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HMHS Britannic

HMHS Britannic (/brɪˈtænɪk/) was the third and final vessel of the White Star Line's Olympic class of steamships and the second White Star ship to bear the name Britannic. She was the youngest sister of the RMS Olympic and the RMS Titanic and was intended to enter service as a transatlantic passenger liner. She was operated as a hospital ship from 1915 until her sinking near the Greek island of Kea, in the Aegean Sea, in November 1916. At the time she was the largest hospital ship in the world.[citation needed]

His Majesty's Hospital Ship (HMHS) Britannic
History
United Kingdom
NameHMHS Britannic
Owner White Star Line
Operator Royal Navy
Port of registryLiverpool, United Kingdom
Ordered1911
BuilderHarland and Wolff, Belfast
Yard number433[1]
Laid down30 November 1911
Launched26 February 1914
Completed12 December 1915
In service23 December 1915
Out of service21 November 1916
FateSank after striking a German mine set by SM U-73 on 21 November 1916 near Kea in the Aegean Sea
General characteristics
Class and typeOlympic-class ocean liner
Tonnage48,158 gross register tons
Displacement53,200 tons
Length882 ft 9 in (269.1 m) overall
Beam94 ft (28.7 m)
Height175 ft (53 m) from the keel to the top of the funnels
Draught34 ft 7 in (10.5 m)
Depth64 ft 6 in (19.7 m)
Decks9 passenger decks
Installed power
  • 24 double-ended, 5 single-ended (coal-fired) boilers[2]
  • Two four-cylinder triple-expansion reciprocating engines, each producing 16,000 hp (12,000 kW) for outboard wing propellers, one low-pressure turbine producing 18,000 hp (13,000 kW) for the centre propeller
  • Total 50,000 hp (37,000 kW)
Propulsion
  • Two bronze triple-blade outboard wing propellers
  • One bronze quadruple-blade central propeller
Speed
  • 21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph)
  • 24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph) (maximum)
Capacity3,309

Britannic was launched just before the start of the First World War. She was designed to be the safest of the three ships with design changes made during construction due to lessons learned from the sinking of the Titanic. She was laid up at her builders, Harland and Wolff, in Belfast for many months before being requisitioned as a hospital ship. In 1915 and 1916 she served between the United Kingdom and the Dardanelles. On the morning of 21 November 1916 she hit a naval mine of the Imperial German Navy near the Greek island of Kea and sank 55 minutes later, killing 30 people.

There were 1,066 people on board; the 1,036 survivors were rescued from the water and lifeboats. Britannic was the largest ship lost in the First World War.[3]

After the First World War the White Star Line was compensated for the loss of Britannic by the award of SS Bismarck as part of postwar reparations; she entered service as RMS Majestic.

The wreck was located and explored by Jacques-Yves Cousteau in 1975. The vessel is the largest intact passenger ship on the seabed in the world.[4] It was bought in 1996 and is currently owned by Simon Mills, a maritime historian.

Characteristics edit

The original dimensions of Britannic were similar to those of her older sisters, but her dimensions were altered whilst still on the building stocks after the loss of Titanic. With a gross tonnage of 48,158, she surpassed her older sisters in terms of internal volume, but this did not make her the largest passenger ship in service at that time; the German SS Vaterland held this title with a significantly higher tonnage.[5]

The Olympic-class ships were propelled by a combined system of two triple-expansion steam engines which powered the three-bladed outboard wing propellers whilst a low-pressure steam turbine used steam exhausted from the two reciprocating engines to power the central four-bladed propeller giving a maximum speed of 23 knots.[6]

Post-Titanic design changes edit

 
An artist's conception of Britannic in her intended White Star livery

Britannic had a similar layout to her sister ships. Following the Titanic disaster and the subsequent inquiries, several design changes were made to the remaining Olympic-class liners. With Britannic, these changes made before launch included increasing the ship's beam to 94 feet (29 m) to allow for a double hull along the engine and boiler rooms, and raising six out of the 15 watertight bulkheads up to B Deck. Additionally, a larger 18,000 horsepower (13,000 kW) turbine was added instead of the 16,000 horsepower (12,000 kW) units installed on the earlier vessels to make up for the increase in hull width. The central watertight compartments were enhanced, allowing the ship to stay afloat with six compartments flooded.[7]

