yes
it was built at Hamburg, Germany.
no one
No, the Titanic ship sank in 1912. It collided with an iceberg on April 14th, 1912, and sank in the early hours of April 15th.
The first double hull ship, known as the "Oregon," was built in 1891. This design innovation improved the ship's safety by providing an additional layer of protection against hull damage and oil spills. Double hull ships have since become standard in the marine industry.
The HMS Victory is a large, wooden ship that was built in England in the years between 1759 and 1765. The ship was built at the Old Single Dock in the Chatham Dockyard.
yes
It was built that way. To be the most luxurious liner of the age. It had to be such a long ship otherwise it would not have reached from the bow to the stern.
Royal Mail Ship
The Titantic
Titantic
It was said to be the best ship ever built and unsinkable and the sexiest
It was a crewman that said that "God himself cannot sink this ship" to Sylvia Caldwell at Southampton.
Well the Titanic hit an Iceberg but it was not a cruies ship.
The RMS Titanic served only as a passenger liner. The ship was built intended for use as a luxury oceanliner, for passenger use, only. It was the largest luxury liner, ever built at the time of her maiden voyage (first and last). RMS Titantic's sister ship, HMHS Britannic, was built and intended to serve as a transatlantic passenger liner. Shortly before the start of WWI, Britannic was put to use as a hospital ship. In November of 1916, she struck a mine off one of the Greek Islands, and sank with a loss of 30 lives, all crew members of the ship. RMS Titantic's older sister ship, RMS Olympic was also built as a Passenger Oceanliner. During the Olympic's lengthy time in service, she served extensively as a troopship during WWI, and later went on to serve as a transatlantic passenger liner. The RMS Titanic only moved passengers and their belongings, her sister ship HMHS Britannic, intended for the movement of passengers, served only as a hospital ship. Titantic's other sister ship, RMS Olympic served as a troopship, and passenger liner. As a troopship (and passenger liner), the Olympic moved military troops, and passengers. All 3 ships, only moved people, and did not serve as cargo liners.
yes because even though there was only enough lifeboats for half the passengers, the first few boats to leave the ship were more than half empty
when was the ship hotel built? 1927
Historians believe that no one said it--not until after the sinking anyway. An article discussing the ship as an engineering marvel said that the bulkheads made the ship "practically unsinkable" and after the ship sank the newspapers were believed to have twisted this quote into the famous line "not even God Himself could sink this ship"