|
The following is a Gaslight etext.... |
A message to you about copyright and permissions |
|
Plunged Into Icy Sea Did Not See Berg Parted From Parents Saw Many jump Overboard Leaped Into Ocean Eight Year Old Boy's Narrative Was "Very Quiet After He Was In Boat" Another Lad Tells How He Saw His Uncle Die.
|
John B. Thayer, the
seventeen- Mrs. Thayer was saved in one of
the lifeboats, while her son was rescued after a
most exciting experience on an upturned boat,
upon which he clambered after struggling on the
icy water for some time.
According to Thayer's account
there was an explosion as the Titanic sank, this
explosion forcing him a considerable distance
and probably saving him from being drawn in by
the suction as the steamer went down. His
statement follows:
"Father was in bed and
mother and myself were about to get into bed.
There was no great shock. I was on my "I put on an overcoat and
rushed up on 'A' deck on the port side. I saw
nothing there. I then went forward to the bow to
see if I could see any signs of ice. The only
ice I saw was on the well deck.
"I could not see very far
ahead, having just come out of a brilliantly
lighted room. I then went down to our room and
my father and mother came on deck with me, to
the starboard side of 'A' deck. We could not see
anything there. Father thought be saw small
pieces of ice floating around, but I could not
see any myself. There was no big berg.
"We walked around to the
part side and the ship had then a fair list to
port. We stayed there looking over the side for
about five minutes. The list seemed very slowly
to be increasing. We then went down to our rooms
on 'C' deck, all of us dressed quickly, putting
on all our clothes.
"We all put on life
preservers, including the maid, and over these
we put our overcoats. Then we hurried up on deck
and walked around, looking out at different
places until the women were all ordered to
collect on the port side. Father and I said
good-bye to mother at the top of the stairs on
'A' deck on the port side and we went to "As at this time we had no
idea the boat would sink, we walked around 'A'
deck and then went to 'B' deck. Then we thought
we would go back to see if mother had gotten off
safely, and went to the port side of 'A' deck.
We met the chief of the main dining saloon and
he told us that mother had not yet taken a boat
and he took us to her.
FATHER LOST SIGHT OF FOREVER.
"Father and mother went
ahead and I followed. They went down to 'B'
deck, and a crowd got in front of me and I was
not able to catch them, and lost sight of them.
As soon as I could get through the crowd I tried
to find them on 'B' deck, but without success.
That is the last time I saw my father.
"This was about one-half
hour before she sank. I then went to the
starboard side, thinking that father and mother
must have gotten off in a boat. All of this time
I was with a fellow named Milton C. Long, of New
York, whom I had just met that evening.
"On the starboard side the
boats were getting away quickly. Some boats were
already off in a distance. We thought of getting
into one of the boats, the last boat to go on
the forward part of the starboard side, but
there seemed to be such a crowd around I thought
it unwise to make any attempt to get into it.
"He and I stood by the
davits of one of the boats that had left. I did
not notice anybody that I knew, except Mr.
Lindley, whom I had also just met that evening.
I lost sight of him in a few minutes. Long and I
then stood by the rail just a little aft of the
captain's bridge.
"The list to the port had
been growing greater all the time. About this
time the people began jumping from the stern.
"I thought of jumping
myself, but was afraid of being stunned on
hitting the water. Three times 1 made up my mind
to jump out and slide down the davit ropes and
try to make the boats that were lying off from
the ship, but each time Long got hold of me and
told me to wait a while.
"He then sat down and I
stood up waiting to see what would happen. Even
then we thought she might possibly stay afloat.
"I got a sight on a rope
between the davits and a star and noticed that
she was gradually sinking. About this time she
straightened up on an even keel and started to
go down fairly fast at an angle of about thirty
degrees.
SAYS GOOD-BYE TO EACH OTHER.
"As she started to sink we
left the davits and went back and stood by the
rail about even with the second funnel. Long and
myself said good-bye to each other and jumped up
on the rail. He put his legs over and held on a
minute and asked me if I was coming.
"I told him I would be with
him in a minute. He did not jump clear, but slid
down the side of the ship. I never saw him
again.
"About five seconds after he
jumped I jumped out, feet first. I was clear of
the ship, bent down, and as I came up I was
pushed away from the ship by some force. I came
up facing the ship, and one of the funnels
seemed to be lifted off and fell towards me,
about 15 yards away, with a mass of sparks and
steam coming out of it.
"I saw the ship in a sort of
a red glare, and it seemed to me that she broke
in two just in front of the third funnel. At
this time I was sucked down, and as I came up I
was pushed out again and twisted around by a
large wave, coming up in the midst of a great
deal of small wreckage.
