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Category: Associated with RMS Titanic

206) Charles Joughin

206: Charles Joughin

Titanic’s Famously Inebriated Baker

Born: 3 August 1878, Birkenhead, Cheshire, England, United Kingdom

Died: 9 December 1956, Paterson, New Jersey, United States of America

Charles was the Chief Baker aboard RMS Titanic on her doomed maiden voyage. As Chief Baker, his responsibilities covered the entire bakery department onboard the ship, overseeing the baking and creation of all manner of pastries and other delectable goods. According to his later testimony, Charles oversaw thirteen other bakers aboard the ship.

Charles had four full siblings and two half-siblings. His father died when Charles was only around eight years old, and his mother had to take up nursing to keep the bills paid for her family. By the age of eleven, Charles had gone to sea to work and earn money for his family. He would not be the only seafarer in his family (two of his brothers served in the Royal Navy), and it was while working onboard these ships that Charles learned to be a baker by trade. In 1915, one of Charles’s brothers actually died while serving aboard the HMS Cornwallis and was buried at sea.

In his own personal life before Titanic, Charles was married and had two children; a son and a daughter. He had been serving as chief baker on the Olympic when he was transferred to service aboard Titanic. At the time, Charles was being paid £12 per month!

When Titanic struck the iceberg and began to sink, Charles wasted no time. He directed other kitchen staff to begin loading breads and other baked goods into the lifeboats to provide provisions for passengers (after receiving an order to do so by the ship’s officers). He also helped direct passengers to the lifeboats themselves—things below deck could be a bit confusing for some, especially in an emergency situation.

Charles himself was not one of the lucky ones who found his way onto a lifeboat. Instead, he chugged some whisky* before finding himself afloat in the frigid North Atlantic. The whisky seems to have kept his body from succumbing to hypothermia, and eventually he was pulled from the water and into a lifeboat by other survivors. In his own recount, Charles stated he believes he was in the water for around two and a half hours (though his biography on the Encyclopedia Titanica website describes this amount of time as “highly questionable.”) The water was only -2°C (28°F) that night!

Upon his return to England, Charles was called to testify on Day Six of the British Inquiry. His testimony can be read at one of the links below.

After the Titanic disaster, Charles went back to sea and continued to serve throughout World War I. In 1916, he actually survived another disaster when the SS Congress caught fire and was destroyed—though luckily not a single person died in that calamity.

Sadly, the heartbreak and tragedy didn’t end there. In 1919, Charles’s wife died while pregnant with their third baby, and their son Richard also died during the birth. Charles soon left the UK, and his two children behind. He moved to the United States, and obtained citizenship there in the 1930s. In 1925, Charles remarried a woman who had a daughter from a previous marriage. His second wife would pass away in 1944, widowing him for a second time. Charles’s surviving son, Roland, died in 1955. Neither Roland, or Charles’s daughter Agnes, had any children of their own.

In 1941, Charles was once again onboard a ship when disaster struck. The SS Oregon was rammed by the USS New Mexico and sank—luckily Charles would once again survive.

When Charles died in 1956, he had been in contact with Sir Walter Lord, but sadly did not live to see A Night to Remember’s release. His estate was divided between his daughter and stepdaughter.

*While today, Charles’s story is often told from the point of view that he drank copious amounts of whisky and was drunk at the time of the sinking, Charles himself maintained throughout his life that he had drank some whisky, but was not drunk by any means and was still fully aware of his surroundings.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Located in my Personal Library:

Titanic: First Accounts by Tim Maltin and Nicholas Wade

Sources:

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/charles-john-joughin.html

https://allthatsinteresting.com/charles-joughin

https://www.titanicinquiry.org/BOTInq/BOTInq06Joughin01.php

https://www.glenoradistillery.com/our-blog/2024/3/15/how-charles-joughin-survived-the-titanic-by-drinking-whisky

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6852885/charles-john-joughin

20) Jenny the Cat

20: Jenny the Titanic Cat

Supposedly Aboard the Doomed Ship

Birth and Death Dates and Locations Unknown

As most of you know, I consider myself a bit of a Titanic expert, and while I knew the stories of many of the dogs onboard, a cat was a different story.

Supposedly, as the story goes, Jenny was the ship’s mascot and was cared for by a laborer named either Jim or Joseph Mulholland. Jenny lived near the ship’s galley (or kitchen) and was brought on board to help fight rodents. She had previously served in the same capacity aboard the Olympic.

During Titanic’s Sea trials, Jenny gave birth to a litter of kittens. Jim found the tiny family a place to keep warm near the galley.

