Titanic's fateful messages on the auction block
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On the auction block were Titanic documents and printed
telegraph messages
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February 17, 1998
Web posted at: 6:05 p.m. EST (2305 GMT)
NEW YORK (CNN) -- In an move no doubt timed to coincide with
the spectacular box office success of the movie "Titanic,"
one of the more dramatic telegraph messages ever sent was on
the auction block Tuesday.
Christie's auction house in New York was selling the
telegraph sent by the doomed Titanic before it began sinking
on April 14, 1912: "We have struck an iceberg." It is among
four lots of Titanic documents and printed telegraph messages
that were being offered for bidding.
Earlier telegraph messages from the Titanic's maiden voyage
in the North Atlantic include those received and sent by
nearby ships, detailing bad weather conditions the night of
the disaster. Among the ships exchanging warnings with the
Titanic was its sister ship, the Olympic.
"These messages are gossip almost, an exchange from ship to
ship as they ask about the whereabouts of the Titanic," said
Christie's East expert James Zemaitis.
Titanic's fateful messages on the auction block
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The Titanic sent this message to its sister ship the
Olympic, informing its crew it had struck an iceberg
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The documents are primarily translations of Morse code
printed by Marconi Telegraph operators aboard other ships.
One message to the SS Baltic from the Titanic reads, "Thanks
for message and best wishes. Had fine weather since
leaving."
"The more messages you read, the more iceberg warnings you
read, the more you realize how perilous it was out there in
the Atlantic at this time," Zemaitis said.
Despite the warnings of icebergs, the captain of the Titanic
proceeded at full speed in an effort to break records for the
ship's voyage.
The Titanic sank more than halfway through its voyage from
Southampton, England, to New York. Of the 2,200 passengers
and crew aboard the ship, about 1,500 died.
Reuters contributed to this report.