 Chapter 28 of the Sinking of the Titanic in Great Sea Disasters. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. This reading by Allison Hester of Athens, Georgia. The Sinking of the Titanic in Great Sea Disasters. Edited by Logan Marshall. Chapter 28. Time for Reflection and Reforms. Speed and luxury overemphasized. Space needed for lifeboats devoted to swimming pools and squash courts? Mania for speed records compels use of dangerous routes and prevents proper caution and foggy weather. Life more valuable than luxury. Safety more important than speed. And aroused public opinion necessary. International conference recommended. Adequate life-saving equipment should be compulsory. Speed regulations in bad weather? Cooperation and arranging schedules to keep the vessels within reach of each other? Legal regulations. It is a long time since any modern vessel of importance has gone down under nature's attack. And in general, the floating city of steel laughs at the wind and waves. She is not, however, proof against disaster. Danger lies in her own power and attends of thousands of horsepower with which she may be driven into another ship. Or into an iceberg standing cold and unyielding as a wall of granite. In view of this fact, it is of the utmost importance that the present day vessels should be thoroughly provided with the most efficient life-saving devices. These would seem more important than fireplaces, squash courts, and many other luxuries with which the Titanic was provided. The comparatively few survivors of the ill-fated Titanic were saved by the lifeboats. The hundreds of others who went down with the vessel perished because there were no lifeboats to carry them until rescue came. Survivors urge reform. The survivors urged the need of reform. In a resolution drawn up after the disaster, they said, We feel it our duty to call the attention of the public to what we consider the inadequate supply of life-saving appliances provided for the modern passenger steamships. And recommend that immediate steps be taken to compel passenger steamers to carry sufficient boats to accommodate the maximum number of people carried on board. The following facts were observed and should be considered in this connection. The insufficiency of lifeboats, rafts, etc. Lack of trained seamen to man some. Stokers, stewards, etc. are not efficient boat handlers. Not enough officers to carry out emergency orders on the bridge and superintend the launching and control of lifeboats? The absence of searchlights. The Board of Trade allows for entirely too many people in each boat to permit the same to be properly handled. On the Titanic, the boat deck was about 75 feet from the water and consequently the passengers were required to embark before lowering the boats. Thus endangering the operation and preventing the taking on of the maximum number the boats would hold. Boats at all times should be properly equipped with provisions, water, lamps, compasses, lights, etc. Life-saving boat drills should be more frequent and thoroughly carried out and officers should be armed at both drills. There should be greater reduction of speed and fog and ice as damage if collision actually occurs is liable to be less. International Conference recommended. In conclusion, we suggest that an international conference be called to recommend the passage of identical laws providing for the safety of all at sea. And we urge the United States government to take the initiative as soon as possible. That ocean liners take chances with their passengers, though known to the well-informed, is newly revealed and comes with a shock of surprise and dismay to most people. If boats are insinkable as well as fireproof, there is no need of any lifeboats at all. But no such steamship has ever been constructed. That it is realized that lifeboats may be necessary on the best and newest steamships is proved by the fact that they carry them even beyond the law's requirements. But if lifeboats for one-third of those on the ship are necessary, lifeboats for all on board are equally necessary. The law of the United States requires this, but the law and trade regulations of England do not. And these control the Titanic and cause the death of over 1,600 people. True, a steamship is rarely crowded to her capacity, and ordinarily accommodations and lifeboats for a full list would not be needed. But that is no argument against maximum safety facilities. For when disaster comes, it comes unexpectedly, and it might come when every birth was occupied. So there must be lifeboats for use in every possible emergency. Places must be found for them, and methods for handling them promptly. Suppose a vessel to be thus equipped would safety be ensured? In calm weather, such as the Titanic had, yes, for all that would be needed would be to keep the small boats afloat until help came. The Titanic could have saved everyone aboard. In heavy weather, no. As at present arranged, if a vessel has a list or in a non-nautical language has tipped over on one side, only the boats upon the lower side can be dropped, for they must be swung clear of the vessel to be lowered from the davits. So there is a problem, which it is the duty of marine designers to dissolve. They have, here to for, turned their attention to the invention of some new contrivance for comfort and luxury. Now let them grasp the far