Titanic Merchandise
Titanic Branson Home Page Titanic Pigeon Forge Home Page
For assistance please call (800)381-7670 ext 191
     
 
Log In  |  Create Account   |   Shopping Cart / Checkout
 
 
 
 

The Sinking Of The Titanic By Bruce M. CaplanModel: ID # 445

$14.99

Logan Marshall's Original 1912 Classic Abridged and Edited by Bruce M. Caplan “Logan Marshall’s book sold about a million copies in 1912, and was not reprinted,” noted Caplan. “Nobody got rid of it, and it became a family heirloom. But everyone sees an original copy and thinks it’s rare -- it’s not.” What is rare about Marshall’s account, though, is the documented fact that a raging coal fire was burning deep within the belly of the ship even before the Titanic left the port of Southampton on April 10th, bound for New York. The fire actually began in Belfast where the Titanic was built. “The book I edited told about the fire in great detail, however, no other book told about the fire until 1986,” Caplan said, adding that present-day books about the Titanic usually do contain information about the coal fire. It’s common knowledge that an iceberg was involved in sending the great ship to the bottom of the sea, but Marshall’s account of how officers commanded the coal stokers to keep mum about the fire raises more questions than it answers. “My feeling is that White Star Line officials were very worried about having their insurance claims turned down after the demise of the ship, because it was illegal for the Titanic to have left port in that condition,” Caplan noted. “I think that’s why no other volumes of 1912 discussed the fire. A 1912 coverup?” He contends that the fire probably contributed to ship’s sinking. “Would it have sank if the fire hadn’t weakened the metallurgy?” he asks, adding that prior to 1999, the consensus was that the sharp ice cut through the ship’s hull like a can opener. But further research and actual photos of the ship under water prove that slight random penetrations caused the fatal damage. “The bottom of the ship contained 16 compartments,” Caplan explained. “Up to four of the compartments could have been compromised, and the ship could have still stayed afloat. But once the fifth compartment gave way, the ship would surely sink.” The coal fire was located right between the fifth and sixth compartments. “I like people to know about the real facts of the Titanic,” said Caplan, 62, who has traveled all over the country, educating people about little-known details that make the Titanic disaster more fascinating than any Hollywood film. “Did you know that a nearby ship, The Californian, could have saved everyone on the Titanic? The radio on the Titanic was owned by the Marconi company,” explained Caplan, and it was set up to make money transmitting wireless messages to and from the passengers. “The Marconi transmitter had broken down that day and they had to fix it. When it was repaired several hours later, the Californian sent word to the Titanic’s operator that they had to stop for the night because of ice. However, the Titanic operator was upset because of the interruption and told the Californian operator to shut up so he could continue to send his backlogged messages. A few minutes later, the Titanic hit the iceberg, but by then the Californian operator had turned off his radio and gone to sleep.” Caplan delights in telling audiences that the collision went virtually unnoticed by most passengers, but those who were still awake that evening were actually pleased with this sudden turn of events. “It was a minor annoyance, and they weren’t hurt,” said Caplan, adding that when the engines stopped, passengers thought their vacation on the luxurious ship would be extended. “It was kind of exciting for the first 45 minutes to an hour.” The slow realization by the passengers that the ship was actually sinking made the boarding of lifeboats seem like a mere formality, said Caplan. “The first ones departed almost empty.” The book paints Titanic’s Captain John Smith as a hero, but Caplan pointed out that by sailing with a fire on board, Smith was negligent. “Had he prudently waited for about a week to extinguish the fire in the coal bin, and then sailed, the probability of the ship hitting the iceberg in the same place was a billion to one.” Since it’s re-issue, Caplan has attended a multitude of book signings and has sold more than 40,000 copies of “The Sinking of the Titanic,” often donating the book’s proceeds to worthy causes. Said Caplan, “I want people to have empathy for what the Titanic’s passengers went through by trying to get them to understand the many facts of what happened 93 years ago.”

 
   

 

Contact Us Shipping Information Return Policy Privacy Policy