Externally the largest visual change was the fitting of large crane-like gantry davits, each powered by an electric motor and capable of launching six lifeboats which were stored on gantries; the ship was designed to have eight sets of gantry davits but only five were installed before Britannic entered war service, with the difference being made up with boats launched by manually operated Welin-type davits as on Titanic and Olympic.[8][9]

Additional lifeboats could be stored within reach of the davits on the deckhouse roof, and the gantry davits could reach lifeboats on the other side of the ship, providing that none of the funnels was obstructing the way. This design enabled all the lifeboats to be launched, even if the ship developed a list that would normally prevent lifeboats from being launched on the side opposite to the list. Several of these davits were placed abreast of funnels, defeating that purpose. The elevators, which previously stopped at A deck, could now reach the boat deck.[10] The ship carried 48 lifeboats, capable of carrying at least 75 people each. Thus, at least 3,600 people could be carried by the lifeboats, which was well above the ship's maximum capacity of 3,309.

History edit

Conception edit

In 1907, J. Bruce Ismay, director general of the White Star Line, and Lord Pirrie, chairman of the Harland & Wolff shipyard in Belfast had decided to build a trio of ocean liners of unmatched size to compete with the Cunard Line's Lusitania and Mauretania not in terms of speed but in terms of luxury and safety.[11] The names of the three vessels were decided at a later date and they showed the intention of the designers regarding their size: Olympic, Titanic and Britannic.[12]

Construction of the Olympic and the Titanic began in 1908 and 1909 respectively.[13] Their sizes were so large that it was necessary to build the Arrol Gantry to shelter them, wide enough to span the two new building slips and allow two ships to be built at a time.[14] The three ships were designed to be 270 metres long and to have a gross tonnage of over 45,000. Their designed speed was approximately 22 knots, well below that of the Lusitania and Mauretania, but still allowing for a transatlantic crossing of less than one week.[15]

Rumoured name-change edit

 
The Arrol Gantry towering above Britannic, circa 1914

Although the White Star Line and the Harland and Wolff shipyard always denied it,[10][16] some sources claim that Britannic was to be named Gigantic, but its name was changed so as not to compete with Titanic or create comparisons.[17][1] One source is a poster of the ship with the name Gigantic at the top.[18] Other sources are November 1911 American newspapers stating the White Star order for Gigantic being placed, as well as other newspapers from around the world both during construction and immediately after the sinking of the Titanic.[19][20][21][22]

Tom McCluskie stated that in his capacity as archive manager and historian at Harland and Wolff, he "never saw any official reference to the name Gigantic being used or proposed for the third of the Olympic-class vessels".[23][24] Some hand-written changes were added to the order book and dated January 1912. These only dealt with the ship's moulded width, not her name.[24]

Construction edit

 
One of Britannic's funnels being transported to Harland & Wolff shipyards
 
Britannic (right) during fitting out in Belfast alongside Olympic

Britannic's keel was laid on 30 November 1911 at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, on the gantry slip previously occupied by Olympic, 13 months after the launch of that ship, and Arlanza, launched seven days before.[9] The acquisition of the ship was planned to be at the beginning of 1914.[25] Due to improvements introduced as a consequence of the Titanic's disaster, Britannic was not launched until 26 February 1914,[26] which was filmed along with the fitting of a funnel.[27] Several speeches were given in front of the press, and a dinner was organised in honour of the launching.[28] Fitting out began subsequently. The ship entered dry dock in September and her propellers were installed.[29]

Reusing Olympic's space saved the shipyard time and money by not clearing out a third slip similar in size to those used for the two previous vessels. In August 1914, before Britannic could commence transatlantic service between New York and Southampton, the First World War began. Immediately, all shipyards with Admiralty contracts were given priority to use available raw materials. All civil contracts including Britannic were slowed.[30]

The naval authorities requisitioned a large number of ships as armed merchant cruisers or for troop transport. The Admiralty paid the companies for the use of their ships but the risk of losing a ship in naval operations was high. The larger ocean liners were not initially taken for naval use, because smaller ships were easier to operate. Olympic returned to Belfast on 3 November 1914, while work on Britannic continued slowly.[30]

Requisition edit

 
Britannic seen after her conversion to an operative hospital ship, c. January 1916

The need for increased tonnage grew critical as naval operations extended to the Eastern Mediterranean. In May 1915, Britannic completed mooring trials of her engines, and was prepared for emergency entrance into service with as little as four weeks' notice. The same month also saw the first major loss of a civilian ocean liner when Cunard's RMS Lusitania was torpedoed near the Irish coast by SM U-20.[31]

