Southampton Dock S.S. Titanic White Star Line Moored April 1912 Real Photo Postcard

Southampton Dock S.S. Titanic White Star Line Moored April 1912 Real Photo Postcard
The S.S. Titanic, completed in 1911 by Harland and Wolff in Belfast for the White Star Line, represented the zenith of luxury and engineering in early 20th-century ocean liners. At its launch, it was the largest ship in the world, renowned for its opulence and innovative design, intended to serve the lucrative transatlantic route between Southampton and New York. This image, likely from its fitting out or pre-departure phase, showcases the immense scale and grandeur that captivated the public imagination.

The ship's historical significance is inextricably linked to its catastrophic maiden voyage in April 1912, when it struck an iceberg and sank, resulting in one of history's deadliest peacetime maritime disasters. The loss of the Titanic, once famously deemed "unsinkable," prompted widespread reforms in maritime safety protocols and international regulations, profoundly impacting ship design, life-saving equipment, and communication at sea.
Real Photo PostcardRPPCSS TitanicTitanic Ocean LinerShip at DockFour FunnelsDockside CranesBunting FlagsHarbor SceneMaritime HistoryWhite Star LineEarly 1900sBritish LinerDisaster History
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