Tragedy on the Titanic's last rescue boat

The photos and manuscripts reveal in detail the search for the Titanic's last lifeboat, along with the fate of three passengers.

According to Fox News, three photos were taken on May 13, 1912, nearly a month after the sinking of the Titanic, indicating that the RMS Oceanic crew was trying to salvage one of the rescue boats. of the ill-fated passenger ship. Inside the last lifeboat from the sunken ship was the decaying body of three passengers.

Picture 1 of Tragedy on the Titanic's last rescue boat
Illustration of the Titanic sinking into the sea after crashing into an iceberg.(Photo: Wikia).

A photo showing the boat from the Oceanic was lowered into the water while another photo showed the boat approaching the lifeboat floating on the sea. The third photo shows the Aceanic sailor standing on the Titanic's rescue boat.

The Titanic crashed into an iceberg at 11:40 on April 14, 1912 and sank after just over two hours, dragging 1,500 passengers dead.

A manuscript of the salvage boat salvage event of an anonymous Oceanic passenger describing the discovery of three corpses. A corpse wearing a dress for dinner. The two remaining corpses belonged to the lifesaving soldiers on the Titanic tucked under the lifeboat's seat and the arm of one of the deceased when the Oceanic crew touched. A woman's ring is also found on the rescue boat.

"This is a vivid description of the salvage event. Titanic is the ship of all dreams but this is also the ship of nightmares. It is a frightening proof of what happened in the disaster." , Andrew Aldridge at auction house Henry Aldridge & Son, commented.

Picture 2 of Tragedy on the Titanic's last rescue boat
Oceanic crew on the last lifeboat leaves from the Titanic.(Photo by Henry Aldridge & Son).

Some Titanic passengers boarded a lifeboat called Collapsible A when it was swept off the deck by the sea during a partial sinking, but not all survived. The corpse found by the Oceanic crew was left on the rescue boat when Collapsible A survivors were picked up by another boat.

Thomson Beattie's dinner suit belongs to the first-class dinner suit. The wedding ring is owned by the Swedish passenger Elin Gerda Lindell, who drowned after approaching the Collapsible A boat, according to Encyclopedia Titanica. Her husband Edvard Bengtsson Lindell kept Elin's ring until his death on the Collapsible A boat and Edvard's body was never found.