Ten (10) is the total number of officers, passengers and seamen aboard the half brig Mary Celeste. Andrew Gillilng, Edward William Head, and Albert G. Richardson served respectively as second mate, cook and steward, and first mate while Gottlieb Goodschaad, Arian Martens, and the brothers Boz and Volkert Lorenzen were seamen. Captain Benjamin Spooner Briggs was accompanied by his daughter, Sophia Matilda, and his wife, Sarah Elizabeth.
No, there were no survivors on the ship Mary Celeste. No one knows what happened to them except that they just disappeared.
No, there were no life boats on Mary Celeste after the crew went missing.
The year 1872 is the year that Mary Celeste was found adrift without captain, crew or passengers. The hermaphrodite brig in question was sighted by the crew of the Dei Gratiasomewhere between the Azores and Portugal on Wednesday, December 4, 1872, (nautical time) or Thursday, December 5, 1872 (civilian or local time). It was thought to have been drifting since Sunday, November 24, 1872, since the ship's map has a last course charting of the former date.
There was crew and paid passengers. No animals.
The titanic had 1500 passengers.
Crew and passengers 2223 people in total
907 members of crew were aboard the Titanic.
As soon as the crew were ready, they let the passengers come aboard the ship.
The fact that nobody knows what happened to the Mary Celeste 10 in 1872 is a reason why Mary Celeste is a mystery. The mystery of the disappearance of the captain with his daughter and wife as well as of all of his crew and officers remains the greatest maritime enigma of all time. No one scenario yet tends to fit even though suggestions of mutiny, piracy, seaquakes and water spouts have been offered.
1,317 passengers and around 885 crew members
There was no search and rescue team search for the missing passengers of Mary Celeste. The Mary Celeste Ten went missing off the southernmost Azores during or subsequent to the morning of Sunday, November 24, 1872. The captain and the crew of Dei Gratia were the first-known contacts with Mary Celeste between the hermaphrodite brig's departure on Thursday, November 7, 1872, from Staten Island and its discovery yawing between the Azores and Portugal on Wednesday, December 4 or Thursday, December 5, 1872.
Mary Celeste