The following month, the Admiralty decided to use recently requisitioned passenger liners as troop transports in the Gallipoli Campaign (also called the Dardanelles service). The first to sail were Cunard's RMS Mauretania and RMS Aquitania. As the Gallipoli landings proved to be disastrous and the casualties mounted, the need for large hospital ships for treatment and evacuation of wounded became evident. Aquitania was diverted to hospital ship duties in August (her place as a troop transport would be taken by Olympic in September). Then on 13 November 1915, Britannic was requisitioned as a hospital ship from her storage location at Belfast.[citation needed]

Repainted white with large red crosses and a horizontal green stripe, she was renamed HMHS (His Majesty's Hospital Ship) Britannic[30] and placed under the command of Captain Charles Alfred Bartlett.[32] In the interior, 3,309 beds and several operating rooms were installed. The common areas of the upper decks were transformed into rooms for the wounded. The cabins of B Deck were used to house doctors. The first-class dining room and the first-class reception room on D Deck were transformed into operating rooms. The lower bridge was used to accommodate the lightly wounded.[32] The medical equipment was installed on 12 December 1915.[30]

First service edit

 
Britannic with HMHS Galeka, taking on board the wounded at Mudros

When declared fit for service on 12 December 1915 at Liverpool, Britannic was assigned a medical team consisting of 101 nurses, 336 non-commissioned officers and 52 commissioned officers as well as a crew of 675 people.[32] On 23 December, she left Liverpool to join the port of Mudros on the island of Lemnos on the Aegean Sea to bring back sick and wounded soldiers.[33] She joined with several ships on the same route, including Mauretania, Aquitania,[34] and her sister ship Olympic.[35] The four ships were joined a little later by Statendam.[36] She made a stopover at Naples before continuing to Mudros, in order for her stock of coal to be replenished. After she returned, she spent four weeks as a floating hospital off the Isle of Wight.[37]

The third voyage was from 20 March 1916 to 4 April. The Dardanelles was evacuated in January.[38] At the end of her military service on 6 June 1916, Britannic returned to Belfast to undergo the necessary modifications for transforming her into a transatlantic passenger liner. The British government paid the White Star Line £75,000 to compensate for the conversion. The transformation took place for several months before being interrupted by a recall of the ship back into military service.[39]

Recalled edit

The Admiralty recalled Britannic back into service as a hospital ship on 26 August 1916, and the ship returned to the Mediterranean Sea for a fourth voyage on 24 September of that year.[40] On 29 September on her way to Naples, she encountered a violent storm from which she emerged unscathed.[41] She left on 9 October for Southampton. Then, she made a fifth trip, which was marked by a quarantining of the crew when the ship arrived at Mudros (now Moudros) because of food-borne illness.[42]

Life aboard the ship followed a routine. At six o'clock, the patients were awakened and the premises were cleaned up. Breakfast was served at 6:30 AM, then the captain toured the ship for an inspection. Lunch was served at 12:30 PM and tea at 4:30 PM. Patients were treated between meals and those who wished to go for a walk could do so. At 8:30 PM, the patients went to bed and the captain made another inspection tour.[33] There were medical classes available for training the nurses.[43]

Last voyage edit

 
The location of Kea in the Cyclades archipelago in the Aegean Sea
 
The channel between Makronisos (near top) and Kea (bottom); Britannic sank closer to Kea

After completing five successful voyages to the Middle Eastern theatre and back to the United Kingdom transporting the sick and wounded, Britannic departed Southampton for Lemnos at 14:23 on 12 November 1916, her sixth voyage to the Mediterranean Sea.[32] The ship passed Gibraltar around midnight on 15 November and arrived at Naples on the morning of 17 November, for her usual coaling and water-refuelling stop, completing the first stage of her mission.[44]

A storm kept the ship at Naples until Sunday afternoon when Captain Bartlett decided to take advantage of a brief break in the weather and continue. The seas rose once again as Britannic left the port. By the next morning, the storms died and the ship passed the Strait of Messina without problems. Cape Matapan was rounded in the first hours of 21 November. By morning, Britannic was steaming at full speed into the Kea Channel, between Cape Sounion (the southernmost point of Attica, the prefecture that includes Athens) and the island of Kea.[44]

There were 1,066 people on board: 673 crew, 315 Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC), 77 nurses, and the captain.[45]

Explosion edit

 
Some newspapers printed reports that the sinking was caused by one of two torpedoes launched by respective German submarines whose commanders would have known the ship, being northbound, did not carry combatants.[46] The report stated that after the explosion there was "perfect order" and "not the slightest panic", and that "the women, of course, were saved first".[46]

At 08:12 am European Eastern Time on 21 November 1916, HMHS Britannic was rocked by an explosion after hitting a mine and sank 55 minutes later.[47] It was later revealed that the mines were planted in the Kea Channel on 21 October 1916 by SM U-73 under the command of Gustav Sieß [de].

