Noted businessman John Jacob Astor (1864-1912), who made his fortune in the fur trade, was 47 when the Titanic sank in April 1912. According to survivor accounts, Astor didn’t believe the ship was in any kind of immediate danger. He helped his young wife Madeleine (1893-1940) board Lifeboat#4 and was last seen smoking and talking with another passenger. Tragically 1,500+ victims drowned.
I agree. All items related to the sinking of the Titanic should indeed go to the victims’ children or grandchildren. But auctioning them off to strangers at any high price destroys potential collections of Titanic memorabilia, and doesn’t preserve them. So families who no longer want to maintain their grandparents’ treasures should give them to an official Titanic Museum, with a donor’s plaque.
Sited beside the Titanic Slipways, the place where Titanic was designed, built and launched, Titanic Belfast Museum tells the story of Titanic of her design, construction, launch, voyage and catastrophe. The Belfast Museum contains many other original artefacts, along with other fascinating items of cultural and historical interest. In the US, Titanic Museums are located in Branson Missouri and in Pigeon Forge TN. Owned by John Joslyn, the two U.S museums hold a great collection of artefacts in many galleries.
John Jacob Astor
14-carat gold Waltham pocket watch
BBC
Astor was not only the richest passenger on the Titanic, but was one of the richest in the world, with a net worth of c$87 million. His body was recovered from the Atlantic Ocean 7 days later, with his valuable 14-carat gold Waltham pocket watch engraved with his initials. After its recovery, the watch was passed from Astor's son Vincent to the son of his father's executive secretary William Dobbyn. Recently this gold watch was sold at auction by Henry Aldridge & Son in Devizes UK for a record £1.175 mill, the highest amount ever paid for Titanic memorabilia.
bandmaster Wallace Hartley's violin & case
L.A Times
A violin was also part of Titanic memorabilia. The auction house announced they’d authenticated the instrument from an engraving: For Wallace on the occasion of our engagement from Maria. And in the catalogue: As the Titanic sank, bandmaster Wallace Hartley (1878–1912) and his orchestra stayed on deck and playing Nearer My God to Thee. Played by Hartley in the ship’s final moments, he placed his violin in a leather case and famously stayed aboard as the ship sank in the icy Northern waters.
Hartley's body and violin case were found by a ship that responded to the disaster. The violin was also sold by Henry Aldridge & Son in the UK and fetched £360,000. The rotten instrument, totally unplayable, was sold for c3 times more than the suggested. The violin was given to Hartley's fiancé, Maria Robinson. It passed through some other hands before being rediscovered in 2006. The auctioneer said the price was $1.45 mill. But when the auctioneer's fee was added, the price paid by the buyer was $1.6 mill.
A rare menu from the Titanic’s first-class restaurant showed what the most well-to-do passengers ate for dinner on April 11, 1912; it sold for £84,0000 ($103,00) at Henry Aldridge & Son auction house. The dinner menu, which offered oysters, beef and mallard duck was sold, was decorated with a red White Star Line burgee but the original gilt lettering is no longer visible. Clearly the menu had been subjected to the icy North Atlantic waters, having been recovered in the clothes of one of those drowned. The menu was found in a photo album of late Canadian amateur historian Len Stephenson.
Hartley's body and violin case were found by a ship that responded to the disaster. The violin was also sold by Henry Aldridge & Son in the UK and fetched £360,000. The rotten instrument, totally unplayable, was sold for c3 times more than the suggested. The violin was given to Hartley's fiancé, Maria Robinson. It passed through some other hands before being rediscovered in 2006. The auctioneer said the price was $1.45 mill. But when the auctioneer's fee was added, the price paid by the buyer was $1.6 mill.
A rare menu from the Titanic’s first-class restaurant showed what the most well-to-do passengers ate for dinner on April 11, 1912; it sold for £84,0000 ($103,00) at Henry Aldridge & Son auction house. The dinner menu, which offered oysters, beef and mallard duck was sold, was decorated with a red White Star Line burgee but the original gilt lettering is no longer visible. Clearly the menu had been subjected to the icy North Atlantic waters, having been recovered in the clothes of one of those drowned. The menu was found in a photo album of late Canadian amateur historian Len Stephenson.
One night's dinner menu
from the Titanic’s first-class restaurant
BBC
Memorabilia reflected 1] only the importance of the artefacts themselves and their rarity and 2] they also show the enduring fascination with the Titanic story. After its recovery, the gold watch was passed from Astor’s son Vincent to the son of his father’s executive secretary William Dobbyn. 112 years later, people were still talking about the ship, passengers and crew. So while the Titanic was effectively a large ship that hit an iceberg with a tragic loss of life, more importantly there were still at least 2,200 items of memorabilia to tell the stories now.
I agree. All items related to the sinking of the Titanic should indeed go to the victims’ children or grandchildren. But auctioning them off to strangers at any high price destroys potential collections of Titanic memorabilia, and doesn’t preserve them. So families who no longer want to maintain their grandparents’ treasures should give them to an official Titanic Museum, with a donor’s plaque.
Sited beside the Titanic Slipways, the place where Titanic was designed, built and launched, Titanic Belfast Museum tells the story of Titanic of her design, construction, launch, voyage and catastrophe. The Belfast Museum contains many other original artefacts, along with other fascinating items of cultural and historical interest. In the US, Titanic Museums are located in Branson Missouri and in Pigeon Forge TN. Owned by John Joslyn, the two U.S museums hold a great collection of artefacts in many galleries.
Titanic Belfast Museum
cabin furniture
NBC News