Titanic survivor’s tale sold at UK auction
An account of the sinking of the Titanic written by a survivor who was secretary to a controversial aristocrat has sold for £20,000, auctioneers in Britain said on Sunday.
Laura Francatelli wrote of how she heard an “awful rumbling” as the liner went down before hearing “screams and cries” from hundreds of drowning passengers.
She was travelling with her employer, Scottish landowner Sir Cosmo Duff-Gordon and his wife Lady Lucy Christiana when the disaster struck in 1912.
Duff-Gordon and his party boarded one of the last lifeboats, which had space for 40 people but only ended up carrying five passengers and seven crew.
He later paid the crew members around £5 each — the equivalent of about £300 today — and had to defend himself against claims that he had paid them off to secure his own safety.
In one of the most vivid passages of her account — an affidavit for the British inquiry into the disaster — Francatelli detailed what happened after their lifeboat was lowered into the sea.
“We kept on rowing and stopping and rowing again I heard some talk going on all about the suction if the ship went down,” she wrote. “We were a long way off when we saw the Titanic go right up at the back and plunge down. There was an awful rumbling when she went. Then came the screams and cries. I do not know how long they lasted. We had hardly any talk. The men spoke about God and prayers and wives. We were all in the darkness.”
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