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Topic: Raise The Titanic
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Steve Klare
Film Guy
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted October 31, 2019 01:32 PM
When I was 18 (or so) years old, I was fascinated by the Titanic. Right around then, something really cool took place. Mom and Dad sent me to Engineering School and the University library was a major archival center: for example they had bound hard copies of every National Geographic back to #1 in the 1880s.
They had 1912 Harper's magazines with articles about the upcoming maiden voyage of the new White Star Liner.
Even though I was supposed to be working on my Calculus and Thermodynamics, I just had to work that card catalog. (This may at least partially explain my extended stay at college...It sure wasn't Girls!)
I found a very old looking book: The Loss of the SS Titanic by Lawrence Beesley. He wrote this:
"Several apparently authentic accounts have been given, in which definite stories of explosions have been related in some cases even with wreckage blown up and the ship broken in two; but I think such accounts will not stand close analysis."
This book was published very quickly after the sinking: it shows that from the very beginning there were at least theories that she had broken up. (-and I wonder if his "explosions" were actually "implosions")
Lawrence Beesley: The Loss of the SS Titanic (Page 23)
Maybe if structural simulation software was a couple of decades more advanced and people had wider access to computers, they would have arrived at the wreck that first day: "Yes, she's broken aft of the second funnel: just as we expected." [ October 31, 2019, 02:41 PM: Message edited by: Steve Klare ]
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
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