Frederick Fleet and Reginald Lee, both of them were on look out duty. Their shift was to end 20 minutes after the collision.
No, Captain Edward Smith had already gone to bed when the Titanic hit the Iceberg, the ship however had two lookouts stationed in it's crows nest. It was Fredrick Fleet, one of the lookouts in the crows nest, who first spotted the berg. He radioed the bridge as soon as he seen it.
What I hear happened was the Titanic had gotten massages about iceberg fields ahead but Capt. Smith still had the Titanic cruising along at maybe 24 knots, and it's highest was 25 knots. The men in the crows nest spotted the iceberg with only their eyes, and they rang the bell. The Titanic was turning and it seemed to not hit but it did. If the men in the crows nest had had binoculars, which were in a locked locker (because a crew member was put off the ship for another, and he by mistake took the key to the locker.) they could have spotted it quicker and therefore the Titanic would not have hit the iceberg which in fact was a blackberg.
7
Yes 1,517 people died the night the Titanic hit the iceberg and the captain died as well.
Before she hit the iceberg? Well, Captain Smith could have, but he retired to his cabin
wel the captain knew that it would sink so he told members of the crew to get all the people of the ship in the lifeboats and before it hit the captain told the crew to turn the ship around.
He was having his night sleep in his cabin. There were only the observers on the deck.
yes, there was but the captain wasn't paying atention, so that is why the ship crashed.
The captain was to blame. The lookouts had warned him of an iceberg straight ahead, however the captain refused to slow down from 25.3 mph. There are a few people to blame. Some people say Bruce is because he was said to be pressurising the captain and a passenger's letter said that the captain was drunk when it hit the iceberg.
The name of the Captain was Captain Smith. On that night, he got many warnings about the ice locations and how to avoid them. He ignored them all, and told the last ship that sent an ice message to shut up. If he listened to all these ships, there was a very high possibility that he wouldn't of hit the iceberg. Hope this answers your question!
It hit an Iceberg No fire
The captain of the Titanic was Edward Smith. On the night the ship hit the iceberg, he was in command and had been warned about ice in the area but did not reduce speed significantly. After the collision, he took charge of the evacuation efforts, directing the crew and passengers to lifeboats, and ultimately went down with the ship.