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  1. Titanic. Culture. TITANIC MOVIES. 14 items. Articles and other stories relating to titanic movies from 1912 to the present day. See also Titanic Videos. A Night to Remember (1958 Film) Atlantic (1929 Film) In Nacht Und Eis (1912 Film) Saved from the Titanic (1912 Film) Titanic (1943 Film) Titanic (1997 Film)

  2. Feb 1, 2005 · Thomas, Cameron made twelve 15-hour dives to the Titanic with cameras that could hold 500 feet of film, so only twelve minutes were shot on each and every dive. The filmed images were, as Mark put it, shot on a submerged set in Rosarito, Mexico. The design was based on the 1995 wreck footage and images of the Olympic 's interiors.

  3. A 3d computer generated model of the Titanic takes to the high seas.... Stars and Titanic survivors gather for the London premiere of A Night to Remember. 1st July 1958.... Michael Martin, creator of ‘The Titanic Trail’ takes us on a tour of Cobh, the Titanic’s last port of call. He sets the scene of the day that Titanic le...

  4. by Nathan Robison. "Iceberg, right ahead!" These three words were spoken by Lookout Frederick Fleet at 11:40 p.m. on 14 April 1912 from the crow’s nest of the ill-fated RMS Titanic. The story has come down that, reacting to this three-word warning, First Officer William Murdoch ordered "hard a-starboard." The ship started to turn left, but ...

  5. Emma Bliss The Windsor Daily Star, March 9, 1959. Mrs. Emma Bliss, once a stewardess on the ill-fated Titanic, which sank after hitting an iceberg on its maiden voyage in 1912, relived the tragedy when she watched a special showing of the British movie, “A Night to Remember,” which depicts the sinking of the ship.

  6. When he signed on to the Titanic on 6 April 1912 Barrett gave his local address as 24 King Street, Southampton; his previous ship had been the New York and as a leading fireman he could expect monthly wages of £6, 10s. He was one of two men named Frederick William Barrett working as firemen. Just after departure from Southampton Barrett states ...

  7. Thayer vividly suggests that the ship was being compressed—‘the noise of a pressed steel factory and wholesale breakage of china.’. He also confirms that the angle of the ship out of the stern was in the range of 10 to 20 degrees when the ship broke up, since the bow was sinking at about a 15 degree angle.

  8. Arun Vajpey. I have met 3 survivors - Millvina Dean, Edith Haisman (nee Brown) and Eva Hart. Of the three, Eva Hart was the most interesting as she could remember some details. Although Edith Brown-Haisman was 15+ years old on the Titanic, she was very old and not able to say much when I met her. Millvina Dean was, of course, a 10 week old baby ...

  9. Dorothy Winifred Gibson. Dorothy Gibson, 22, of New York, New York, was born Dorothy Winifred Brown in Hoboken, New Jersey, the daughter of John A. and Pauline Boesen Brown. John Brown died when Dorothy was a child and her mother married John Leonard Gibson. Dorothy married George Battier, Jr. in 1910 but separated from him shortly thereafter.

  10. Titanic. Victims. Mrs Annie Elizabeth Sage. Mrs John George Sage was born as Elizabeth Ann Cazaly in Wolverhampton, Staffordshire, England on 3 August 1865 and she was later baptised in St Jude's, Islington, London on 20 June 1869. She was the daughter of Francis Wilmot Cazaly (1832-1904), a warehouseman originally from Chichester, Sussex, and ...

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