There were 324 first class passengers sailing aboard Titanic.
There were 324 first class passengers on the Titanic. 123 of those passengers did not survive
284 Second-Class passengers sailed Titanic.
62% of the passengers that sailed Titanic in First-Class were rescued.
Of the 176 male passengers that sailed Titanic in First-Class, 58 survived.
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).AnswerThere 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)
Depending on the source, there were either 329 or 324 passengers in first class aboard the Titanic when she sank in the Atlantic on April 15, 1912.
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".
The first class passengers, rich, would have the most servants.
AnswerThere were 285 second class passengers aboard, of which 119 survived.Answer(158 men, 93 women, and 24 children)Of those, 118 lived. (14 men, 80 women, and 24 children)There were 284 second class passengers on Titanic.
There were 329 1st class passengers on the Titanic.
Of the 117 women-and-children passengers that sailed Titanic in Second-Class, 105 survived.
AnswerAccording to the British Board of Trade report on the Titanic disaster, there were 325 first class passengers aboard - 175 men, 144 women, and 6 children.AnswerAccording to the First-Class Passenger Guest List on Encyclopedia-Titanic.org, there were 325 first-class passengers on the Titanic: 175 men, 144 women, and 6 children. Of these, 202 survived: 57 men, 140 women, and 5 children.Answer329