more important question of taking every soul from a sinking ship. They can do it, and while they are about it, it would be well to supplement lifeboats with other methods. We like to think and to say that nothing is impossible in these days of ceaseless and energetic progress. Certainly, it is possible for the brains of marine designers to find a better way for rescue work. Lewis Nixon, shipbuilder and designer for years, is sure that we can revolutionize safety appliances. He has had a plan for a long time for the construction of a considerable section of deck that could be detached and floated off like an immense raft. He figures that such a deck raft could be made to carry the bulk of the passengers. That may seem a bit chimerical to layman, but Nixon is no layman. His ideas are worthy of every consideration. Certain it is that something radical must be done, and that the maritime nations must get together, not only in the way of providing more life-saving facilities, but in agreeing upon navigation routes and methods. Captain William S. Sims of the United States Navy, who is in a position to know what he is talking about, has made some very pointed comments on the subject. He says, The truth of the matter is that in case any large passenger steam ship sinks by reason of collision or other fatal damage to her floatability, more than half of her passengers are doomed to death, even in fair weather. And in case there is a bit of sea running, none of the loaded boats can long remain afloat, even if they succeed in getting safely away from the side. And one more will be added to the long list of the ships that never return. Most people accept this condition as one of the inevitable perils of the sea, but I believe it can be shown that the terrible loss of life occasioned by such disasters as overtook the Burgone and the Titanic, and many other ships can be avoided or at least greatly minimized. Moreover, it can be shown that the steam ship owners are fully aware of the danger to their passengers, that the laws on the subject of life saving appliances are wholly inadequate, that the steam ship companies comply with the law, though they oppose any changes therein, and that they decline to adopt improved appliances. Because there is no public demand for them, the demand being for high schedule speed and luxurious conditions of travel. In addition to installing efficient life saving appliances, if the great steam ship lines should come to an agreement to fix a maximum speed for their vessels of various classes and fix their dates and hours of steaming so that they would cross the ocean in pairs within supporting distances of each other on routes of clear ice, all dangers of ocean travel would practically be eliminated. The shortest course between New York and the English Channel lies across Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Consequently, the shortest water route is overseas where navigation is dangerous by reason of fog and ice. It is a notorious fact that the transatlantic steam ships are not navigated with due regard to safety, that they steam at practically full speed in the densest fog. But the companies cannot properly be blamed for this practice because if the blue liners slow down in a fog or take a safe route, clear of ice, the public will take passage on the green liners, which take the shortest route and keep their scheduled time, regardless of the risks indicated. Prompt reforms. The terrible sacrifice of the Titanic, however, is to have its fruit and safety for the future. The official announcement is made by the International Mercantile Marine that all its ships will be equipped with sufficient lifeboats and rafts for every passenger and every member of the crew without regard to the regulations in this country and England or Belgium. One of the German liners already had this complement of lifeboats, though the German Marine as a whole is sufficiently deficient at this point to induce the rakes tag to order an investigation. Prompt immediate and gratifying reform marks this action of the International Mercantile Marine. It is doubtless true that this precaution ought to have been taken without waiting for a loss of life, such as makes all previous marine disasters seem trivial. But the public itself has been inert. For 30 years since Plymso's day, every intelligent passenger knew that every British vessel was deficient in lifeboats and neither public opinion nor the public press took this matter up. There were no questions in Parliament and no measures introduced in Congress. Even the legislation by which the United States permitted English vessels reaching American ports to avoid the legal requirements of American statute law, which requires a seat in the lifeboats for every passenger and every member of the crew, attracted no public attention and occasional references to the subject by those better informed did nothing to awake action. But this is past. Those who died bravely without complaint and with sacrificing regard for others did not lose their lives in vain. The safety of all travelers for all times to come under every civilized flag is to be greater through their sacrifice. Under modern conditions, life can be made as safe at sea as on the land. It is heartrending to stop and think that 32 more lifeboats costing only about $16,000, which could have been stowed away without being noticed on the broad decks of the Titanic, would have saved every man, woman and child on the steamer. There has never been so great a disaster in the history of civilization due to the neglect of so small an expenditure. It would be idle to think that this was due simply to parsimony. It was really due to the false and vicious notion that life at sea must be made showy, sumptuous and magnificent. The absence of lifeboats was not due to their cost, but to the demand for a great promenade deck with ample space to look out on the sea with which a continuous row of lifeboats would have interfered and to the general tendency to lavish money on the luxuries of a voyage instead of first ensuring its safety. End of Chapter 28, Chapter 29 of the Thinking of the Titanic in Great Sea Disasters. