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<h2> CHAPTER II. THE MOST SUMPTUOUS PALACE AFLOAT </h2>
<p>DIMENSIONS OF THE TITANIC—CAPACITY—PROVISIONS FOR THE COMFORT
AND ENTERTAINMENT OF PASSENGERS—MECHANICAL EQUIPMENT THE ARMY OF
ATTENDANTS REQUIRED.</p>
<p>THE statistical record of the great ship has news value at this time.</p>
<p>Early in 1908 officials of the White Star Company announced that they
would eclipse all previous records in shipbuilding with a vessel of
staggering dimensions. The Titanic resulted.</p>
<p>The keel of the ill-fated ship was laid in the summer of 1909 at the
Harland & Wolff yards, Belfast. Lord Pirrie, considered one of the
best authorities on shipbuilding in the world, was the designer. The
leviathan was launched on May 31, 1911, and was completed in February,
1912, at a cost of $10,000,000.</p>
<p>SISTER SHIP OF OLYMPIC</p>
<p>The Titanic, largest liner in commission, was a sister ship of the
Olympic. The registered tonnage of each vessel is estimated as 45,000, but
officers of the White Star Line say that the Titanic measured 45,328 tons.
The Titanic was commanded by Captain E. J. Smith, the White Star admiral,
who had previously been on the Olympic.</p>
<p>She was 882 1/2 long, or about four city blocks, and was 5000 tons bigger
than a battleship twice as large as the dreadnought Delaware.</p>
<p>Like her sister ship, the Olympic, the Titanic was a four-funneled vessel,
and had eleven decks. The distance from the keel to the top of the funnels
was 175 feet. She had an average speed of twenty-one knots.</p>
<p>The Titanic could accommodate 2500 passengers. The steamship was divided
into numerous compartments, separated by fifteen bulkheads. She was
equipped with a gymnasium, swimming pool, hospital with operating room,
and a grill and palm garden.</p>
<p>CARRIED CREW OF 860</p>
<p>The registered tonnage was 45,000, and the displacement tonnage 66,000.
She was capable of carrying 2500 passengers and the crew numbered 860.</p>
<p>The largest plates employed in the hull were 36 feet long, weighing 43 1/2
tons each, and the largest steel beam used was 92 feet long, the weight of
this double beam being 4 tons. The rudder, which was operated
electrically, weighed 100 tons, the anchors 15 1/2 tons each, the center
(turbine) propeller 22 tons, and each of the two "wing" propellers 38 tons
each. The after "boss-arms," from which were sus-pended the three
propeller shafts, tipped the scales at 73 1/2 tons, and the forward
"boss-arms" at 45 tons. Each link in the anchor-chains weighed 175 pounds.
There were more than 2000 side-lights and windows to light the public
rooms and passenger cabins.</p>
<p>Nothing was left to chance in the construction of the Titanic. Three
million rivets (weighing 1200 tons) held the solid plates of steel
together. To insure stability in binding the heavy plates in the double
bottom, half a million rivets, weighing about 270 tons, were used.</p>
<p>All the plating of the hulls was riveted by hydraulic power, driving
seven-ton riveting machines, suspended from traveling cranes. The double
bottom extended the full length of the vessel, varying from 5 feet 3
inches to 6 feet 3 inches in depth, and lent added strength to the hull.</p>
<p>MOST LUXURIOUS STEAMSHIP</p>
<p>Not only was the Titanic the largest steamship afloat but it was the most
luxurious. Elaborately furnished cabins opened onto her eleven decks, and
some of these decks were reserved as private promenades that were engaged
with the best suites. One of these suites was sold for $4350 for the
boat's maiden and only voyage. Suites similar, but which were without the
private promenade decks, sold for $2300.</p>
<p>The Titanic differed in some respects from her sister ship. The Olympic
has a lower promenade deck, but in the Titanic's case the staterooms were
brought out flush with the outside of the superstructure, and the rooms
themselves made much larger. The sitting rooms of some of the suites on
this deck were 15 x 15 feet.</p>
<p>The restaurant was much larger than that of the Olympic and it had a
novelty in the shape of a private promenade deck on the starboard side, to
be used exclusively by its patrons. Adjoining it was a reception room,
where hosts and hostesses could meet their guests.</p>
<p>Two private promenades were connected with the two most luxurious suites
on the ship. The suites were situated about amidships, one on either side
of the vessel, and each was about fifty feet long. One of the suites
comprised a sitting room, two bedrooms and a bath.</p>
<p>These private promenades were expensive luxuries. The cost figured out
something like forty dollars a front foot for a six days' voyage. They,
with the suites to which they are attached, were the most expensive
transatlantic accommodations yet offered.</p>
<p>THE ENGINE ROOM</p>
<p>The engine room was divided into two sections, one given to the
reciprocating engines and the other to the turbines. There were two sets
of the reciprocating kind, one working each of the wing propellers through
a four-cylinder triple expansion, direct acting inverted engine. Each set
could generate 15,000 indicated horse-power at seventy-five revolutions a
minute. The Parsons type turbine takes steam from the reciprocating
engines, and by developing a horse-power of 16,000 at 165 revolutions a
minute works the third of the ship's propellers, the one directly under
the rudder. Of the four funnels of the vessel three were connected with
the engine room, and the fourth or after funnel for ventilating the ship
including the gallery.</p>
<p>Practically all of the space on the Titanic below the upper deck was
occupied by steam-generating plant, coal bunkers and propelling machinery.