The reaction in the dining room was immediate; doctors and nurses left instantly for their posts but not everybody reacted the same way, as further aft, the power of the explosion was less felt and many thought the ship had hit a smaller boat. Captain Bartlett and Chief Officer Hume were on the bridge at the time and the gravity of the situation was soon evident.[48] The explosion was on the starboard[48] side, between holds two and three. The force of the explosion damaged the watertight bulkhead between hold one and the forepeak.[47] The first four watertight compartments were filling rapidly with water,[47] the boiler-man's tunnel connecting the firemen's quarters in the bow with boiler room six was seriously damaged, and water was flowing into that boiler room.[47]

Bartlett ordered the watertight doors closed, sent a distress signal, and ordered the crew to prepare the lifeboats.[47] An SOS signal was immediately sent out and was received by several other ships in the area, among them HMS Scourge and HMS Heroic, but Britannic heard nothing in reply. Unknown to either Bartlett or the ship's wireless operator, the force of the first explosion had caused the antenna wires slung between the ship's masts to snap. This meant that although the ship could still send out transmissions by radio, she could no longer receive them.[49]

Along with the damaged watertight door of the firemen's tunnel, the watertight door between boiler rooms six and five failed to close properly.[47] Water was flowing further aft into boiler room five. Britannic had reached her flooding limit. She could stay afloat (motionless) with her first six watertight compartments flooded. There were five watertight bulkheads rising all the way up to B Deck.[50] Those measures had been taken after the Titanic disaster (Titanic could float with only her first four compartments flooded).[51]

The next crucial bulkhead between boiler rooms five and four and its door were undamaged and should have guaranteed the ship's survival. However, there were open portholes along the front lower decks, which tilted underwater within minutes of the explosion. The nurses had opened most of those portholes to ventilate the wards, against standing orders. As the ship's angle of list increased, water reached this level and began entering aft from the bulkhead between boiler rooms five and four. With more than six compartments flooded, Britannic could not stay afloat.[51]

Evacuation edit

 
A depiction of Britannic's sinking

On the bridge, Captain Bartlett was already considering efforts to save the ship. Only two minutes after the blast, boiler rooms five and six had to be evacuated. In about ten minutes, Britannic was roughly in the same condition Titanic had been in one hour after the collision with the iceberg. Fifteen minutes after the ship was struck, the open portholes on E Deck were underwater. With water also entering the ship's aft section from the bulkhead between boiler rooms four and five, Britannic quickly developed a serious list to starboard due to the weight of the water flooding into the starboard side.[52]

With the shores of the Greek island Kea to the right, Bartlett gave the order to navigate the ship towards the island in an attempt to beach the vessel. The effect of the ship's starboard list and the weight of the rudder made attempts to navigate the ship under its own power difficult, and the steering gear was knocked out by the explosion, which eliminated steering by the rudder. The captain ordered the port shaft driven at a higher speed than the starboard side, which helped the ship move towards the island.[52]

At the same time, the hospital staff prepared to evacuate. Bartlett had given the order to prepare the lifeboats, but he did not allow them to be lowered into the water. Everyone took their most valuable belongings with them before they evacuated. The chaplain of the ship recovered his Bible. The few patients and nurses on board were assembled. Major Harold Priestley gathered his detachments from the Royal Army Medical Corps to the back of the A deck and inspected the cabins to ensure no one was left behind.[52]

While Bartlett continued his desperate manoeuvre, the ship listed more and more. The other crew members began to fear that the list would become too large, so they decided to put the first lifeboat onto the water without waiting for the order to do so.[52] Bartlett then decided to stop the ship and her engine. Before he could do so, two lifeboats were put onto the water on the port side without permission by Third Officer Francis Laws. The still-turning, partly surfaced propeller sucked the two lifeboats into it, mincing them, along with their passengers.[51] Bartlett was then finally able to stop the propellers before they could suck in any more lifeboats.[53]