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. This reading by Allison Hester of Athens, Georgia. The Thinking of the Titanic in Great Sea Disasters. Edited by Logan Marshall. Chapter 29, The Senatorial Investigation. Prompt action of the government, Senate Committee probes disaster and brings out details, testimony of ISMA, officers, crew, passengers and other witnesses. Public sentiment with regard to the Titanic disaster was reflected in the prompt action of the United States government. On April 17, the Senate, without a dissenting vote, ordered an investigation of the wreck of the Titanic with particular reference to the inadequacy of life-saving boats and apparatus. The resolution also directed inquiry into the use by the Titanic of the northern course over a route commonly regarded as dangerous from the icebergs. Besides investigating the disaster, the committee was directed to look into the feasibility of international agreements for the further protection of ocean traffic. The Senate Committee on Commerce, in whose charge the investigation was placed, immediately appointed the following subcommittee to conduct the gathering of evidence and the examination of witnesses. Senator William Alden Smith of Michigan, Chairman. Senator Francis Newlands of Nevada. Senator Jonathan Bourne, Jr. of Oregon. Senator George C. Perkins of California. Senator Theodore E. Burton of Ohio. Senator Frenifold Simmons of North Carolina. And Senator Duncan U. Fletcher of Florida. The Senate Committee began its investigation in New York on Friday, April 19, the morning after the arrival of the Carpathia. Smith May, the first witness, came to the witness chair with a smile upon his face. He was sworn and then told the committee that he made the voyage on the Titanic only as a voluntary passenger. Nobody designated him to come to see how the newly launched monster would behave on the initial trip. He said no money was spared in the construction, and as she was built on commission, there was no need for the builders to slight the work for their own benefit. The accident had happened on Sunday night, April 14. I was in bed asleep, he said. The ship was not going at full speed, as has been printed, because full speed would be from 78 to 80 revolutions, and we were making only 75. After the impact with the iceberg, I dressed and went on deck. I asked the stewards what the matter was, and he told me. Then I went to Captain Smith and asked him if the ship was in danger, and he told me he thought she was. Smith May said that he went on the bridge and remained there for some time and then lent a hand in getting the lifeboats ready. He helped to get the women and children into the boats. Smith May said that no other executive officer of the steamship company was on board, which practically made him the sole master of the vessel the minute it passed beyond the control of the captain and his fellow officers. But Smith May, seeming to sent the drift of the questions, said that he never interfered in any way with the handling of the ship. Smith May was asked to give more particulars about his departure from the ship. He said, the boat was ready to be lowered away, and the officer called out if there were any more children or women to go on, or any more passengers on deck, but there was none, and I got on board. Captain Rostran's testimony. Captain Rostran of the Carpathia followed Mr. Isdme. He said the first message received from the Titanic was that she was in immediate danger. I gave the order to turn the ship around as soon as the Titanic had given her position. I set a course to pick up the Titanic, which was 58 miles west of my position. I sent for the chief engineer, told him to put on another watch of stokers and make all speed for the Titanic. I told the first officer to stop all deck work, get out the lifeboats and be ready for any emergency. The chief steward and doctor of the Carpathia I called to my office and instructed as to their duties. The English doctor was assigned to the first class dining room, the Italian doctor to the second class dining room, the Hungarian doctor to the third class dining room. They were instructed to be ready with all supplies necessary for any emergency. The captain told in detail of the arrangements made to prepare the lifeboats and the ship for the receipt of the survivors. Weeps as he tells story. Then with tears filling his eyes, Captain Rostran said he called the purser. I told him, said Captain Rostran, I wanted to hold a service of prayer, thanksgiving for the living and a funeral service for the dead. I