"As I pushed it from around
my head my hand touched the cork fender of an
overturned lifeboat. I looked up, saw some men
on the top and asked them to give me a hand. One
of them, who was a stoker, helped me up. In a
short time the bottom was covered with about 25
or 30 men.
"When I got on this I was
facing the ship. The stern then seemed to rise
in the air and stopped at about an angle of 60
degrees. It seemed to hold there for a time and
then, with a hissing sound, it shot right down
out of sight with people jumping from the stern.
"The stern either pivoted
around towards our boat or we were sucked
towards it, and as we only had one oar we could
not keep away. There did not seem to be very
much suction and most of us managed to stay on
the bottom of our boat.
"We were then right in the
midst of fairly large wreckage, with people
swimming all around us. The sea was very calm
and we kept the boat pretty steady, but every
now and then a wave would wash over it.
SANG A HYMN AND SAID THE LORD'S PRAYER.
"The assistant wireless
operator was right next to me, holding on to me
and kneeling in the water. We all sang a hymn
and said the Lord's prayer, and then waited for
dawn to come.
"As often as we saw the
other boats in a distance we would yell 'Ship
ahoy!' but they could not distinguish our cries
from, any others so we all gave it up, thinking
it useless. It was very cold and none of us were
able to move around to keep warm, the water
washing over her almost all the time.
"Towards dawn the wind
sprang up roughing up the water and making it
difficult to keep the boat balanced. The
wireless man raised our hopes a great deal by
telling us that the Carpathia would be up in
about three hours. About three thirty or four
o'clock some men on our boat on the bow sighted
her mast lights.
"I could not see them as I
was sitting down with a man kneeling on my leg.
He finally got up and I stood up. We had the
second officer, Mr. Lightoller, on board. We
had an officer's whistle and whistled for the
boats in the distance to come up and take us
off.
"It took about an hour and a
half for the boats to draw near. Two boats came
up. The first took half and the other took the
balance, including myself.
"We had great difficulty
about this time in balancing the boat, as the
men would lean too far, but were all taken
aboard the already crowded boat and in about a
half-or three-quarters of an hour later we were
picked up by the Carpathia.
"I have noticed second
officer Little Arthur Olsen, eight years
old, said that America was pretty good place,
and that he was going to like it.
TOOK CARE OF HIM IN THE LIFEBOAT.
Arthur came to that conclusion
because so many people had been good to him.
First there was Fritzjof Madsen, one of the
survivors, who took care of him in the lifeboat.
Then Miss Jean Campbell gave him
hot coffee and sandwiches and propped him
comfortably against some clothing while she
busied herself with others.
Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt, Jr.,
next appeared with two nice, big men, put him in
a taxi with Miss Campbell and sent him to a hot
bath and bed at the Lisa Day Nursery, No. 458
West Twentieth street, New York. And the next
morning Miss Florence Hayden taught him
kindergarten songs and dances with her class.
Later Arthur's stepmother, Mrs.
Esther Olson of No. 978 Hart street, Brooklyn,
appeared and clasped him in her arms. Her
husband, Arthur's father, Charlie Olsen,
perished in the wreck.
Mrs. Olsen had never seen Arthur,
because after Charlie Oslen's first wife died in
Trondhjem, Norway, leaving the little baby
Arthur, he had come to America, where he married
again.
A while ago Olsen crossed to see
about the settlement of an estate and to bring
his son home. He and the boy were in the
steerage of the Titanic.
Arthur is a sturdy, quiet-faced
little chap with red hair, freckles and a ready
smile. He speaks only Norwegian, but Mrs. Olsen
translated for him when he told his story.
"I was with papa on the
boat," said the youngster timidly,
"and then something was the matter. Papa
said I should hurry up and go into the boat and
be a good boy. We had a friend, Fritzjof Madsen,
with us from our town, and he told me to go too.
"The ship was kind of
shivering and everybody was running around. We
kept getting quite close down to the water, and
the water was quiet, like a lake.
THE LAST BOY SAW OF PAPA.
"Then I got into a boat and
that was all I saw of papa. I saw a lot of
people floating around drowning or trying to
snatch at our boat. Then all of a sudden I saw
Mr. Madsen swimming next to the boat and he was
pulled in. He took good care of me.
"In our boat everybody was
crying and sighing. I kept very quiet. One man
got very crazy, then cried just like a little
baby. Another man jumped right into the sea and
he was gone.