Everything seemed fine, and Jenny and her kittens stayed abord the ship as it docked in Queenstown and Cherbourg. However, things changed when the ship docked for a final time in Southampton.

Apparently, Jenny could sense the coming danger. One by one, she picked each kitten up by the scruff of their neck and carried them down the gangplank, to dry land and safety, disappearing into the annals of history.

Jim decided that Jenny must have had a sixth sense about the ship, and supposedly he also took his belongings and left the ship as well.

Supposedly, the source for this story (according to Facebook) is what I am assuming was a newspaper called “Irish Road” that talked to Jim as an old man, who claimed his life had been saved by a mama cat and her babies.

Yahoo News and Mental Floss both state that the famous survivor Violet Jessop saw Jenny and her kittens, but I have no idea how anyone could actually verify that claim. Yahoo and Mental Floss also states that Jenny and her kittens were still abord the ship when it sank and so their fate is unknown.

It is very likely that there were multiple cats onboard Titanic, as mice and rats were a very real problem on ships in that day and age. Whether or not any of them survived the sinking, or what the names of those other felines would have been, is lost to history.

Just like the story of Signalman Jack the Baboon, Jenny’s story is recounted on a number of pop culture websites, but I haven’t been able to see any reliable cited historical sources about her story. The photo included in this article was posted on The Vintage News, but apparently there are no known actual photos of Jenny, and this one honestly looks like it might be photoshopped anyways. If Jenny and her kittens were real, I really hope they were able to escape the doomed ship with their lives!

What I was able to verify is that Joseph Mullholland was a real crew member, and he did disembark in Southampton. According to his Encyclopedia Titanic entry (linked below), Joseph left the ship partially because he saw the ship’s cat (presumably Jenny) leaving the ship, but also because of several other crewmembers making comments that worried him about the safety of the ship—including Thomas Andrews himself.

There is very little other information about Joseph in the article, and Encyclopedia Titanic even admits they do not have a death date for Joseph as he disappeared from history after 1962. Well, at least there is a grain of certifiable fact in this story!

Sources:

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/tragic-story-jenny-titanic-cat-193714174.html

https://titanic.fandom.com/wiki/Jenny_(Cat)

https://www.mentalfloss.com/history/titanic/jenny-titanic-cat

https://www.facebook.com/groups/catsaddicted/posts/1605414517504486

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animals_aboard_the_Titanic

https://www.thevintagenews.com/2022/07/25/jenny-the-cat-titanic

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-biography/joseph-mulholland.html

1083) Rhoda Abbott

Courtesy of Find a Grave

1083: Rhoda Abbott

The Only Female RMS Titanic Survivor to Have Been Pulled from the Water

Born: 14 January 1873, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, England, United Kingdom

Died: 18 February 1946, Surrey, England, United Kingdom

Also Known As: Rosa Abbott

Rhoda was traveling in third class with her two sons; both of whom would die in the sinking.

Rhoda’s sons were Rossmore (sixteen when he died) and Eugene (thirteen at the time of his death). On the night of the sinking, Rhoda was offered a place on one of the lifeboats, but stayed onboard the ship after realizing her sons would not be allowed to escape with her.

Before the Abbott family earned their spot in history, they had been living in England and before that Rhode Island (where Rhoda had immigrated in 1894). Rhoda and her husband had divorced while living in the United States, and Rhoda decided to move her sons to England to live with her mother in 1911. Rhoda worked as a seamstress, Rossmore a bootmaker, in order to pay the bills. However, by the following year, Rossmore and Eugene were homesick and Rhoda agreed to move the family back to the United States. They had no idea that by booking passage on the Titanic, they had already sealed their fates.

As the Titanic began its final descent into the frigid Atlantic, Rhoda, Rossmore, and Eugene all jumped into the water. Rhoda was able to swim to the lifeboat known as Collapsible A, which was filling rapidly with water. Eventually the survivors in Collapsible A were transferred to nearby Lifeboat 14, where they waited and were eventually rescued with the other passengers by the Carpathia.

Rhoda’s boys were never seen again.

Rhoda reportedly spent two weeks recovering in hospital upon reaching New York. Rhoda would remarry, but her second marriage was almost entirely loveless. The rest of her life was plagued by mental turmoil from all she had survived, as well as frequent times of unemployment and other financial struggles. She even suffered from Chronic asthma brought on by her night in the water.

Rhoda eventually found her way back across the ocean and she died in England thirty-four years after the sinking. Rhoda had spent the last few years of her life trying in vain to return to the United States, but thanks to the outbreak of World War II that was impossible to achieve. When she died, the only family she had left was a niece with whom she only had a distant relationship.

