People thought that they wouldn't need them because they were under the impression that the ship was invincible. Lifeboats at the time were seen as a ferry from a foundering ship to a rescue ship. The number of boats a ship should have at the time was based on the size of the ship; not how many people it can carry at once. Titanic had 20 boats, which was four more than the legal minimum around that time.
scared worried and probably wanted to be with there family for what might be their
last moments alive
RIP every one that died in that fatel event
in the crew there were 150 people being the crew for captain Edward smith
Captain was edwrd john SMITH theres was more than 200 people as crew
Capt. Smith, the Gentleman's Captain, was a favorite of the White Star Line. So much so that he was on the maiden voyages for the Adriatic, the Majestic, the Baltic, the Olympic, and Titanic.
Titanic had two captains. Starting March 25th Capt. Haddock commanded her for about a week. Then she was reassigned to Capt. Edward John Smith. She also had harbor pilots like George Bowyer, who was shuttled in to guide her into Southampton.
No
The captain and crew. The captain and crew.
one of the Titanic crew members was Captain Smith.
in the crew there were 150 people being the crew for captain Edward smith
Either the captain of the ship or the crew
Captain was edwrd john SMITH theres was more than 200 people as crew
Titanic's sinking was not the fault of the engineers. It was not the fault of the Captain, nor the lookouts nor the crew.
Capt. Smith, the Gentleman's Captain, was a favorite of the White Star Line. So much so that he was on the maiden voyages for the Adriatic, the Majestic, the Baltic, the Olympic, and Titanic.
There were 891 crewmembers serving on Titanic during her maiden voyage.
Yes, the Titanic had a crew
Titanic had two captains. Starting March 25th Capt. Haddock commanded her for about a week. Then she was reassigned to Capt. Edward John Smith. She also had harbor pilots like George Bowyer, who was shuttled in to guide her into Southampton.
About 1,500 people died in the shipwreck including the captain, Captain Smith. Captain Smith believed in the saying "Every good captain goes down with his ship."
No