There were just over 700 third class passengers and only 178 of them survived. There are conflicting numbers from the official manifest lists (706 vs 708 vs 721).
Answer
There is a list of 721 third-class passengers on the Titanic. Most of those who died were from this section, known as "steerage."
(see the related link to the 3rd class passenger list)
Out of the 2,224 passengers and crew aboard Titanic, 721 were the third class passengers
titanic is real and so is rose dewitt bukater when you go to the titanic experience rose talks about how it was on titanic and how much fear there is to titanic when it hit the iceberg
Only 174 3rd class passengers aboard the Titanic survived.
No passengers served. Only the waitstaff did that.
709 people sailed in Third-Class on Titanic.
There were 709 passengers in Third Class (Steerage); more than in First and Second Class combined. (There were 324 First Class passengers and 284 in Second Class.)
721 passengers were third class
706, and only 178 of them survived
Around 1700
568
178 out of 706 third-class passengers survived
Ship's biscuits. Hard tack. Wevils. Dust.
There was a total of 2201 people on board the Titanic. Out of those people, only 711 people survived the ordeal, while and astounding 1,490 people lost there lives. Here is a list of the names of all the first class passengers reported to be on the ship --> http://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-first-class-passengers/ Here is a list of the names of all the second class passengers reported to be on the ship --> http://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-second-class-passengers/ Here is a list of the names of all the third class passengers reported to be on the ship --> http://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-third-class-passengers/
Titanic (and Olympic) had different kinds of elevators (lifts). According to Bill Sauder: There were two for passengers; two for mail/provisions; and three for food. The hoist between the galley and the Engineer's mess is mechanical, otherwise all are electrical.
Lifebelts were distributed to as many passengers as possible.
Titanic had 2,208 passengers.
Third class passengers needed to get check out by a doctor before boarding the famous ship!
Titanic, the grandest ship in the world, was quite affordable to third-class passengers but was extremely expensive to first-class passengers who sailed with the philosophy to "get what you pay for".
178 out of 706 third-class passengers survived
first class because they were at the top of the ship
Passengers and crew (fully loaded):3547Staterooms (840 total):First Class: 416Second Class: 162Third Class: 262Plus 40 open berthing areas
Ship's biscuits. Hard tack. Wevils. Dust.
There was a total of 2201 people on board the Titanic. Out of those people, only 711 people survived the ordeal, while and astounding 1,490 people lost there lives. Here is a list of the names of all the first class passengers reported to be on the ship --> http://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-first-class-passengers/ Here is a list of the names of all the second class passengers reported to be on the ship --> http://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-second-class-passengers/ Here is a list of the names of all the third class passengers reported to be on the ship --> http://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-third-class-passengers/
Life on the Titanic for third class passengers was anything but ideal. Although they were getting to America just as much as the first class passengers were, The conditions for them were so much worse. The wealthy had luxurious rooms and suites with the most elegant furniture while the third class passengers had very small rooms with bunk beds. the ship was divided by class where the upper deck was mostly for the wealthy and the poor were confined to the lower decks. But the real disaster was when the Titanic hit the iceberg. Because first class passengers were closer to the higher decks, it was more possible for them to reach the lifeboats than the third class passengers. There's even evidence to say that ship crew locked the lower class below decks using gates within the ship. The third class passengers on the Titanic had very little comforts on the ship and many were not even given the chance to try to survive.
Yes, there was a 6ft deep swimming pool for the first class passengers.
Titanic (and Olympic) had different kinds of elevators (lifts). According to Bill Sauder: There were two for passengers; two for mail/provisions; and three for food. The hoist between the galley and the Engineer's mess is mechanical, otherwise all are electrical.
There were 2,223 passengers aboard the Titanic when it set sail for New York City. Out those passengers, 1,517 died either when the ship went down or shortly after from hypothermia.