Final moments edit

By 08:50, most of those on board had escaped in the 35 successfully launched lifeboats. At this point, Bartlett concluded that the rate at which Britannic was sinking had slowed so he called a halt to the evacuation and ordered the engines restarted in the hope that he might still be able to beach the ship.[54] At 09:00 Bartlett was informed that the rate of flooding had increased due to the ship's forward motion and that the flooding had reached D-deck. Realising that there was now no hope of reaching land in time, Bartlett gave the final order to stop the engines and sounded two final long blasts of the whistle, the signal to abandon ship.[55] As water reached the bridge, he and Assistant Commander Dyke walked off onto the deck and entered the water, swimming to a collapsible boat from which they continued to coordinate the rescue operations.[56]

Britannic gradually capsized to starboard and the funnels collapsed one after the other as the ship rapidly sank. By the time the stern was out of the water, the bow had already slammed into the seabed. As Britannic's length was greater than the depth of the water, the impact caused major structural damage to the bow before she slipped completely beneath the waves at 09:07, 55 minutes after the explosion.[55] Violet Jessop (who was one of the survivors of the Titanic, and had also been on board when the Olympic collided with HMS Hawke) described the last seconds:[57]

"She dipped her head a little, then a little lower and still lower. All the deck machinery fell into the sea like a child's toys. Then she took a fearful plunge, her stern rearing hundreds of feet into the air until with a final roar, she disappeared into the depths, the noise of her going resounding through the water with undreamt-of violence...."

When the Britannic came to rest, she became the largest ship lost in the First World War and the world's largest sunken passenger ship.[58]

Rescue edit

 
Survivors of Britannic on board HMS Scourge
 
Captain John Cropper of the RAMC, who died in the sinking[59]

Compared to Titanic, the rescue of Britannic was facilitated by three factors: The temperature was higher (20 °C (68 °F)[60] compared to −2 °C (28 °F)[61] for Titanic), more lifeboats were available (35 were successfully launched and stayed afloat[62] compared to Titanic's 20[63]), and help was closer (it arrived less than two hours after first distress call[62] compared to three and a half hours for Titanic.[64])

The first to arrive on the scene were fishermen from Kea on their caïque, who picked many survivors from the water.[65] At 10:00, HMS Scourge sighted the first lifeboats and 10 minutes later stopped and picked up 339 survivors. Armed boarding steamer HMS Heroic had arrived some minutes earlier and picked up 494.[66] Some 150 had made it to Korissia, Kea, where surviving doctors and nurses from Britannic were trying to save the injured, using aprons and pieces of lifebelts to make dressings. A little barren quayside served as their operating room.[citation needed]

Scourge and Heroic had no deck space for more survivors, and they left for Piraeus signalling the presence of those remaining at Korissia. HMS Foxhound arrived at 11:45 and, after sweeping the area, anchored in the small port at 13:00 to offer medical assistance and take on board the remaining survivors.[66] At 14:00 the light cruiser HMS Foresight arrived. Foxhound departed for Piraeus at 14:15 while Foresight remained to arrange the burial on Kea of RAMC Sergeant William Sharpe, who had died of his injuries. Another two survivors died on the Heroic and one on the French tug Goliath. The three were buried with military honours in the Piraeus Naval and Consular Cemetery.[67] The last fatality was G. Honeycott, who died at the Russian Hospital at Piraeus shortly after the funerals.[citation needed]

In total, out of the 1,066 people on board, 1,036 people survived the sinking. Thirty people lost their lives in the disaster[68] but only five were buried; others were not recovered and are honoured on memorials in Thessaloniki (the Mikra Memorial) and London. Another 38 were injured (18 crew, 20 RAMC).[69] Survivors were accommodated in the warships that were anchored at the port of Piraeus while nurses and officers were hosted in separate hotels at Phaleron. Many Greek citizens and officials attended the funerals. Survivors were sent home and few arrived in the United Kingdom before Christmas.[70]

In November 2006, Britannic researcher Michail Michailakis discovered that one of the 45 unidentified graves in the New British Cemetery in the town of Hermoupolis on the island of Syros contained the remains of a soldier collected from the church of Ag. Trias at Livadi (the former name of Korissia). Maritime historian Simon Mills contacted the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Further research established that this soldier was a Britannic casualty and his remains had been registered in October 1919 as belonging to a certain "Corporal Stevens".[71]

