Titanic -

Construction on the Titanic began in 1909. She was a marvel of the industrial age. At 882 feet long and 92 feet wide, she was the largest moving object ever created by human hands. Her design boasted a double-bottomed hull and sixteen watertight compartments designed to close automatically in the event of a breach. It was this feature that led the nautical publication The Shipbuilder to famously declare the ship "practically unsinkable"—a qualifier that the press and public would tragically drop in the wake of the disaster. When the Titanic departed Southampton on April 10, 1912, on her maiden voyage to New York, she carried over 2,200 passengers and crew. She was a microcosm of the Edwardian world, sharply divided by class but united by the grandeur of the vessel.

When the RMS Titanic slipped beneath the freezing waters of the North Atlantic in the early hours of April 15, 1912, it took with it more than 1,500 souls. In the century since, the ship has evolved from a tangible tragedy into a mythical symbol of human hubris. The name "Titanic" is no longer merely a descriptor of size; it is a shorthand for disaster, a cautionary tale about the limits of technology, and a ghost that continues to haunt the popular imagination. The Age of the Olympians: Conception and Construction To understand the Titanic , one must understand the era in which it was born. The early 20th century was the height of the transatlantic passenger trade, a fierce battleground for dominance between the British and the Germans. At the forefront of this battle was the White Star Line and its chairman, J. Bruce Ismay. Titanic

While the rich dined on ten-course meals, the majority of the passengers were in Third Class—immigrants from Ireland, Scandinavia, Syria, and Southern Europe seeking a new life in America. Though their accommodations were far simpler, the Titanic offered them amenities superior to many other ships of the time, including real beds instead of dormitory bunks and ample deck space. The Iceberg: A Perfect Storm of Errors The voyage proceeded smoothly until the evening of April 14. The Titanic was sailing through Construction on the Titanic began in 1909

Ismay partnered with the legendary shipbuilder Harland and Wolff, based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Their goal was not to build the fastest ships—a record held by the Cunard Line’s Lusitania —but to build the largest and most luxurious. The result was the Olympic-class ocean liners, the first of which was the RMS Olympic , followed closely by her sister ship, the Titanic . Her design boasted a double-bottomed hull and sixteen

The wealthier passengers experienced luxury previously unknown at sea. The ship featured a grand staircase crowned with a glass dome, a swimming pool, a Turkish bath, a gymnasium, and squash courts. The interiors were modeled after the grandest hotels of London and Paris. Onboard were some of the world’s wealthiest people, including John Jacob Astor IV, Benjamin Guggenheim, and Isidor Straus (co-owner of Macy’s department store).