On the night of 14/15 April 1912; a brandnew; supposedly unsinkable ship; the largest and most luxurious vessel in the world at the time; collided with an iceberg and sank on her maiden voyage. Of the 2;208 people on board; only 712 were saved. The rest either drowned or froze to death in the icy-cold waters of the North Atlantic. How could this ‘unsinkable’ vessel sink and why did so few of those aboard survive? The authors bring the tragedy to life; telling the story of the ship’s design; construction and maiden voyage. The stories of individuals who sailed on her; many previously known only as names on yellowing passenger and crew lists; are brought to light using rarely-seen accounts of the sinking. The stories of passengers of all classes and crewmembers alike; are explored. They tell the dramatic stories of lives lost and people saved; of the rescue ship Carpathia; and of the aftermath of the sinking. Never again would a large passenger liner sail without lifeboats for all. Despite the tragedy; the sinking of the Titanic indirectly led to untold numbers of lives being saved due to new regulations that came into force after the tragedy. Profusely illustrated; including many rare and unique views of the ship and those who sailed on her; this is as accurate and engrossing a telling of the life of the White Star Line’s Titanic and her sinking as you will read anywhere. Made special by the use of so many rare survivor accounts from the eye witnesses to that night to remember; the narrative places the reader in the middle of the maiden voyage; and brings the tragic sinking to life as never before.
#518730 in Books O Malley Sj John W 2015-09-15Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.25 x .90 x 6.36l; .0 #File Name: 144225002X248 pagesCatholic History for Today s Church How Our Past Illuminates Our Present
Review
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Meaningful HistoryBy Paul A. ByrnesO'Malley's great sense of church history helps us to understand many of the issues that face us today. He is easy to read. Sometimes even exciting.8 of 10 people found the following review helpful. A collection of articles describing past Church Councils in relation ...By Charles R. GaganA collection of articles describing past Church Councils in relation to the Second Vatican Council --- where they are similar and where they differ. At the Second Vatican Council for the first time "dialog" becomes a goal; not to replace proclamation of the gospel but to enhance proclamation. Very readable by an historian who refutes the position "As the Church has always said; therefore; nothing can be changed".1 of 2 people found the following review helpful. This book is a cumulative of various talks the author ...By sue gieskeThis book is a cumulative of various talks the author gave on relevant topics. It is obvious he is an authority on relevant history. Because of the format perhaps It didn't pull together for me as much as I expected.