Eight of the fifteen water-tight compartments contained the mechanical
part of the vessel. There were, for instance, twenty-four double end and
five single end boilers, each 16 feet 9 inches in diameter, the larger 20
feet long and the smaller 11 feet 9 inches long. The larger boilers had
six fires under each of them and the smaller three furnaces. Coal was
stored in bunker space along the side of the ship between the lower and
middle decks, and was first shipped from there into bunkers running all
the way across the vessel in the lowest part. From there the stokers
handed it into the furnaces.</p>
<p>One of the most interesting features of the vessel was the refrigerating
plant, which comprised a huge ice-making and refrigerating machine and a
number of provision rooms on the after part of the lower and orlop decks.
There were separate cold rooms for beef, mutton, poultry, game, fish,
vegetables, fruit, butter, bacon, cheese, flowers, mineral water, wine,
spirits and champagne, all maintained at different temperatures most
suitable to each. Perishable freight had a compartment of its own, also
chilled by the plant.</p>
<p>COMFORT AND STABILITY</p>
<p>Two main ideas were carried out in the Titanic. One was comfort and the
other stability. The vessel was planned to be an ocean ferry. She was to
have only a speed of twenty-one knots, far below that of some other modern
vessels, but she was planned to make that speed, blow high or blow low, so
that if she left one side of the ocean at a given time she could be relied
on to reach the other side at almost a certain minute of a certain hour.</p>
<p>One who has looked into modern methods for safeguarding</p>
<p>{illust. caption = LIFE-BOAT AND DAVITS ON THE TITANIC</p>
<p>This diagram shows very clearly the arrangement of the life-boats and the
manner in which they were launched.}</p>
<p>a vessel of the Titanic type can hardly imagine an accident that could
cause her to founder. No collision such as has been the fate of any ship
in recent years, it has been thought up to this time, could send her down,
nor could running against an iceberg do it unless such an accident were
coupled with the remotely possible blowing out of a boiler. She would sink
at once, probably, if she were to run over a submerged rock or derelict in
such manner that both her keel plates and her double bottom were torn away
for more than half her length; but such a catastrophe was so remotely
possible that it did not even enter the field of conjecture.</p>
<p>The reason for all this is found in the modern arrangement of water-tight
steel compartments into which all ships now are divided and of which the
Titanic had fifteen so disposed that half of them, including the largest,
could be flooded without impairing the safety of the vessel. Probably it
was the working of these bulkheads and the water-tight doors between them
as they are supposed to work that saved the Titanic from foundering when
she struck the iceberg.</p>
<p>These bulkheads were of heavy sheet steel and started at the very bottom
of the ship and extended right up to the top side. The openings in the
bulkheads were just about the size of the ordinary doorway, but the doors
did not swing as in a house, but fitted into water-tight grooves above the
opening. They could be released instantly in several ways, and once closed
formed a barrier to the water as solid as the bulkhead itself.</p>
<p>In the Titanic, as in other great modern ships, these doors were held in
place above the openings by friction clutches. On the bridge was a switch
which connected with an electric magnet at the side of the bulkhead
opening. The turning of this switch caused the magnet to draw down a heavy
weight, which instantly released the friction clutch, and allowed the door
to fall or slide down over the opening in a second. If, however, through
accident the bridge switch was rendered useless the doors would close
automatically in a few seconds. This was arranged by means of large metal
floats at the side of the doorways, which rested just above the level of
the double bottom, and as the water entered the compartments these floats
would rise to it and directly release the clutch holding the door open.
