- by foxnews
- 20 Nov 2024
A postcard from a victim of the Titanic sinking has sold at auction for thousands.
The postcard was written by Richard William Smith, a British businessman who was one of the ship's first-class passengers, according to SWNS.
Smith sent the card from Cork, Ireland, and it was addressed to Mrs. Olive Dakin in Norwich.
"Have had a fine run around to Queenstown. Just leaving for the land of Stars and Stripes," Smith hand-wrote on the stationary.
"Hope you are all quite well at home," the note continued. "Kindest regards, R.W.S."
The postcard was originally going for $12,000, but it eventually sold for more than $25,000 due to additional fees, SWNS reported.
Andrew Aldridge, managing director at the auction house, believes that Smith was a tea broker and had been traveling aboard the ship with Mrs. Nicholls, a family friend, according to SWNS.
"She was only going a quarter of the way as she was getting off in Queenstown, so he must have asked her to post the card," Aldridge told the British news organization.
"Titanic had just stopped in Queenstown to take on a load of passengers - little was anyone onboard aware what was on the horizon just 80 hours or so into the future."
There were several other items up for auction during the "Titanic, White Star and Transport Memorabilia" sale, including a luxury, 18-carat gold Tiffany and Co. timepiece.
There was an inscription on the inside of the case that read, "Presented to Captain Rostron with the heartfelt gratitude and appreciation of three survivors of the Titanic April 15th 1912, Mrs John B. Thayer, Mrs John Jacob Astor and Mrs George D. Widener."
Captain Rostron is credited with saving over 700 lives during the sinking of the Titanic, SWNS wrote.
The timepiece eventually sold for just under $2 million, which was 10 times more than the original guided price.
Today, there's still a tremendous interest in the Titanic's tragic story of maritime technology and adventure ending in great loss of life.
The wreckage of the Titanic was discovered in the 1980s, further fueling intense interest in the ship's story.
Within a couple of years of the discovery, "wealthy tourists could pay thousands of dollars to descend to the site of the wreck" and see the Titanic. It was "an experience that many likened to stepping into another world," Smithsonian Magazine reported.
Deirdre Reilly contributed to this report.
A postcard from a passenger aboard the Titanic that was sent out three days before the great ship sank has sold for more than $25,000 along with other Titanic memorabilia.
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