The SS Lusitania
Great Western
Lusitania was the name of the sunken ship.
Wilhelm gustov
The Bismarck .
You can find passenger ship lists at railway stations passenger reservation board, A ticket checker have also a list contain passenger name details.Find more about Indian railway - http://travelkhana.com/rail-info
The Germans sunk several ships while Wilson was President, but the most momentous sinking so far as the US was concerned was the sinking of the passenger ship, The Lusitania by German U-boats on May 7, 1915, killing 1198.
Lusitania
By passenger ship, like all the other migrants of that time.
The Falaba
RMS Lusitania.
there were several ships torpedoed in the channel, 1915 one was a ferry and the other one was the "Lusitania"
the cabin.
7th May 1915, the Lusitania, 1,924 people died
This question is somewhat vague in it's reference. U boats sank many ships. Possibly "the ship" was the Lusitania, a passenger liner. It was sunk on May 7th 1915 off the coast of Ireland. The Germans justified this horrible act by their belief that the ship was also carrying war munitions to Britain, which has been verified in more recent years. The ship had a number of Americans on board which strengthened the argument that the U.S. should enter the war, which it did on April 6, 1917.
He did not go on a ship for most of his adventure. When he did he was a passenger.
If you're referring to the German U-boat attack that killed 128 Americans in 1915, that was the RMS Lusitania. The ship was actually a British passenger liner (similar to RMS Titanic) that was torpedoed off the Irish coast. She exploded violently, and was supposedly carrying munitions from the United States to Great Britain.
This question is somewhat vague in it's reference. U boats sank many ships. Possibly "the ship" was the Lusitania, a passenger liner. It was sunk on May 7th 1915 off the coast of Ireland. The Germans justified this horrible act by their belief that the ship was also carrying war munitions to Britain, which has been verified in more recent years. The ship had a number of Americans on board which strengthened the argument that the U.S. should enter the war, which it did on April 6, 1917.