These clutches could also be released by hand.</p>
<p>It was said of the Titanic that liner compartments could be flooded as far
back or as far forward as the engine room and she would float, though she
might take on a heavy list, or settle considerably at one end. To provide
against just such an accident as she is said to have encountered she had
set back a good distance from the bows an extra heavy cross partition
known as the collision bulkhead, which would prevent water getting in
amidships, even though a good part of her bow should be torn away. What a
ship can stand and still float was shown a few years ago when the Suevic
of the White Star Line went on the rocks on the British coast. The
wreckers could not move the forward part of her, so they separated her
into two sections by the use of dynamite, and after putting in a temporary
bulkhead floated off the after half of the ship, put it in dry dock and
built a new forward part for her. More recently the battleship Maine, or
what was left of her, was floated out to sea, and kept on top of the water
by her water-tight compartments only.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER III. THE MAIDEN VOYAGE OF THE TITANIC </h2>
<p>PREPARATIONS FOR THE VOYAGE—SCENES OF GAYETY—THE BOAT SAILS—INCIDENTS
OF THE VOYAGE—-A COLLISION NARROWLY AVERTED—THE BOAT ON FIRE—WARNED
OF ICEBERGS.</p>
<p>EVER was ill-starred voyage more auspiciously begun than when the Titanic,
newly crowned empress of the seas, steamed majestically out of the port of
Southampton at noon on Wednesday, April 10th, bound for New York.</p>
<p>Elaborate preparations had been made for the maiden voyage. Crowds of
eager watchers gathered to witness the departure, all the more interested
because of the notable people who were to travel aboard her. Friends and
relatives of many of the passengers were at the dock to bid Godspeed to
their departing loved ones. The passengers themselves were unusually gay
and happy.</p>
<p>Majestic and beautiful the ship rested on the water, marvel of
shipbuilding, worthy of any sea. As this new queen of the ocean moved
slowly from her dock, no one questioned her construction: she was fitted
with an elaborate system of</p>
<p>{illust. caption = STEAMER "TITANIC" COMPARED WITH THE LARGEST STRUCTURES
IN THE WORLD 1. Bunker Hill Monument. Boston, 221 feet high. 2. Public</p>
<p>{illust. caption = J. BRUCE ISMAY</p>
<p>Managing director of the International Mercantile Marine, and managing
director of the White....}</p>
<p>{illust. caption = CHARLES M. HAYS</p>
<p>President of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railways, numbered among the heroic
men....}</p>
<p>water-tight compartments, calculated to make her unsinkable; she had been
pronounced the safest as well as the most sumptuous Atlantic liner afloat.</p>
<p>There was silence just before the boat pulled out—the silence that
usually precedes the leave-taking. The heavy whistles sounded and the
splendid Titanic, her flags flying and her band playing, churned the water
and plowed heavily away.</p>
<p>Then the Titanic, with the people on board waving handkerchiefs and
shouting good-byes that could be heard only as a buzzing murmur on shore,
rode away on the ocean, proudly, majestically, her head up and, so it
seemed, her shoulders thrown back. If ever a vessel seemed to throb with
proud life, if ever a monster of the sea seemed to "feel its oats" and
strain at the leash, if ever a ship seemed to have breeding and blue blood
that would keep it going until its heart broke, that ship was the Titanic.</p>
<p>And so it was only her due that as the Titanic steamed out of the harbor
bound on her maiden voyage a thousand "God-speeds" were wafted after her,
while every other vessel that she passed, the greatest of them dwarfed by
her colossal proportions, paid homage to the new queen regnant with the
blasts of their whistles and the shrieking of steam sirens.</p>
<p>THE SHIP'S CAPTAIN</p>
<p>In command of the Titanic was Captain E. J. Smith, a veteran of the seas,
and admiral of the White Star Line fleet. The next six officers, in the
order of their rank, were Murdock, Lightollder,{sic} Pitman, Boxhall, Lowe
and Moody. Dan Phillips was chief wireless operator, with Harold Bride as
assistant.</p>
<p>From the forward bridge, fully ninety feet above the sea, peered out the
benign face of the ship's master, cool of aspect, deliberate of action,
impressive in that quality of confidence that is bred only of long
experience in command.</p>
<p>From far below the bridge sounded the strains of the ship's orchestra,
playing blithely a favorite air from "The Chocolate Soldier." All went as
merry as a wedding bell. Indeed, among that gay ship's company were two
score or more at least for whom the wedding bells had sounded in truth not
many days before. Some were on their honeymoon tours, others were
returning to their motherland after having passed the weeks of the
honeymoon, like Colonel John Jacob Astor and his young bride, amid the
diversions of Egypt or other Old World countries.</p>
<p>What daring flight of imagination would have ventured the prediction that
within the span of six days that stately ship, humbled, shattered and torn