went to Mr. Ismay. He told me to take full charge. An Episcopal clergyman was found among the passengers and he conducted the services. Titanic was a lifeboat. Captain Rostran said that the Carpathia had 20 lifeboats of her own in accordance with British regulations. Wouldn't that indicate that the regulations are out of date? Your ship being much smaller than the Titanic, which also carried 20 lifeboats? Senator Smith asked, No, the Titanic was supposed to be a lifeboat herself. Wireless failed. Why so few messages came from the Carpathia was gone into. Captain Rostran declared the first messages, all substantially the same, were sent to the White Star Line, the Kunard Line, and the Associated Press. Then the first and second cabin passenger lists were sent when the wireless failed. Senator Smith said some complaint had been heard that the Carpathia had not answered President Taft's inquiry for major but. Captain Rostran declared a reply was sent, not on board. Captain Rostran declared he issued orders for no messages to be sent except upon orders from him and for official business to go first, then private messages from the Titanic survivors in order of filing. Absolutely no censorship was exercised, he said. The wireless continued working all the way in, the Marconi operator being constantly at the key. Guglielmo Marconi, the wireless inventor, was the next witness. Marconi said he was chairman of the British Marconi Company. Under instructions of the company, he said, operators must take their orders from the captain of the ship on which they are employed. Do the regulations prescribe whether one or two operators should be aboard the ocean vessels? Yes, on ships like the late Titanic and Olympic, two are carried, said Marconi. The Carpathia, a smaller boat, carries one. The Carpathia's wireless apparatus is a short distance equipment. Titanic well equipped. Do you consider that the Titanic was equipped with the latest improved wireless apparatus? Yes, I should say it had the very best. Did you hear the captain of the Carpathia say in his testimony that they caught this distressed message from the Titanic almost providentially? Asked Senator Smith. Yes, I did. It was absolutely providential. Is there any sign for the operator if he is not at his post? I think there is none, said Marconi. Aught it not be incumbent upon ships to have an operator always at the key? Yes, but ship owners don't like to carry two operators when they can get along with just one. The smaller boat owners do not like the expense of two operators. Second Officer Testifies Charles Herbert Leitholer, Second Officer of the Titanic, followed Marconi on the stand. Mr. Leitholer said he understood the maximum speed of the Titanic as shown by its trial tests to have been 22.5 to 23 knots. Senator Smith asked if the rule requiring life-saving apparatus to be in each room for each passenger was complied with. Everything was complete, said Leitholer. In lifeboats of which four were collapsible were on the Titanic, he added. During the tests, he said, Captain Clark of the British Board of Trade was aboard the Titanic to inspect its life-saving equipment. How thorough are these captains of the board trade in inspecting ships? Asked Senator Smith. Captain Clark is so thorough that we called him a nuisance. Titanic Killed Rapidly After testifying to the circumstances under which the lifeboats were filled and lowered, Leitholer continued. The boat's deck was only 10 feet from the water when I lowered the sixth boat. When we lowered the first, the distance to the water was 70 feet. If the same course was pursued on the starboard side as you pursued on the port and filling boats, how do you account for so many members of the crew being saved? Asked Chairman Smith. I have inquired especially and have found that for every six persons picked up, five were either firemen or stewards. Codham Tells His Story Thomas Codham of Liverpool, the Marconi operator on the Carpathia, was the next witness. Codham said that he was about ready to retire Sunday night, having partially removed his clothes and was waiting for a reply message to the Parisian when he heard the Cape Cod trying to call the Titanic. Codham called the Titanic operator to inform him of the fact and received the reply. Come at once. This is a distress message. CQD. What did you do then? I confirmed the distress message by asking the Titanic if I should report the distress message to the captain of the Carpathia. How much time elapsed after you received the Titanic's distress message before you reported it to Captain Rostron? About a couple of minutes, Codham answered. Codham recalled. When the committee resumed the investigation on April 20, Codham was recalled to the stand. Senator Smith asked the witness if he had received any messages from the time the Carpathia left the scene of the disaster until it reached New York. The purpose of this question was to discover whether any official had sought to keep back the news of the disaster. No, sir, answered Codham. I reported the entire matter myself to the steamship Baltic at 10.30 o'clock Monday morning. I told her we had been to the wreck and had picked up as many of the passengers as we could. Codham denied that he had sent any message that all passengers had been saved or anything on which such a report could be based. Codham said he was at work