"It was awful cold in the
boat, but I was dressed warm, like we dress in
Norway. I had to put on my clothes, when my papa
told me to on the big ship. I couldn't talk to
anybody, because I don't understand the
language. Only Mr. Madsen talked to me and told
me not to be afraid, and I wasn't afraid. Mr.
Madsen was shivering in his wet clothes, but he
got all right after the Carpathia came."
A bright-faced boy of eight
walked up and down in front or Blake's Star
Hotel at No. 57 Clarkson street, New York, the
day after the Carpathia arrived. He was Marshall
Drew of Greenport, L.I., one of the survivors of
the Titanic.
"It all seems just like the
bad dreams that I used to have," he
confided. "I never want to go to England
again. I went over there with my uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. James Drew, to visit my grandpa. We
had a good time in England and started back on
the Titanic.
"The night of the wreck my
aunt woke me and said she was going to dress me
and take me out on deck. I was sleepy and didn't
want to get up. I could hear funny noises all
over the ship and sometimes a woman talking loud
out in the corridor. My aunt didn't pay any
attention to what I said but hurried me into my
clothes and rushed me with her up to the deck.
"There every one was running
about. Some of the men were laughing and saying
there was no danger. They were taking all the
women and hurrying them into the boats along
with the children. We could not see what for. I
thought at first that we had got home.
WAS HURRIED INTO A BOAT.
"Aunt Lulu put me into the
boat and then stood back with Uncle James, and
in a moment some one had hurried her into the
boat, too, and we went down the side, Uncle
James waving his hand at us and Aunt Lulu
standing up and looking at him.
"Then the boat pulled away
from the ship and there was a lot of talk and
screaming. We were a long time on the water and
were finally picked tip by the Carpathia."
Marshall and his aunt were saved.
They were met at the pier by his grandfather,
Mr. Henry P. Christian, of Greenport, and with
his aunt were taken to the hotel along with
other survivors of the second cabin.
Miss Emily Rugg, 20 years old, of
the Isle of Guernsey, England, told a graphic
story of the sinking.
Miss Rugg, who was one of the
second class passengers, was met in New York by
her uncle, F.W. Queripel, a grocer. The young
woman was on her way to visit relatives.
She was asleep when the ship
struck the berg, and the jar aroused her.
Looking out she saw a mass of ice. Throwing a
coat about her, she went on deck and saw
lifeboats being lowered.
Returning to the cabin, she
dressed, and then went to an adjoining cabin and
aroused two women friends.
Following this Miss Rugg ran up
on deck and was taken in charge by some of the
crew, who dragged her toward a lifeboat. She was
lifted into the third from the last which left
the ship.
She said that there seemed to be
nearly seventy-five persons in the boat and that
it was very much crowded. In the meantime a
panic had started among those who remained on
board the Titanic.
An Italian jumped from the
steerage deck and fell into a lifeboat, landing
upon a woman who had a baby in her arms.
Miss Rugg saw the Titanic go down
and declares but for the horror of it all, it
might have been termed one of the grandest
sights she ever saw.
SHIP TAKES ITS FINAL PLUNGE.
The boat seemed to have broken in
half, and with all the lights burning brightly,
the stern arose into the air , the lights being
extinguished as it did so. A moment later the
ship plunged beneath the surface. Karl H. Behr,
the well known tennis player, who went to
Australia in 1910 with the American team, was
one of the Titanic survivors.
He was graduated from Yale in
1906 and later from Columbia, where he took a
law degree. This is his statement of his
experiences on the night of the disaster.
"We were a party of four,
Mr. and Mrs. R.L. Beckwith, Mrs. Beckwith's
daughter, Miss Helen W. Newsom, and myself. Mr.
Beckwith and I had stayed up in the smoking
room. We left just before it closed for the
night.
"I went to my stateroom and
only partly undressed when I felt a distinct jar
run through the whole vessel, which quivered all
over. It was distinct enough for me to be
certain that we had hit something. I dressed
again immediately, my first thought and purpose
being to reach my party at once."
Mr. Behr told of assembling his
party and added:
"I knew exactly where the
lifeboats were, so Miss Newsom and I and Mr. and
Mrs. Beckwith went to the top deck. We waited
quietly while the first boat filled and was
lowered. It appeared to me to be quite full.
"We then went to the second
boat, which was quite full. Mr. Ismay was
directing its launching. When Mrs. Beckwith came
to the edge of the lifeboat, which was hanging
over the sides, she asked Mr. Ismay before
attempting to get in whether her men could go
with her, and I heard him reply quietly, 'Why
certainly, madam.' We then got into the boat.
