The third class passengers were near the bottom of Titanic, on decks D, E, and F. Their cabins were spread out between the three decks, as were their general and smoking room, open space, and dining saloon. It wasn't just third class on the three decks, there were also a bit of second class' cabins, first class' cabins, dining room, swimming pool and Turkish Baths. Third class and staffs' cabins were the lowest.
They knew it was sailing to New York. Many immigrant families wanted to move to America for a new life or visit families that lived there.
the passengers from the titanic was from England.
Well, MOST of them were, but not all- there were also a considerable number of Americans (mostly in 1st or 2nd Class), and a lot of immigrants heading to America in Steerage class. Most of these were from Ireland or the North of England, but they also included Germans, Norwegians, Swedes, Turks, French, Italian and Chinese, as well as a few Japanese, Persians and Central Europeans.
most passengers came from enland Scotland ireland and usa but there were lots of immigrants including italians, bulgarians, bosnians, finnish, dutch, german, swedish, russian, and evan lebanese , so the titanic had an astounding amount of culutes aboard and this incident united them
Many of those traveling third class were emigrants traveling to the United States from Ireland and Scandinavia. The third class passenger nationalities include Irish, Finnish, Swedish, and Belgian.
Irish
120 of the third class passengers on the Titanic were Irish. They were emigrants making their ways to America, and very few of them survived the sinking.
{| ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Category First Class ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Number Aboard 329 ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Number of Survivors 199 ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Percentage That Survived 60.5 % ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Number Lost 130 ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Percentage That Were Lost 39.5 % | From: Ali Sabah Al-Takmachi, College: Medicine , UOS |}
First class total: 319 - Died: 120 - Survived: 199 - Survived: 62% Second Class total: 272 - Died: 155 - Survived: 117 - Survived: 43%
OH YEA! First of all, the 1st class people paid more, were richer, and because they were rich they got high quality rooms. I went to a Titanic exhibit at a science museum and they showed replicas of the rooms. The First class room had couches and king size beds and giant bathrooms and 3 windows. The 3rd class passengers had 2 bunk beds and a sink and the room was literally 10 feet by 5 feet! Not joking!!! Also the first class passengers got to get off the boat first while sinking. That's why many of the second and mostly third class all died. Also, at the exhibit, they showed a replica of the iceberg and the temperature of the water. My friend and I couldn't keep our hand in the water for more than 10 seconds it was that freezing. Also, what many people don't know is the people didn't die from drowning, only some, most people died from hypothermia. Hypothermia is when your body temperature drops so dramatically and so amazingly fast that you freeze to death.
Amy kelly rachel ohara charlotte Hopkins
120 of the third class passengers on the Titanic were Irish. They were emigrants making their ways to America, and very few of them survived the sinking.
australia
{| ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Category First Class ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Number Aboard 329 ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Number of Survivors 199 ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Percentage That Survived 60.5 % ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Number Lost 130 ! style="BACKGROUND: lightsteelblue; COLOR: black" width="120" | Percentage That Were Lost 39.5 % | From: Ali Sabah Al-Takmachi, College: Medicine , UOS |}
First class total: 319 - Died: 120 - Survived: 199 - Survived: 62% Second Class total: 272 - Died: 155 - Survived: 117 - Survived: 43%
OH YEA! First of all, the 1st class people paid more, were richer, and because they were rich they got high quality rooms. I went to a Titanic exhibit at a science museum and they showed replicas of the rooms. The First class room had couches and king size beds and giant bathrooms and 3 windows. The 3rd class passengers had 2 bunk beds and a sink and the room was literally 10 feet by 5 feet! Not joking!!! Also the first class passengers got to get off the boat first while sinking. That's why many of the second and mostly third class all died. Also, at the exhibit, they showed a replica of the iceberg and the temperature of the water. My friend and I couldn't keep our hand in the water for more than 10 seconds it was that freezing. Also, what many people don't know is the people didn't die from drowning, only some, most people died from hypothermia. Hypothermia is when your body temperature drops so dramatically and so amazingly fast that you freeze to death.
120 passengers
about 120
Amy kelly rachel ohara charlotte Hopkins
120
One third of 120 is 40.
Passenger capacity ranged from 92 to 120 passengers depending on configuration.
No. "Normandie" was about 120 feet longer than "Titanic", it was also almost twice as big as "Titanic" in tonnage.