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Titanic survivor's letter sold for £300,000 at auction | Titanic survivor's letter sold for £300,000 at auction |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The handwritten letter is dated 10 April 1912 - just five days before the Titanic sank | The handwritten letter is dated 10 April 1912 - just five days before the Titanic sank |
A letter written by a Titanic passenger days before the ship sank has been sold for a record-breaking £300,000 ($400,000) at auction in the UK. | |
Colonel Archibald Gracie's letter was purchased by an anonymous buyer at Henry Aldridge and Son auction house in Wiltshire on Sunday, at a price five times higher than the £60,000 it was expected to fetch. | Colonel Archibald Gracie's letter was purchased by an anonymous buyer at Henry Aldridge and Son auction house in Wiltshire on Sunday, at a price five times higher than the £60,000 it was expected to fetch. |
The letter has been described as "prophetic", as it records Col Gracie telling an acquaintance he would "await my journey's end" before passing judgement on the "fine ship". | The letter has been described as "prophetic", as it records Col Gracie telling an acquaintance he would "await my journey's end" before passing judgement on the "fine ship". |
The letter was dated 10 April 1912, the day he boarded the Titanic in Southampton, and five days before it sank after hitting an iceberg in the North Atlantic. | The letter was dated 10 April 1912, the day he boarded the Titanic in Southampton, and five days before it sank after hitting an iceberg in the North Atlantic. |
Col Gracie was one of about 2,200 passengers and crew on board the Titanic sailing to New York. More than 1,500 died in the disaster. | Col Gracie was one of about 2,200 passengers and crew on board the Titanic sailing to New York. More than 1,500 died in the disaster. |
The first-class passenger, wrote the letter from cabin C51. It was posted when the ship docked in Queenstown, Ireland, on 11 April 1912. It was also postmarked London on 12 April. | The first-class passenger, wrote the letter from cabin C51. It was posted when the ship docked in Queenstown, Ireland, on 11 April 1912. It was also postmarked London on 12 April. |
The auctioneer who facilitated the sale said the letter had attracted the highest price of any correspondence written onboard the Titanic. | The auctioneer who facilitated the sale said the letter had attracted the highest price of any correspondence written onboard the Titanic. |
Col Gracie's account of the sinking is among the best known. | Col Gracie's account of the sinking is among the best known. |
He later wrote the book The Truth About The Titanic, recalling his experience onboard the doomed ocean liner. | He later wrote the book The Truth About The Titanic, recalling his experience onboard the doomed ocean liner. |
He recounted how he survived by scrambling onto an overturned lifeboat in the icy waters. | He recounted how he survived by scrambling onto an overturned lifeboat in the icy waters. |
More than half the men who had originally reached the lifeboat died from exhaustion or cold, he wrote. | |
Although Col Gracie survived the disaster, his health was severely affected by the hypothermia and physical injuries he suffered. | Although Col Gracie survived the disaster, his health was severely affected by the hypothermia and physical injuries he suffered. |
He fell into a coma on 2 December 1912, and died of complications from diabetes two days later. | He fell into a coma on 2 December 1912, and died of complications from diabetes two days later. |