When the remains were moved to the new cemetery at Syros in June 1921, it was found that there was no record relating this name with the loss of the ship, and the grave was registered as unidentified. Mills provided evidence that this man could be Sergeant Sharpe and the case was considered by the Service Personnel and Veterans Agency.[71] A new headstone for Sharpe was erected and the CWGC has updated its database.[72]

Visualised as an ocean liner edit

The plan of Britannic showed that she was intended to be more luxurious than her sister ships in order to compete with SS Imperator, SS Vaterland and RMS Aquitania. Enough cabins were provided for passengers divided into three classes. The White Star Line anticipated a considerable change in its customer base. Thus, the quality of the Third Class (intended for migrants) was lowered when compared to that of her sisters, while the quality of the Second Class increased. In addition, the number of crew planned was increased from about 860 – 880 onboard Olympic and Titanic to 950 aboard Britannic.[73]

The quality of the First Class was also improved. Children began to appear as part of the clientele that needed to be satisfied, and thus a playroom for them was built on the boat deck.[74] Similar to her two sister ships, the first class amenities included the Grand Staircase, but Britannic's amenities were more sumptuous, with worked balustrades, decorative panels and a pipe organ.[75] The A Deck of the ship was devoted in its entirety to the First Class, being fitted with a salon, two veranda cafes, a smoking room and a reading room.[76] The B Deck included a hair salon, post office, and redesigned deluxe Parlour Suites, dubbed Saloons in the Builder's Plans.[77] The most important addition was that of individual bathrooms in almost every First Class cabin, which would have been a first on an ocean liner. Aboard the Olympic and Titanic, most passengers had to use public bathrooms.[78]

These facilities were installed but were soon removed because the ship was converted to a hospital ship and were never re-installed because the ship sank before she could enter transatlantic service, so the planned facilities were either cancelled, destroyed, reused on other vessels, like the Olympic or Majestic, or just never used.[30] Of these accessories, only a large staircase and a children's playroom remained installed. Under the glass dome was a white wall above the first-class staircase instead of a clock and a large painting.

 
Welte philharmonic organ on Britannic in a company catalogue of 1914

Pipe organ edit

A Welte philharmonic organ was planned to be installed on board Britannic but because of the outbreak of war, the instrument never made its way to Belfast from Germany.[30] After the War, it wasn't claimed by Harland and Wolff since Britannic sank before she could have ever entered transatlantic service. It also wasn't installed on Olympic or Majestic since White Star Line didn't want it. For a long time, it was thought that the organ was lost or destroyed.[30]

In April 2007, the restorers of a Welte organ, now in the Museum für Musikautomaten [de] in Seewen, Switzerland, detected that the main parts of the instrument were signed by the German organ builders with "Britanik".[79] A photograph of a drawing in a company prospectus, found in the Welte-legacy in the Augustiner Museum in Freiburg, proved that this was the organ intended for Britannic. It was found that Welte had first sold the organ to a private owner in Stuttgart instead. Later, in 1937 it had been transferred to a company's concert hall in Wipperfürth, where it was eventually acquired by the founder of the Swiss Museum of Music Automatons in 1969. At the time, the museum was still unaware of the organ's original history.[80][81] The museum maintains the organ in working condition and it is still used for fully automated and manual performances.

Wreck edit

 
 
class=notpageimage|
The wreck's location off the coast of Greece

The wreck of HMHS Britannic is at 37°42′05″N 24°17′02″E / 37.70139°N 24.28389°E / 37.70139; 24.28389 in about 400 feet (122 m) of water.[4] It was discovered on 3 December 1975 by Jacques Cousteau, who explored it.[82][73] In filming the expedition, Cousteau also held conference on camera with several surviving personnel from the ship including Sheila MacBeth Mitchell, a survivor of the sinking.[83] In 1976, Cousteau entered the wreck with his divers for the first time.[84] He expressed the opinion that the ship had been sunk by a single torpedo, basing this opinion on the damage to her plates.[85]

The giant liner lies on her starboard side hiding the zone of impact with the mine. There is a huge hole just beneath the forward well deck. The bow is heavily deformed and attached to the rest of the hull only by some pieces of C-Deck. The crew's quarters in the forecastle were found to be in good shape with many details still visible. The holds were found empty.[84]