Rhoda is seen briefly in James Cameron’s 1997 epic Titanic, however her story is slightly altered for the film. In the film, Rhoda is already seated in Collapsible A when she is handed a small girl by Cal Hockley (played by Billy Zane). Rhoda is next seen being helped back into the boat after the sinking when she is tossed out of it.

So many regular people know the history of the Titanic, at least somewhat anyway, but they do not know the story of what happened to the survivors after the sinking; how their lives were forever altered by one chance night. Some survivors went on to lead happy and productive lives, while many other remained trapped, at least mentally, on a lifeboat in the frigid North Atlantic waters, just wanting to go back to the way their life was leading on the morning of 14 April 1912. Rhoda was one such survivor, and she wasn't alone. When she sank, Titanic took over 1,500 lives with her, but in the decades after, many dozen more of the so-called "survivors" became victims of their past, unable to move on from the loved ones they'd left behind. And that is yet another aspect of the tragedy that is hardly ever considered.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Located In My Personal Library:

Centennial Presents The Titanic: The Shipwreck That Shocked the World, What Really Happened by Ben Harris and Sebastian Raatz

The Complete Guide to the Titanic by Julia Gastecki

Gilded Lives, Fatal Voyage: The Titanic's First-Class Passengers and Their World by Hugh Brewster

A Night to Remember by Sir Walter Lord (Seen on the Passenger List as Rosa Abbott)

How it Happened: Titanic by Geoff Tibballs (Seen on the Passenger List as S. Abbott)

Sources:

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/rhoda-mary-rosa-abbott.html

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/rhoda-abbott.html

https://titanic.fandom.com/wiki/Rhoda_Mary_Abbott

https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hunt-5911

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/204890356/rhoda-mary-abbott

735) Katherine Gilnagh Manning

Courtesy of Irish Central

735: Katherine Gilnagh Manning

RMS Titanic Survivor

Born: 30 October 1894, Rhine (Also Spelled Rhyne), County Longford, Ireland (Present-day Republic of Ireland)

Died: 1 March 1971, Long Island, New York, United States of America

Also Known As: Kate or Katie Gilnagh

Katherine was coming to America to join her sister who had immigrated earlier on.

Katherine was held back from entering a lifeboat several times by crew members who were trying to dissuade steerage (or third class) passengers from getting on the boats. Finally, she managed to get on board a boat after telling one of the crew members her sister was on the boat (she wasn’t—but the lie saved her life). Katherine and her three roommates all escaped on lifeboat sixteen.

At the time of the disaster, Katherine said she naively believed the ship sinking and having to get on a lifeboat was the way everyone got to America.

Katherine was eventually reunited with her sister and went on to marry and became a part of what would become the Titanic Historical Society. She had four children.

Katherine even appeared on an episode of To Tell the Truth and was also interviewed by Walter Lord when he was writing A Night to Remember.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Located In My Personal Library:

A Night to Remember by Walter Lord (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

How It Happened: Titanic, The Epic Story From the People Who Were There by Geoff Tibballs (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

Sources:

https://titanic.fandom.com/wiki/Kate_Gilnagh

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/katie-gilnagh.html

https://www.irishcentral.com/news/titanic-survivor-story-katie-gilnagh

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/195099730/katherine-manning

Affiliated With RMS Titanic

Hopefully you've heard the story of the RMS Titanic by now. If you haven't, here's a basic rundown. Titanic was called the ship of dreams...wait, that's from the movie Titanic...Hang on, here we go:

RMS Titanic was a Royal Mail Ship built by Harland and Wolfe and operated by the White Star Line. Thousands of Irish men worked to build her over several years (alongside her sister ships Britannic and Olympic), and several of them died constructing her (one of which is an entry below). Once the ship was completed, she launched in early April 1912 on her maiden voyage, carrying over 2,000 passengers and crew. On the night of April 14th, Titanic struck an iceberg, and sunk just after two AM on April 15th, taking over 1,500 souls with her. Ever since the Titanic disaster, maritime safety has been a top priority the world over (but that doesn't mean maritime disasters have stopped!).

I have been fascinated with Titanic since I was six years old, and my grandfather gave me a book on the ship for Christmas. The next Thanksgiving I blanketed the entire house in Titanic trivia and facts, and I got to go through the Titanic exhibit in the Luxor in Las Vegas several years ago (combining two loves, Egypt and Titanic, in one go!).

Below you'll find stories of survivors, victims, and other people associated with the Titanic. If the person never actually sailed aboard the famous ship, I'll indicate them with the mark **.