Monday and until Wednesday. He repeated his testimony of the previous day and said he had been without sleep throughout Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, and until late Wednesday afternoon when he had been relieved by Bride. Did you or Bride send any message declaring that the Titanic was being towed into Halifax? No, sir, said the witness with emphasis. Marconi explains, In an effort to determine whether the signal CQD might not have been misunderstood by passing ships, Senator Smith called upon Mr. Marconi. The CQ, said Marconi, is an international signal which meant that all stations should cease sending except the one using the call. The D was added to indicate danger. The call, however, has now been superseded by the universal call SOS. Bride on the stand Harold S. Bride, the sole surviving operator of the Titanic, was then called. Bride said he knew the Frankfurt was nearer than the Carpathia when he called for assistance, but that he ceased his efforts to communicate with the former because her operator persisted in asking, What is the matter? Despite Bride's message that the ship was in distress, time after time Senator Smith asked in varying forms why the Titanic did not explain its condition to the Frankfurt. Any operator receiving CQD and the position of the ship, if he is on the job, said Bride, would tell the captain at once. Marconi again testified to the distress signals and said that the Frankfurt was equipped with Marconi wireless. He said that the receipt of the signal CQD by the Frankfurt's operator should have been all sufficient to send the Frankfurt to the immediate rescue. All appeals received. Under questioning by Senator Smith, Bride said that undoubtedly the Frankfurt received all of the urgent appeals for help sent subsequently to the Carpathia. Investigation carried to Washington. The first witness when the investigation was resumed in Washington on April 22nd was P.A.S. Franklin, Vice President of the International Mercantile Marine Company. Franklin testified that he had no communication with Captain Smith during the Titanic's voyage, nor with Ismay, except one cable from Southampton. Senator Smith then showed Mr. Franklin the telegram received by Congressman Hughes of West Virginia from the White Star Line, dated New York, April 15th, and addressed to J.A. Hughes, Huntington, West Virginia, as follows. Titanic proceeding to Halifax. Passengers probably land on Wednesday. All safe. Signed the White Star Line. Telegram a mystery. I ask you, continued the Senator, whether you know about the sending of that telegram by whom it was authorized and from whom it was sent. I do not, sir, said Franklin. Since it was mentioned at the Waldorf Saturday, we have had the entire passenger staff examined and we cannot find out. Asked when he first knew that the Titanic had sunk, Franklin said he first knew about it at 6.27 p.m. Monday. Mr. Franklin then produced a thick package of telegrams which he had received in relation to the disaster. About 20 minutes of two on Monday morning, said he. I was awakened by a telephone bell and was called by a reporter for some paper who informed me that the Titanic had met with an accident and was sinking. I asked him where he got the information. He told me that it had come by wireless from the steamship Virginia which had been appealed to by the Titanic for aid. Mr. Franklin said he called up the White Star Docs but they had no information and he then appealed to the Associated Press and there was read to him a dispatch from the Cape Race advising him of the accident. I asked the Associated Press, said Mr. Franklin, not to send out the dispatch until we had more detailed information in order to avoid causing unnecessary alarm. I was told, however, the story had already been sent out. The reassuring statements sent out by the line in the early hours of the disaster next were made the subject of inquiry. Tell the committee on what you based those statements, directed Senator Smith. We based them on reports and rumors received at Cape Race by individuals and by the newspapers. They were rumors and we could not place our finger on anything authentic. First, definite news. At 6.20 or 6.30 Monday evening, Mr. Franklin continued, a message was received telling the faithful news that the Carpathia reached the Titanic and found nothing but boats and wreckage. That the Titanic had foundered at 2.20 a.m. and 41.16 north and 50.14 west. That the Carpathia picked up all the boats and had on board about 675 Titanic survivors, passengers and crew. It was such a terrible shock that it took me several moments to think what to do. Then I went downstairs to the reporters. I began to read the message holding it high in my hand. I had read only to the second line, which said that the Titanic had sunk when there was not a reporter left. They were so anxious to get to the telephones. Safety equipment. The Titanic's equipment was in excess of the law, said the witness. It carried its clearance in the shape of a certificate from the British Board of Trade. I might say that no vessel can leave a British port without a certificate that it is equipped to care for human lives aboard in case of accident. It is the law. Do you know of anyone, any officer or man or any official whom you deem could be held responsible for the accident and its attendant loss of life? Positively