Titanic, Ships

What can you say it's still heartbreaking
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A Filligree diamond ring is shown in this undated handout photo supplied by RMS Titanic Inc., November 12, 2012. The ring is among 15 items including pendants, rings and a pocket watch salvaged from the wreck of the Titanic going on display later this week in Atlanta, according to Premier Exhibitions Inc. The exhibit will also travel to Orlando and Las Vegas next year. REUTERS/RMS Titanic Inc./Handout
for those in peril
Titanic: Captain Smith’s memorial in Lichfield, Staffordshire, England. Smith came from Staffordshire, although he was born in Hanley, not Lichfield. A plaque underneath the statue reads: COMMANDER EDWARD JOHN SMITH R.D. R.N.R. BORN JANUARY 27 1850 DIED APRIL 15 1912 BEQUEATHING TO HIS COUNTRYMEN THE MEMORY & EXAMPLE OF A GREAT HEART A BRAVE LIFE AND A HEROIC DEATH “BE BRITISH”
#Titanic china, still laying as it did in the cabinet, which has deteriorated.
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Part of the largest-ever recovered piece of the Titanic, including a porthole from the first-class cabin, is seen while being moved into the Luxor Resort & Casino Aug. 26, 2008 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The 15-ton, 15-by-30 foot portion of the ship's hull will be housed in the "Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition" at the resort. (Ethan Miller, Getty Images / Premiere Exhibitions)
Take a tour inside the real Titanic (25 photos)
Tickets | Cruising The Past
Last photo taken of the RMS Titanic – Sailing away from Queenstown, Ireland.
Purser Hugh Walter McElroy and Captain Edward J. Smith aboard the Titanic during the run from Southampton to Queenstown, England. The man who took the photograph, Rev. F.M. Browne, got off at Queenstown, three days before the ship hit an iceberg and sank.
The Titanic: Sinking & Facts | HISTORY
The remains of a bronze deck bench lies among the wreckage of the Titanic.
The Promenade Lights from a submersible penetrate the rusted ruin of Titanic’s first-class promenade