Entries:

  • Sir Arthur H Rostron, The Captain of the Carpathia, Which Rescued the Survivors
  • Bill Paxton**, Actor who Appeared in James Cameron's Titanic
  • Charles Joughin, The Famously Inebriated Chief Baker
  • Edith Brown Haisman, Survivor who was Only a Child at the Time
  • Eva Hart, Survivor who was Only a Child at the Time
  • Ida Straus, Mrs. Macy's and Titanic Victim
  • Jenny the Titanic Cat, The Ship's Unofficial Mascot (Supposedly)
  • John Borie Ryerson, Survivor who was Only a Child at the Time
  • John B Thayer III, Survivor who was Only 17 at the Time
  • John Collins, Survivor who was a Member of the Galley Staff at the Time
  • Katherine Gilnagh Manning, Survivor who Managed to Keep Her Naivety Intact
  • Madeleine Astor Dick, Survivor and Widow of One of the Richest Men in the World
  • Margaret Tobin Brown, The Unsinkable Maggie Brown
  • Marjorie Collyer Dutton, Survivor who was Only a Child at the Time
  • Millvina Dean, The Youngest Survivor and Last of the 705 to Die
  • Rhoda Abbott, The Only Female Survivor to Have Been Pulled from the Water
  • Robertha Watt Marshall, Survivor who was Only a Child at the Time
  • Ruth Becker Blanchard, Survivor who was Only a Child at the Time
  • Samuel Scott**, Titanic's First Victim
  • Wallace Hartley, Band Leader Who Did His Best to Keep the Passengers Calm Till the End
  • William Alden Smith**, the US Senator Charged with Leading the Inquiry Into the Disaster
  • William Carter, Survivor who was Only a Child at the Time
  • William Coutts Jr, Survivor who was Only a Child at the Time
  • Violet Jessop, She Literally survived the Titanic Sinking, the Britannic Sinking, and the Olympic Collision

247) Millvina Dean

Courtesy of Biography

247: Millvina Dean

The Last Living Survivor of the Wreck of RMS Titanic

Born: 2 February 1912, Branscombe, United Kingdom

Died: 31 May 2009, Ashurst, United Kingdom

Original Name: Elizabeth Gladys Dean

Millvina was two months old at the time and the youngest of the 705 surviving passengers and crew.

She was traveling third-class with her parents and brother (her father would perish but her mother and brother survived with her).

Her family returned to England soon after the sinking and she worked as a cartographer for the British Government during World War II.
After the Titanic’s wreck site was rediscovered, she became an instant celebrity—appearing at numerous Titanic functions.

Near the end of her life, Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, and James Cameron all worked together to set up a fund to help pay her nursing home costs (despite the fact Millvina had never seen the film, she said she didn’t want to think about how her father died, and that the film would do just that).

After she died her ashes were scattered above the harbor in Southampton where the ship launched from.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Located In My Personal Library:

Centennial Presents The Titanic: The Shipwreck That Shocked the World, What Really Happened by Ben Harris and Sebastian Raatz

The Complete Guide to the Titanic by Julia Garstecki

Gilded Lives, Fatal Voyage: The Titanic's First-Class Passengers and Their World by Hugh Brewster

How It Happened: Titanic, The Epic Story From the People Who Were There by Geoff Tibballs (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

The Jews of the Titanic: A Reflection of the Jewish World on the Epic Disaster by Eli Moskowitz

LIFE Presents Titanic: The Tragedy That Shook the World by Kostya Kennedy

A Night to Remember by Walter Lord (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

Titanic: True Stories of Her Passengers, Crew, and Legacy by Nicola Pierce

Sources:

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/millvina-dean.html

https://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/01/world/europe/01dean.html

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37761233/millvina-dean

246) Eva Hart

Courtesy of 30 James Street

246: Eva Hart

Survived the Sinking of the RMS Titanic When She was Seven Years Old

Born: 31 January 1905, Ilford, United Kingdom

Died: 14 February 1996, Dagenham, United Kingdom

Traveling second-class with her parents, she was asleep at the time of the collision but made it into a lifeboat with her mother (her father perished in the sinking and his body was never recovered).

Eva and her mother returned to England after the sinking.

Eva quickly became one of the most prominent figures in Titanic historical societies and functions—making frequent appearances.

She never married and became a charity worker.

