen Years' Experience, And He
Knew. First, They Would Have To Row One And A Half Miles
At Least To Get Out Of The Sphere Of The Suction, If They Did Not
Want To Go Down. They Would Be Lost, And Nobody Would
Ever Find Them.
"Oh, We Shall Be Picked Up Sooner Or Later," Said Some Of
The Braver Ones. No, Said The Man, There Was No Bread In
The Boat, No Water; They Would Starve--All That Big Boatload
Wandering The High Seas With Nothing To Eat, Perhaps For Days.
"Don't," Cried Mrs. Brown. "Keep That To Yourself,
If You Feel That Way. For The Sake Of These Women And Chil-
Dren, Be A Man. We Have A Smooth Sea And A Fighting Chance.
Be A Man."
But The Coward Only Knew That There Was No Compass And
No Chart Aboard. They Sighted What They Thought Was A
Fishing Smack On The Horizon, Showing Dimly In The Early
Dawn. The Man At The Rudder Steered Toward It, And The
Women Bent To Their Oars Again. They Covered Several Miles
In This Way--But The Smack Faded Into The Distance. They
Could Not See It Any Longer. And The Coward Said That Everything
Was Over.
They Rowed Back Nine Weary Miles. Then The Coward
Thought They Must Stop Rowing, And Lie In The Trough Of The
Waves Until The Carpathia Should Appear. The Women Tried
It For A Few Moments, And Felt The Cold Creeping Into Their
Bodies. Though Exhausted From The Hard Physical Labor They
Thought Work Was Better Than Freezing.
Chapter 9 Pg 70"Row Again!" Commanded Mrs. Brown.
"No, No, Don't," Said The Coward.
"We Shall Freeze," Cried Several Of The Women Together.
"We Must Row. We Have Rowed All This Time. We Must
Keep On Or Freeze."
When The Coward Still Demurred, They Told Him Plainly
And Once For All That If He Persisted In Wanting Them To Stop
Rowing, They Were Going To Throw Him Overboard And Be Done
With Him For Good. Something About The Look In The Eye Of
That Mississippi-Bred Oarswoman, Who Seemed Such A Force
Among Her Fellows, Told Him That He Had Better Capitulate.
And He Did.
Countess Rothes An Expert Oarswoman
Miss Alice Farnam Leader, A New York Physician, Escaped
From The Titanic On The Same Boat Which Carried The Countess
Rothes. "The Countess Is An Expert Oarswoman," Said
Doctor Leader, "And Thoroughly At Home On The Water. She
Practically Took Command Of Our Boat When It Was Found That
The Seaman Who Had Been Placed At The Oars Could Not Row
Skilfully. Several Of The Women Took Their Place With The
Countess At The Oars And Rowed In Turns, While The Weak And
Unskilled Stewards Sat Quietly In One End Of The Boat."
Men Could Not Row
"With Nothing On But A Nightgown I Helped Row One Of The
Boats For Three Hours," Said Mrs. Florence Ware, Of Bristol,
England.
"In Our Boat There Were A Lot Of Women, A Steward And A
Fireman. None Of The Men Knew Anything About Managing
A Small Boat, So Some Of The Women Who Were Used To Boats
Took Charge.
"It Was Cold And I Worked As Hard As I Could At An Oar
Until We Were Picked Up. There Was Nothing To Eat Or Drink
On Our Boat."
Deaths On The Life-Boats
Chapter 9 Pg 71"The Temperature Must Have Been Below Freezing," Testified
Another Survivor, "And Neither Men Nor Women In My Boat
Were Warmly Clothed. Several Of Them Died. The Officer
In Charge Of The Life-Boat Decided It Was Better To Bury The
{Illust. Caption = Survivors Of The Great Marine Disaster
The First Authentic Photograph, ...}
{Illust. Caption =
Copyright By Campbell Studio. N. Y.
Colonel And Mrs. John Jacob Astor
Mrs, Astor, Nee Miss Madeline Force, Was Rescued. Colonel Astor
Who Bravely Refused To Take A Place In The Life-Boats, Went Down With The
Titanic.}
Bodies. Soon They Were Weighted So They Would Sink And Were
Put Overboard. We Could Also See Similar Burials Taking
Place From Other Life-Boats That Were All Around Us."
Gamblers Were Polite
In One Boat Were Two Card Sharps. With The Same Cleverness
That Enabled Them To Win Money On Board They Obtained
Places In The Boats With The Women.
In The Boat With The Gamblers Were Women In Their Night-
Gowns And Women In Evening Dress. None Of The Boats Were
Properly Equipped With Food, But All Had Enough Bread And
Water To Keep The Rescued From Starving Until The Expected
Arrival Of Help.
To The Credit Of The Gamblers Who Managed To Escape, It
Should Be Said That They Were Polite And Showed The Women
Every Courtesy. All They Wanted Was To Be Sure Of Getting
Chapter 9 Pg 72In A Boat. That Once Accomplished, They Reverted To Their
Habitual Practice Of Politeness And Suavity. They Were Even
Willing; To Do A Little Manual Labor, Refusing To Let Women Do
Any Rowing.
The People On That Particular Boat Were A Sad Group.
Fathers Had Kissed Their Daughters Good-Bye And Husbands
Had Parted From Their Wives. The Card Sharps, However
Philosophized Wonderfully About The Will Of The Almighty And
How Strange His Ways. They Said That One Must Be Prepared
For Anything; That Good Always Came From Evil, And That
Every Cloud Had A Silvery Lining{.}
"Who Knows?" Said One. "It May Be That Everybody On
Board Will Be Saved." Another Added: "Our Duty Is To
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