No, he was traveling alone.
Archibald Gracie has written: 'Survivors' 'The Truth about the Titanic' -- subject(s): Titanic (Steamship), Shipwrecks, Titanic (Ship), History
Archibald Gracie was born in 1755.
Archibald Gracie died in 1829.
Archibald Gracie III died in 1864.
Archibald Gracie IV died on 1912-12-04.
Archibald Gracie IV was born on 1859-01-15.
Archibald Gracie III was born on 1832-12-01.
The ten richest passengers on the Titanic included: John Jacob Astor IV, Benjamin Guggenheim, Isidor Straus, Margaret (Molly) Brown, Archibald Willingham Butt, J. Bruce Ismay (chairman of the White Star Line), Colonel Archibald Gracie IV, Charles Melville Hays, Lady Duff Gordon, and Thomas Andrews (chief designer of the Titanic) Brown, Ismay, Gordon, and Gracie all survived the Titanic. However, Gracie died on December 4, 1912 due to his exposure to hypothermia and injuries. He was the first adult survivor to have died.
The ten richest passengers on the Titanic included: John Jacob Astor IV, Benjamin Guggenheim, Isidor Straus, Margaret (Molly) Brown, Archibald Willingham Butt, J. Bruce Ismay (chairman of the White Star Line), Colonel Archibald Gracie IV, Charles Melville Hays, Lady Duff Gordon, and Thomas Andrews (chief designer of the Titanic) Brown, Ismay, Gordon, and Gracie all survived the Titanic. However, Gracie died on December 4, 1912 due to his exposure to hypothermia and injuries. He was the first adult Survivor to have died.
The ten richest passengers on the Titanic included: John Jacob Astor IV, Benjamin Guggenheim, Isidor Straus, Margaret (Molly) Brown, Archibald Willingham Butt, J. Bruce Ismay (chairman of the White Star Line), Colonel Archibald Gracie IV, Charles Melville Hays, Lady Duff Gordon, and Thomas Andrews (chief designer of the Titanic) Brown, Ismay, Gordon, and Gracie all survived the Titanic. However, Gracie died on December 4, 1912 due to his exposure to hypothermia and injuries. He was the first adult Survivor to have died.
Lawrence Beesley and Archibald Gracie both wrote books immediately afterwards and Harold Bride gave a long interview to the New York Times.
Many people survived Titanic despite being in the cold water for long amounts of time like baker Charles Joughin, Col. Archibald Gracie, and the thirty-or-so people that eventually stood up on overturned lifeboat B.