not. No one thought such an accident could happen. It was undreamed of. I think it would be absurd to try to hold some individual responsible. Every precaution was taken. That the precautions were of no avail is the source of the deepest sorrow. But the accident was unavoidable. Fourth Officer testifies. J.B. Boxhall, the fourth officer, was then questioned. Were there any drills or inspections before the Titanic sailed? He was asked. Both, said the witness. The men were mustered and the lifeboats lowered in the presence of the inspectors from the Board of Trade. How many boats were lowered? Just two, sir. On each side of the ship? No, sir. They were both on the same side. We were lying in dock. The witness said he did not know whether the lowering tackle ran free or not on that occasion. In lowering the lifeboats at the test, did the gear work satisfactorily? So far as I know. In lowering a lifeboat, he said, first the boat has to be cleared, chocks knocked down, and the boat hangs free. Then the davits are screwed out to the ship side and the boat lowered. At the time of the tests, all officers of the Titanic were present. Boxhall said that under the weather conditions experienced at the time of the collision, the lifeboats were supposed to carry 65 persons. Under the regulations of the British Board of Trade, in addition to the oars, there were in the boats water beakers, water dippers, bread, balers, mast, and sail, and lights, and a supply of oil. All of these supplies, said Boxhall, were in the boats when the Titanic left Belfast. He could not say whether they were in when the vessel left Southampton. Now, repeated Senator Smith, suppose the weather was clear and the sky unruffled, as it was at the time of the disaster, how many would the boat hold? Really, I don't know. It would depend largely upon the people who were to enter. If they did as they were told, I believe each boat could accommodate 65 persons. Boxhall testified to the sobriety and good habits of his superior and brother officers. No trace of damage inside. Boxhall said he went down to the steerage, inspected all the decks in the vicinity of where the ship had struck, found no traces of any damage, and went directly to the bridge, and so reported. Carpenter found leaks. The captain ordered me to send a carpenter to sound the ship, but I found a carpenter coming up with the announcement that the ship was taking water. In the mail room, I found mail sacks floating about while the clerks were at work. I went to the bridge and reported, and the captain ordered the lifeboats to be made ready. Boxhall testified that at Captain Smith's orders, he took word of the ship's position to the wireless operators. What position was that? 4146 North, 1514 West. Was that the last position taken? Yes, the Titanic stood not far from there when she sank. After that, Boxhall went back to the lifeboats where there were many men and women. He said they had been provided with life belts. Distress rockets fired. After that, I was on the bridge most of the time sending out distress signals, trying to attract the attention of boats ahead. He said, I sent up distress rockets until I left the ship to try to attract the attention of a ship directly ahead. I had seen her lights. She seemed to be meeting us and was not far away. She got close enough, so she seemed to me, to read our Morse electric signals. Suppose you had a powerful searchlight on the Titanic. Could you not have thrown a beam on the vessel and have compelled her attention? We might. H.J. Pittman, the third officer of the ship, was the first witness on April 23rd. By a series of searching questions, Senator Fletcher brought out the fact that when the collision occurred, the Titanic was going at the greatest speed attained during the trip, even though the ship was entering the grand banks and had been advised of the presence of ice. Frederick Fleet, a sailor and lookout man on the Titanic, followed Pittman on the stand. Fleet said he had had five or six years' experience at sea and was lookout on the oceanic prior to going on the Titanic. He was in the crow's nest at the time of the collision. Fleet stated that he had kept a sharp lookout for ice and testified to seeing the iceberg and signaling the bridge. Fleet acknowledged that if he had been aided in his observations by a good glass, he probably could have spied the berg into which the ship crashed in time to have worn the bridge to avoid it. Major Arthur Puchin of Toronto, a passenger who followed Fleet on the stand, also testified to the much greater sweep of vision afforded by binoculars and, as a yachtsman, said he believed the presence of the iceberg might have been detected in time to escape the collision had the lookout men been so equipped. Had asked for binoculars. It was made to appear that the blame for being without glasses did not rest with the lookout men. Fleet said they had asked for them at Southampton and were told there were none for them. One glass and a pinch would have served in the crow's nest. The testimony before the committee on April 24th showed that the big steam ship was on the verge of a field of ice 20 or 30 miles long if she had not actually entered it when the accident occurred. The committee tried to discover whether it would add to human safety if the ships were fitted with searchlights so that at night objects could