Calgary Herald

5,000 Titanic relics up at NYC auction

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Five thousand items recovered from the Atlantic grave of the Titanic, from a 17-ton piece of the hull to china used to serve first-class passengers, will go on auction in New York a century after the liner sank.

The unpreceden­ted collection will be sold as a single lot by Guernsey’s Auctioneer­s on April 11, 100 years after Titanic’s maiden voyage in the city where the doomed ship had been destined when it was holed by an iceberg off Newfoundla­nd.

Guernsey’s described the auction as “historic,” saying it was “the first and only sale of objects that have been recovered from the wreck site of Titanic four kilometres below the ocean’s surface.”

The auctioneer­s estimate the lot will sell for a whopping $189 million.

The items, a handful of which went on display Thursday, are a sometimes ghostly reminder of the 1,500 people who perished when the supposedly unsinkable White Star liner, sailing out of Southampto­n, England, went down.

Arlen Ettinger, president of Guern- sey’s, said the collection had to remain as a single lot to “perpetuate the memory of this great ship” and “so that future generation­s will always have the opportunit­y to see it.”

Included are everything from shaving kits to children’s toys, tobacco pipes and the brass buttons on the smart navy blue uniforms worn by Captain Edward Smith and his officers.

Hints of the glamorous life on board abound, such as crystal decanters from the first-class cabins, a battered chandelier from the A la Carte Restaurant, silver platters and blue-and-gold porcelain dishes.

Remnants of the great ship’s working parts will also be on the auction block. The compass monitored by watch officers in the wheelhouse is for sale, along with a running light, a trio of bronze whistles from a funnel and a bell.

 ?? Mario Tama, AFP-Getty Images ?? Binoculars and a logometer, used to measure boat speed, are seen among artifacts recovered from the Titanic to be sold at auction.
Mario Tama, AFP-Getty Images Binoculars and a logometer, used to measure boat speed, are seen among artifacts recovered from the Titanic to be sold at auction.

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