RMS Carpathia
RMS Carpathia was a Cunard Line transatlantic passenger steamship built by Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson. Carpathia made her maiden voyage in 1903 and became famous for rescuing the survivors of RMS Titanic after the latter ship hit an iceberg and sank on 15 April 1912. Carpathia herself was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic on 17 July 1918 during the First World War by an Imperial German Navy U-boat.
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[edit]History
RMS Carpathia was built by Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson at their Newcastle upon Tyne, England shipyard. She was launched on 6 August 1902 and underwent her sea trials between 22 April and 25 April 1903. Carpathia displaced 8,600 long tons (8,700 t) and was 541 ft (165 m) long and 64 ft 6 in (19.66 m) breadth.
Carpathia made her maiden voyage on 5 May 1903 from Liverpool, England, toBoston, USA, and ran services between New York, Trieste, Rijeka and variousMediterranean ports. She was used as a troopship by the Canadian Expeditionary Force during the First World War.[1]
[edit]Titanic disaster
Carpathia was sailing from New York City to Fiume, Austria-Hungary, (today Rijeka in Croatia) on the night of Sunday, 14 April 1912. Among her passengers were the American painters Colin Campbell Cooper and his wife Emma, journalist Lewis P. Skidmore, photographer Dr. Francis H. Blackmarr, and Charles H. Marshall, whose three nieces were travelling aboard the Titanic.
Carpathia's wireless operator, Harold Cottam, had missed previous messages fromTitanic, as he was on the bridge at the time.[2] He then received messages fromCape Race, Newfoundland, stating that they had private traffic for Titanic. He thought he would be helpful and at 12:11 am on 15 April sent a message to the Titanicstating that Cape Race had traffic for them. In reply he received Titanic's distress signal.[2] Cottam awakened Captain Arthur Henry Rostron who immediately set a course at maximum speed (17 kn (20 mph; 31 km/h)) to Titanic's last known position, approximately 58 mi (93 km) away. Rostron ordered the ship's heating and hot water to be cut off in order to make as much steam as possible available for the engines.
At 4:00 am, Carpathia arrived at the scene, after working her way through dangerous ice fields, and took on 705 survivors of the disaster from Titanic's lifeboats.[2]
[edit]Aftermath
For their rescue work, the crew of Carpathia were awarded medals by the survivors. Crew members were awarded bronze medals, officers silver and Captain Rostron a silver cup and a gold medal, presented by Margaret Brown. Rostron was later a guest of President Taft at theWhite House and was presented with a Congressional Gold Medal, the highest honour the United States Congress could confer upon him.
[edit]Sinking
During the First World War, Carpathia was used to transfer American troops to Europe. Among them was Frank Buckles, who went on to become the last surviving American veteran of the war.
On 15 July 1918, Carpathia departed Liverpool in convoy. Shortly after midnight on 17 July she was torpedoed in the Celtic Sea by theImperial German Navy submarine U-55. Of two torpedoes fired at the ship, one impacted the port side while the other penetrated the engine room, killing two firemen and three trimmers.[3] As Carpathia began to sink by the bow, Captain William Prothero gave the order to abandon ship. All 57 passengers (36 saloon class and 21 steerage) and 218 surviving crew members boarded the lifeboats as the vessel sank.[3] U-55surfaced and fired a third torpedo into the ship and was approaching the lifeboats when the Azalea-class sloop HMS Snowdrop arrived on the scene and drove away the submarine with gunfire before picking up the survivors from Carpathia.
Carpathia sank at 12:40 at a position recorded by Snowdrop as 49.25 N 10.25 W, approximately 120 mi (190 km) west of Fastnet.
[edit]Finding and salvage works
On 9 September 1999, the Reuters and AP wire services reported that Argosy International Ltd., headed by Graham Jessop, son of the undersea explorer Keith Jessop, and sponsored by the National Underwater and Marine Agency, had discovered Carpathia's wreck in 600 ft (180 m) of water, 185 mi (298 km) west of Land's End.[4] Bad weather forced his ship to abandon the position before he could verify the discovery using underwater cameras. However, when he later returned to the location the wreck proved to be not that of Carpathia but that of the Hamburg-America Line's Isis, sunk on 8 November 1936.[5]
In 2000 the American author and diver Clive Cussler announced that his organization, NUMA, had found the true wreck of Carpathia in the spring of that year,[6][7] at a depth of 500 ft (150 m).[8] After the submarine attack Carpathia had rolled over and landed upright on the seabed. NUMA gave the approximate location of the wreck as 120 mi (190 km) west of Fastnet, Ireland.[9]
The current owner of the vessel is the company Premier Exhibitions Inc., formerly RMS Titanic Inc., which plans to recover objects from the wreck.[8] The same company owns the salvor-in-possession rights of Titanic, from which many artefacts have been recovered and are on display in worldwide exhibitions.
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