be seen at greater distance. The testimony so far along this line had been conflicting. Some of the witnesses thought it would be no harm to try it but they were all skeptical as to its value as an iceberg would not be especially distinguishable because its bulk is mostly below the surface. One of the witnesses said that much dependence is not placed upon the lookout and that those lookouts who use binoculars constantly found them detrimental. Harold G. Lowe, fifth officer of the Titanic, told the committee his part in the struggle of the survivors for life following the catastrophe. The details of the struggle have already been told in a previous chapter. Authorized to Sell Story In great detail, Guglielmo Marconi on April 25th explained the operations of his system and told how he had authorized Operator Bride of the Titanic and Operator Cottom of the Carpathia to sell their stories of the disaster after they came ashore. In allowing the operators to sell their stories, said Mr. Marconi, there was no question of suppressing or monopolizing the news. He had done everything he could, he said, to have the country informed as quickly as possible of the details of the disaster. That was why he was particularly glad for the narratives of such important witnesses as the operators to receive publication, regardless of the papers that published them. He repeated the testimony of Cottom that every effort had been made to get legitimate dispatches ashore. The cruiser Chester, he said, had been answered as fully as possible, but was not known at the time that its queries came from the President of the United States. The Salem, he said, had never got in touch with the Carpathia operator. Senator Newland suggested that the telegrams, some signed by the name of Mr. Samus and some with the name of Marconi, directing Cottom to keep his mouth shut and hold out for four figures on his story, was sent only as the Carpathia was entering New York Harbor, when there was no longer need for sending official or private messages from the rescuing ship. There had been an impression before, he said, that the messages had been sent to Cottom when the ship was far at sea, when they might have meant that he was to hold back messages relieving the anxiety of those on shore. Saul Distress Rockets Ernest Gill, a donkey engineman on the steam ship Californian, was the first witness on April 26. He said that Captain Stanley Lord of the Californian refused later to go to the aid of the Titanic, the rockets from which could be plainly seen. He says the captain was apprised of these signals, but made no effort to get up steam and go to the rescue. The Californian was drifting with the flow. So indignant did he become, said Gill, that he endeavored to recruit a committee of protest from among the crew, but the men failed him. Captain Lord entered a sweeping denial of Gill's accusations and read from the Californian's log to support his contention. Cyril Evans, the Californian's wireless operator, however, told of hearing much talk among the crew, who were critical of the captain's course. Gill, he said, told him he expected to get $500 for his story when the ship reached Boston. Evans told of having warned the Titanic only a brief time before the great vessel crashed into the berg that the sea was crowded with ice. The Titanic's operators, he said, at the time were working with the wireless station at Cape Race, and they told him to, quote, shut up and keep out. Within a half hour, the pride of the sea was crumpling and sinking. Members of the committee who examined individually the British sailors and stewards of the Titanic's crew prepared a report of their investigations for the full committee. This testimony was ordered to be incorporated in the record of the hearings. Most of this testimony was but a repetition of experiences similar to the many already related by those who got away in the lifeboats. On April 27, Captain James H. Moore of the steamship Mount Temple, who hurried to the Titanic in response to wireless calls for help, told of the great stretch of field ice which held him off. Within his view from the bridge, he discerned, he said, a strange steamship, probably a tramp, and a schooner which was making her way out of the ice. The lights of this schooner, he thought, probably were those seen by the anxious survivors of the Titanic in which they were frantically trying to reach. Women at Hearing Weep Stuart Crawford also related a thrilling story in regard to loading the lifeboats with women first. He told of several instances that came under his observation of women throwing their arms around their husbands and crying out that they would not lead the ship without them. The pathetic recital caused several women at the hearing to weep, and all with an earshot of the steward's story were thrilled. Andrews was brave. Stories that Mr. Andrews, the designer of the ship, had tried to disguise the extent of danger were absolutely denied by Henry Samuel Etches, his bedroom steward, who told the committee how Mr. Andrews urged women back to their cabins to dress more warmly and to put on life belts. The steward, whose duty it was to serve major butt in his party, told how he did not see the major at dinner the evening of the disaster, as he was dining with a private party in the restaurant. William Burke, a first-class steward, told of serving