The Titanic Ship : An Invincible Tragedy  
The RMS Titanic
 
 No other ship has captured the world's attention, quite like the 
Titanic ship. Constructed to be unsinkable, this first class ocean liner
 set sail on April 10, 1912. The world had awaited the maiden voyage of 
this luxury liner for months. The White Star Line had taken great care 
to publicize the fantastic engineering of the Titanic and the world 
waited with baited breath for the ship to make her first voyage.
 
 
Passengers boarding the Titanic
 As the passengers
 boarded the gangplank at Southampton, England for a trans-Atlantic 
crossing they were no doubt pleased to be a part of the maiden voyage of
 the invincible Titanic ship. Little did they know, however; that in just a few short days their names and the Titanic  would be forever immortalized.
  
The Titanic ship disaster began, ironically enough as the ship was heading out to sea. The ship's builders had spared no expense in assuring that the Titanic would not only be the safest ship on the waters, but also the largest. This fact proved to be disastrous from the beginning. The larger ship managed to suck a much smaller vessel, the New York, into her wake as she began plowing through the waters with her massive propellers. The two ships came very close to colliding. This near miss may have set a few nerves on edge, but it was nothing compared to what would come later.
The Titanic Leaving Queenstown
Despite the close call, the first few days of the ship's voyage in 
no way indicated the tragic history of Titanic ship. Information of 
Titanic records indicate the ship made two ports of call, both with no 
incident. After the stop in Queenstown, Ireland to take on more 
passengers, the RMS Titanic set sail once again, headed for her 
destination in New York. 
    
    
For four days the ship's elite passengers reveled in the brand new amenities of the Titanic ship,
 replete with every modern luxury known at the time. During the early 
part of the 20th century, it was considered quite sophisticated for 
wealthy families to spend portions of their time in Europe, which 
necessitated crossing the Atlantic at least once per year. Even to these
 jaded travelers, however, the Titanic ship was like no other. Nothing 
had been spared to insure the comfort of the first class guests. The 
ship was even equipped with only 20 lifeboats, so that precious deck 
space for the first class passengers would not be taken up by bulky 
lifeboats. 
    
  
Down below, however, it was a different story. While the luxury 
liner teemed with a significant number of first class passengers, 
hundreds of second class and third class passengers survived the first 
few days of the voyage in cramped compartments. Most of these 
individuals were immigrant families who had scraped together every bit 
of money they had to travel to America aboard the grandest, and 
supposedly, safest ship ever built.
    
  
When the Titanic ship disaster finally reached its pinnacle on 
April 14th, each and every passenger on board; wealthy and poor alike; 
were forced to fight for their very survival. In the end only 705 
persons survived the sinking of the ship, out of 2,228 passengers and 
crew members. 1,523 lives were lost when the Titanic ship beneath the 
ice cold waters of the Atlantic.






 
 
 
 
 
 
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The ship was made with full safety precaution. It wasn't suppose to sink at any circumstances. But fate has its own way to prove its presence. It collided with an iceberg, damaged the weak points and sank with all the passengers. What a tragic loss!
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