asunder, would lie two thousand fathoms deep at the bottom of the
Atlantic, that the benign face that peered from the bridge would be set in
the rigor of death and that the happy bevy of voyaging brides would be
sorrowing widows?</p>
<p>ALMOST IN A COLLISION</p>
<p>The big vessel had, however, a touch of evil fortune before she cleared
the harbor of Southampton. As she passed down stream her immense bulk—she
displaced 66,000 tons—drew the waters after her with an irresistible
suction that tore the American liner New York from her moorings; seven
steel hawsers were snapped like twine. The New York floated toward the
White Star ship, and would have rammed the new ship had not the tugs
Vulcan and Neptune stopped her and towed her back to the quay.</p>
<p>When the mammoth ship touched at Cherbourg and later at Queenstown she was
again the object of a port ovation, the smaller craft doing obeisance
while thousands gazed in wonder at her stupendous proportions. After
taking aboard some additional passengers at each port, the Titanic headed
her towering bow toward the open sea and the race for a record on her
maiden voyage was begun.</p>
<p>NEW BURST OF SPEED EACH DAY</p>
<p>The Titanic made 484 miles as her first day's run, her powerful new
engines turning over at the rate of seventy revolutions. On the second day
out the speed was hit up to seventy-three revolutions and the run for the
day was bulletined as 519 miles. Still further increasing the speed, the
rate of revolution of the engines was raised to seventy-five and the day's
run was 549 miles, the best yet scheduled.</p>
<p>But the ship had not yet been speeded to her capacity she was capable of
turning over about seventy-eight revolutions. Had the weather conditions
been propitious, it was intended to press the great racer to the full
limit of her speed on Monday. But for the Titanic Monday never came. FIRE
IN THE COAL BUNKERS</p>
<p>Unknown to the passengers, the Titanic was on fire from the day she sailed
from Southampton. Her officers and crew knew it, for they had fought the
fire for days.</p>
<p>This story, told for the first time by the survivors of the crew, was only
one of the many thrilling tales of the fateful first voyage.</p>
<p>"The Titanic sailed from Southampton on Wednesday, April 10th, at noon,"
said J. Dilley, fireman on the Titanic.</p>
<p>"I was assigned to the Titanic from the Oceanic, where I had served as a
fireman. From the day we sailed the Titanic was on fire, and my sole duty,
together with eleven other men, had been to fight that fire. We had made
no headway against it."</p>
<p>PASSENGERS IN IGNORANCE</p>
<p>"Of course," he went on, "the passengers knew nothing of the fire. Do you
think we'd have let them know about it? No, sir.</p>
<p>"The fire started in bunker No. 6. There were hundreds of tons of coal
stored there. The coal on top of the bunker was wet, as all the coal
should have been, but down at the bottom of the bunker the coal had been
permitted to get dry.</p>
<p>"The dry coal at the bottom of the pile took fire, and smoldered for days.
The wet coal on top kept the flames from coming through, but down in the
bottom of the bunkers the flames were raging.</p>
<p>"Two men from each watch of stokers were tolled off, to fight that fire.
The stokers worked four hours at a time, so twelve of us were fighting
flames from the day we put out of Southampton until we hit the iceberg.</p>
<p>"No, we didn't get that fire out, and among the stokers there was talk
that we'd have to empty the big coal bunkers after we'd put our passengers
off in New York, and then call on the fire-boats there to help us put out
the fire.</p>
<p>"The stokers were alarmed over it, but the officers told us to keep our
mouths shut—they didn't want to alarm the passengers."</p>
<p>USUAL DIVERSION</p>
<p>Until Sunday, April 14th, then, the voyage had apparently been a
delightful but uneventful one. The passengers had passed the time in the
usual diversions of ocean travelers, amusing themselves in the luxurious
saloons, promenading on the boat deck, lolling at their ease in steamer
chairs and making pools on the daily runs of the steamship. The smoking
rooms and card rooms had been as well patronized as usual, and a party of
several notorious professional gamblers had begun reaping their usual easy
harvest.</p>
<p>As early as Sunday afternoon the officers of the Titanic must have known
that they were approaching dangerous ice fields of the kind that are a
perennial menace to the safety of steamships following the regular
transatlantic lanes off the Great Banks of Newfoundland.</p>
<p>AN UNHEEDED WARNING</p>
<p>On Sunday afternoon the Titanic's wireless operator forwarded to the
Hydrographic office in Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and elsewhere
the following dispatch:</p>
<p>"April 14.—The German steamship Amerika (Hamburg-American Line)
reports by radio-telegraph passing two large icebergs in latitude 41.27,
longitude 50.08.—Titanic, Br. S. S."</p>
<p>Despite this warning, the Titanic forged ahead Sunday night at her usual
speed—from twenty-one to twenty-five knots.</p>
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