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Smoking room tile colours - Encyclopedia Titanica Hi, I was wondering what colors were the 1st-class smoking room tiles in the Titanic In Parks's site they are red and blue, in "Anatomy of Titanic", they are portrayed as brown and white with a tint of brown Finally on the Harland and Wolff's website they portray them as a dark green What
A Voyage on the Olympic: Notes for the Holland America Line Born in Amsterdam on 16 March 1874, Willem Frederik Piek Jr became the head agent of the Holland America Line in New York, in 1912; four years later, he became a director of the company, serving in that position until 1935 In December 1911, he boarded Olympic at New York for an eastbound crossing (the passenger list also included ‘Mrs Piek’) Travelling first class, his objective was to
Harland Wolff, Titanic and Olympic smoking room tiles One of the items offered was a piece of Titanic smoking room tile These have become more scarce as time has moved on, but still a controversy rages over this tile Many say it is from Olympic Still others say it is from Titanic, but that it was removed and replaced with red and blue tile
Window from the First Class Dining Room - Encyclopedia Titanica A window from the First Class Dining Room lies almost entirely intact next to the bow section of Titanic? The First Class Dining Saloon was the biggest room aboard Titanic It was located on D Deck, measuring 114 feet long and 92 feet wide
Olympic Titanic : Building of the Hulls THE following are the leading sizes of the Olympic and Titanic as constructed:— TABLE II —DIMENSIONS Length over all 882' 9" Length between perpendiculars 850' 0" Breadth extreme 92' 6" Depth moulded to shelter deck 64' 3" Depth moulded to bridge deck 73' 3" Total height from keel to navigating bridge 104' 0" Loaddraught 34' 6" Gross tonnage 45,000 Indicated horse-power of
The Olympic Class Ships: Olympic, Titanic, Britannic (Revised Edition) While books about Titanic abound (and will proliferate like weeds in the fertile soil of the centenary) most tell the same story in different words Books about Olympic are far and few between Even rarer are books that devote any space to the third of the class, Britannic Thus it was a welcome addition to literary history when, in 2004, a young historian named Mark Chirnside wrote The
Olympic and Titanic : Maiden Voyage Mysteries Olympic's Maiden Voyage Log Card Olympic’s maiden voyage details for her first Atlantic crossing appeared on her log card, which gave the departure time and date, the arrival time and date, the latitude and longitude of the ship at Local Apparent Noon for each day, the distance run for each day, the total distance run from departure point to arrival point, the total passage time in days
Racing Through the Night : Olympics attempt to reach Titanic The author, Mr Sisson, states in the beginning of the book, that he wasn't sure he'd be able to find an aspect that hadn't been covered "time and time again" Having this in mind, he decided to focus on what was happening aboard the Titanic's sister ship, Olympic, during the disaster To my knowledge, I don't believe anyone has covered the Olympic's role in the disaster in depth the way this