dinner at 7.15 o'clock to Mr. and Mrs. Strauss. And later, Mrs. Strauss' refusal to leave her husband was again told to the committee. A bedroom steward told of a quiet conversation with Benjamin Guggenheim, Senator Guggenheim's brother after the accident and shortly before the Titanic settled in the plunge that was to be his death. On April 29th, Marconi produced copies of several messages which passed between the Marconi office and the Carpathia in an effort to get definite information of the wreck and the survivors. Marconi and F. M. Sammas, chief engineer of the American Marconi company, both acknowledged that a mistake had been made in sending messages to Bride and Cottom on board the Carpathia, not to give out any news until they had seen Marconi and Sammas. The senatorial committee investigating the Titanic disaster had served several good purposes. It has officially established the fact that all nations are censorable for insufficient antiquated safety regulations on ocean vessels. And it has emphasized the imperative necessity for united action among all maritime countries to revise these laws and adapt them to changed conditions. The committee reported its findings as follows. General Conclusions No particular person is named as being responsible, though attention is called to the fact that on the day of the disaster, three distinct warnings of ice were sent to Captain Smith. J. Bruce Ismay, managing director of the White Star Line, is not held responsible for the ship's high speed. In fact, he is barely mentioned in the report. Ice positions, so definitely reported to the Titanic just preceding the accident, located ice on both sides of the lane in which she was traveling. No discussion took place among the officers. No conference was called to consider these warnings. No heed was given to them. The speed was not relaxed. The lookout not increased. The supposedly watertight compartments of the Titanic were not watertight because of the non-watertight condition of the decks where the transverse bulkheads ended. The steamship, Californian, controlled by the same concern as the Titanic, was nearer the sinking steamship than the 19 miles reported by her captain. And her officers and crew saw the distress signals of the Titanic and failed to respond to them in accordance with the dictates of humanity, international usage and the requirements of law. Had assistance been promptly proffered, the Californian might have had the proud distinction of rescuing the lives of the passengers and crew of the Titanic. The mysterious lights on an unknown ship seen by the passengers on the Titanic undoubtedly were on the Californian less than 19 miles away. Eight ships, all equipped with wireless, were in the vicinity of the Titanic, the Olympic farthest away, 512 miles. The full capacity of the Titanic's life boats was not utilized because, while only 705 persons were saved, the ship's boats could have carried 1,176. No general alarm was sounded, no whistle blown, no systematic warning was given to the endangered passengers, and it was 15 or 20 minutes after the collision before Captain Smith ordered the Titanic's wireless operator to send out a distress message. The Titanic's crew were only meagerly acquainted with their positions and duties in an accident, and only one drill was held before the maiden trip. Many of the crew joined the ship only a few hours before she sailed and were in ignorance of their positions until the following Friday. Many more lives could have been saved had the survivors been concentrated in a few life boats and had the boats, thus released, returned to the wreck for others. The first official information of the disaster was the message from Captain Haddock of the Olympic, received by the White Star Line at 6.16 p.m. Monday, April 15th. In the face of this information, a message reporting the Titanic being towed to Halifax was sent to Representative J.A. Hughes at Huntington, West Virginia at 7.51 p.m. that day. The message was delivered to the Western Union office in the same building as the White Star Line offices. Whoever sent this message, says the report, under the circumstances is guilty of the most reprehensible conduct. The wireless operator on the Carpathia was not duly vigilant in handling his messages after the accident. The practice of allowing wireless operators to sell their stories should be stopped. Recommendations. It is recommended that all ships carrying more than 100 passengers shall have two searchlights. That a revision be made of steamship inspection laws of foreign countries to conform to the standard proposed in the United States. That every ship be required to carry sufficient lifeboats for all passengers and crew. That the use of wireless be regulated to prevent interference by amateurs. And that all ships have a wireless operator on constant duty. Detailed recommendations are made as to watertight bulkhead construction on ocean-going ships. Bulkheads should be so spaced that any two adjacent compartments of a ship might be flooded without sinking. Transverse bulkheads forward in a bath, the machinery, should be continued watertight to the uppermost continuous structural deck. And this deck should be fitted watertight. End of Chapter 29 and end of The Sinking of the Titanic and Great Sea Disasters edited by Logan Marshall read by Allison Hester of Athens, Georgia.