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Commander Charles Herbert Lightoller, DSC & Bar, RD, RNR (30 March 1874 – 8 December 1952) was a British mariner and naval officer who was the second officer on board the RMS Titanic.
Murdoch departed the bridge, and later relieved Lightoller at 10:00 p.m.. Lightoller conveyed to Murdoch the ship's course and the ice field that they were approaching, and that they expected to be in the vicinity of the ice somewhere around 11:00. Lightoller wished Murdoch "joy of his Watch" and departed the bridge. [4]
William Higgs (politician) (1862-1951) – Australian Senator and member of the House of Representatives, Treasurer of Australia [n 3] Gustav A. Hoff (1852-1930), American businessman and Mayor of Tucson. [n 4] Scott McCallum – 43rd Governor of Wisconsin [n 5] Charles H. Percy (1919-2011) – United States Senator from Illinois [22]
Sundowner is a motor yacht formerly owned by Charles Lightoller, former second officer of the RMS Titanic. She participated in the Dunkirk evacuation as one of the " little ships " as well as a number of commemorations of the event, and is now a museum ship at the Ramsgate Maritime Museum in Southern England.
Wilde was scheduled to leave Southampton on Olympic on 3 April 1912, but a reshuffle on board the Titanic caused the lowering of a rank of William McMaster Murdoch and Charles Lightoller to First and Second Officer, respectively, with Second Officer David Blair being removed from the ship entirely. Almost as soon as the ship had tied up in ...
In his book, Colonel Archibald Gracie said a body was transferred from the collapsible onto boat #12 but said that the body was definitely not that of Phillips. He reported that when speaking with Charles Lightoller , the Second Officer agreed with him that the body was not Phillips.
SS Medic was a steamship built by Harland and Wolff in Belfast for the White Star Line which entered service in 1899. Medic was one of five Jubilee-class ocean liners (the others being the Afric, Persic, Runic and Suevic) built specifically to service the Liverpool–Cape Town–Sydney route. [2]
Bride, who had to be carried off the Carpathia because of injuries to his feet (one was badly sprained, the other foot frostbitten), [7] was met in New York City by Guglielmo Marconi and The New York Times, which gave Bride $1,000 (equivalent to $31,600 in 2023) for his exclusive story, "Thrilling Story by Titanic's Surviving Wireless Man". [8]