"After we were in the boat
we heard Mr. Ismay calling out and asking if
there were any more passengers to go in the
boat.
THE LAST PASSENGERS ON TOP DECK.
"There were none, and we
must have waited at least three minutes or more
before he ordered an officer into the boat and
two or three more of the crew who were alone on
deck and under perfect control. We were
evidently the last passengers on the top deck,
as we could see no others.
"Most fortunately for us,
when we left the ship everything was handled in
perfect discipline, Mr. Ismay launching our
lifeboat in a most splendid fashion, with
absolute coolness, making sure that all
passengers were on board and that our crew was
complete. What happened later we know little
about.
"As far as I am concerned I
saw no signs of a panic and not one person in
our boat lost his head, nor do I know of a
single person being left behind on the top
deck."
George A. Harder, of No. 117
"When the crash came my wife
and I were in our stateroom, about to
retire," said Harder. "Suddenly there
came what seemed like a low, long groan at the
ship's bottom. It did not sound like a
collision.
"Taking my wife by the arm,
I rushed to the deck. Passengers were already
swarming there, asking what had happened.
"I heard an officer order a
carpenter below to ascertain the damage. He
never returned. That the officers already knew
the ship was likely to founder was evident from
the fact that one lifeboat containing among
others Karl M. Behr, the Brooklyn tennis player,
had been launched. Persons on our side of the
boat the starboard side were climbing into a
second boat.
"It was a bitter cold night.
The stars were bright and their rays were
reflected in the surrounding sea, which was as
smooth as glass. Farther and farther we drifted
away in the lifeboat, leaving behind us the
doomed ship.
BLOWN TO SAFETY BY EXPLOSION.
"Suddenly there sounded from
the Titanic the strains of 'The Star-Spangled
Banner.' As I glanced back at the mighty vessel
in the glare of her lights I saw Col. Archibald
Gracie clinging to a brass rail near one of the
forward funnels. I afterward learned the
explosion of the boilers blew him out of the
vortex of the sucked in water to calmer water,
where he was rescued.
"Gradually the distance
between the Titanic and our lifeboat increased.
Her lights continued to gleam, her band to play.
Two hours later, as she loomed a dark mass on
the horizon, her lights suddenly went out. Then
across the water, mingling with the strains of
'Nearer, My God, to Thee,' came the distressing
cries of those about to die.
"Out of the jumble of
foreign tongues could be distinguished the
shrieks of steerage women who were grouped at
the aft end of the boat. And above all the
sounds, like a benediction, sounded that hymn.
It was nameless anguish to us to sit in that
open boat and realize our helplessness to aid
those about to die. We forgot our own losses,
our own sufferings. Only a few of us dared to
look at the mighty ship as, bow first, she
plunged beneath the surface."
Harder denied that many
passengers were shot. He said he knows three
Italians were killed, but by whom he does not
know.
Police Magistrate Robert C.
Cornell, whose wife and her two sisters, Mrs.
Edward Appleton and Mrs. John Murray Brown, of
Denver, were among those rescued from the
Titanic, told her story.
"Mrs. Cornell," said
the Magistrate, "is of the same opinion as
many others of the survivors, that many of the
lifeboats left the side of the Titanic before
they had nearly their capacity.
"Mrs. Cornell, with Mrs.
Appleton, was assigned a place in the second
boat. This boat when it was lowered contained
twenty-three persons and she says there was room
for at least seventeen more without
overcrowding. In fact, all of the boats, my wife
says, could have carried many more passengers
with safety.
"There were three oars in
the boat in which my wife and Mrs. Appleton were
put, and no food or water or covering of any
sort to keep out the cold. The crew of this boat
consisted of one sailor and one petty officer.
"When the boat was lowered
an Italian was seen struggling in the water and
he was picked up. The three men then each took
an oar and did the best they could.
"Mrs. Cornell and her
sister, who have a slight knowledge of rowing,
took turns at the oars, as did the other women
in the boat, and after drifting about in the sea
for about four hours were picked up by the
Carpathia.
"Miss Edith Evans, a niece
of Mrs. Cornell and her sisters were traveling
with them, and she and Mrs. Brown were assigned
to places in one of the boats which left after
the one in which Mrs. Cornell and Mrs. Appleton
were placed.
"When this boat was about to
be lowered it was found that it contained one
more passenger than it could carry. Then the
question came as to who should leave.
"Miss Evans, a handsome girl
of twenty-five, said to Mrs. Brown that she had
children at home and should be the one to
remain. Miss Evans left the boat saying she
would take a chance of getting in a boat later.
|
(End.)