Her autobiography appeared in print in 1994 and she passed away in hospice from cancer.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Located In My Personal Library:

10 True Tales: Titanic Young Survivors by Allan Zullo

Centennial Presents The Titanic: The Shipwreck That Shocked the World, What Really Happened by Ben Harris and Sebastian Raatz

How It Happened: Titanic, The Epic Story From the People Who Were There by Geoff Tibballs (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

The Jews of the Titanic: A Reflection of the Jewish World on the Epic Disaster by Eli Moskowitz

LIFE Presents Titanic: The Tragedy That Shook the World by Kostya Kennedy

A Night to Remember by Walter Lord (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

Sources:

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/eva-hart.html

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/13999122/eva-miriam-hart

245) Marjorie Collyer Dutton

Courtesy of Encyclopedia Titanica

245: Marjorie Collyer Dutton

Survived the Sinking of the RMS Titanic

Born: 28 January 1904, Bishopstoke, Hampshire, United Kingdom

Died: 26 February 1961, Gosport, Hampshire, United Kingdom

Marjorie and her parents were second-class passengers and she was eight years old at the time.

Her father perished in the sinking and so she and her mother returned to England soon after.

By 1919, both Marjorie’s mother and now stepfather had died leaving her orphaned and in the care of an uncle where she remained until marriage.

There is rumor she and her husband had a child who died early on, but no record of the child exists.

Marjorie was widowed in 1943 and never remarried.

In the 1950’s she worked with Walter Lord via letter correspondence for his A Night To Remember.

Marjorie spent the last years of her life in a nursing home before passing away from a stroke.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Located In My Personal Library:

10 True Tales: Titanic Young Survivors by Allan Zullo

How It Happened: Titanic, The Epic Story From the People Who Were There by Geoff Tibballs (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

LIFE Presents Titanic: The Tragedy That Shook the World by Kostya Kennedy

A Night to Remember by Walter Lord (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

Sources:

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/marjorie-collyer.html

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/63571422/marjorie-charlotte-dutton

244) Robertha Watt Marshall

Courtesy of Titanic Wiki

244: Robertha Watt Marshall

Survived the Sinking of the RMS Titanic  When She was Twelve Years Old

Born: 11 September 1899, Scotland, United Kingdom

Died: 4 March 1993, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Robertha traveled alongside her mother in second-class (her father had crossed over to the United States in 1911).

Robertha was reportedly friends with Marjorie Collyer, a fellow survivor, while on board.

In 1917, she wrote a vivid account of her memory of that night for her school newspaper.

In 1923, Robertha married a Canadian dentist. They had four children and she became a Canadian citizen.

Bertha, as she was called, was an avid sailor and a member of her community yacht club.

She lost her husband, daughter, and grandson in a period of only a few short years.

Robertha appeared at one Titanic historical function and granted occasional interviews but mostly shunned the publicity.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Located In My Personal Library:

10 True Tales: Titanic Young Survivors by Allan Zullo

A Night to Remember by Walter Lord (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

How It Happened: Titanic, The Epic Story From the People Who Were There by Geoff Tibballs (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

Sources:

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/bertha-watt.html

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/26356553/robertha-josephine-marshall

243) Ruth Becker Blanchard

Courtesy of Find a Grave

243: Ruth Becker Blanchard

Survived the Sinking of the RMS Titanic When She was Twelve Years Old

Born: 28 October 1899, Guntur, India

Died: 6 July 1990, Santa Barbara, California, United States of America

Ruth was traveling in second-class with her mother and two siblings (her father stayed behind in India where he was working as a missionary).

During the night of the sinking her mother instructed Ruth to return to the cabin to get extra blankets—in that split second her younger siblings were thrown into a lifeboat and her mother panicked and jumped in with them telling Ruth to get in the next one. Luckily Ruth was able to board the next available lifeboat. Her family all survived and in 1913 her father joined them in Ohio.

Ruth became a teacher after attending college.
She married and had three children but was divorced after twenty years of marriage.

After retiring she began speaking up about Titanic and attended several historical society functions.

After Titanic’s rediscovery Ruth advocated for the ship to be left alone but was not upset at artifact retrieval for museums.

Her ashes were scattered over the wreck site.

Badges Earned:

Find a Grave Marked

Located In My Personal Library:

10 True Tales: Titanic Young Survivors by Allan Zullo

How It Happened: Titanic, The Epic Story From the People Who Were There by Geoff Tibballs (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

A Night to Remember by Walter Lord (Mentioned on the Passenger List)

Ohio Tales of the Titanic by Mary Whitley and Janet White

What was the Titanic? by Stephanie Sabol

Sources:

https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/ruth-elizabeth-becker.html

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-07-09-mn-215-story.html

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8124050/ruth-elizabeth-blanchard

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