The forecastle machinery and the two cargo cranes in the forward well deck are well preserved. The foremast is bent and lies on the seabed near the wreck with the crow's nest still attached. The bell, thought to be lost, was found in a dive in 2019, having fallen from the mast and is now lying directly below the crow's nest on the seabed. Funnel number 1 was found a few metres from the Boat Deck. Funnel numbers two, three, and four were found in the debris field (located off the stern).[84] Pieces of coal lie beside the wreck.[86]

In mid-1995, in an expedition filmed by NOVA, Dr Robert Ballard, best known for having discovered the wrecks of Titanic in 1985, and the German battleship Bismarck in 1989, visited the wreck, using advanced side-scan sonar. Images were obtained from remotely controlled vehicles, but the wreck was not penetrated. Ballard found all the ship's funnels in surprisingly good condition. Attempts to find mine anchors failed.[87]

In August 1996, the wreck was bought by Simon Mills, who has written two books about the ship: Britannic – The Last Titan and Hostage To Fortune.[88]

In November 1997, an international team of divers led by Kevin Gurr used open-circuit trimix diving techniques to visit and film the wreck in the newly available DV digital video format.[87]

In September 1998, another team of divers made an expedition to the wreck.[89][90] Using diver propulsion vehicles, the team made more man-dives to the wreck and produced more images than ever before, including video of four telegraphs, a helm and a telemotor on the captain's bridge.[91]

In 1999 GUE divers acclimated to cave diving and ocean discovery led the first dive expedition to include extensive penetration into Britannic. Video of the expedition was broadcast by National Geographic, BBC, the History Channel and the Discovery Channel.[92]

In September 2003, an expedition led by Carl Spencer dived into the wreck.[93] This was the first expedition to dive Britannic where all the bottom divers were using closed circuit rebreathers (CCR). Diver Leigh Bishop brought back some of the first photographs from inside the wreck and his diver partner Rich Stevenson found that several watertight doors were open. It has been suggested that this was because the mine strike coincided with the change of watches. Alternatively, the explosion may have distorted the doorframes. A number of mine anchors were located off the wreck by sonar expert Bill Smith, confirming the German records of U-73 that Britannic was sunk by a single mine and the damage was compounded by open portholes and watertight doors. Spencer's expedition was broadcast extensively across the world for many years by National Geographic and the UK's Channel 5.[94]

In 2006, an expedition, funded and filmed by the History Channel, brought together fourteen skilled divers to help determine what caused the quick sinking of Britannic.[94] After preparation the crew dived on the wreck site on 17 September. Time was cut short when silt was kicked up, causing zero visibility conditions, and the two divers narrowly escaped with their lives. One last dive was to be attempted on Britannic's boiler room, but it was discovered that photographing this far inside the wreck would lead to violating a permit issued by the Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities, a department within the Greek Ministry of Culture.

Partly because of a barrier in languages, a last-minute plea was turned down by the department. The expedition was unable to determine the cause of the rapid sinking, but hours of footage were filmed and important data was documented. The Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities later recognised the importance of this mission and extended an invitation to revisit the wreck under less stringent rules.

On 24 May 2009, Carl Spencer, drawn back to his third underwater filming mission of Britannic, died in Greece due to equipment difficulties while filming the wreck for National Geographic.[95]

In 2012, on an expedition organised by Alexander Sotiriou and Paul Lijnen, divers using rebreathers installed and recovered scientific equipment used for environmental purposes, to determine how fast bacteria are eating Britannic's iron compared to Titanic.[96]

On 29 September 2019, a British technical diver, Tim Saville, died during a 120 m / 393 ft dive on Britannic's wreck.[97]

Legacy edit

Having her career cut short in wartime, never having entered commercial service, and having had few victims, Britannic did not experience the same notoriety as her sister ship Titanic. After being largely forgotten by the public, she finally gained fame when her wreck was discovered.[98] Her name was reused by the White Star Line when it put MV Britannic into service in 1930. That ship was the last to fly the flag of the company when it retired in 1960.[99]

After Germany capitulated at the end of the First World War followed by the Treaty of Versailles, Germany handed over some of its ocean liners as war reparations, two of which were given to the company. The first, the Bismarck, renamed Majestic, replaced the Britannic. The second, the Columbus, renamed the Homeric, compensated for other ships lost in the conflict.[100]

The last survivor, George Perman, died in 2000. At the time of the sinking, he was a 15- year-old scout working on Britannic.[101]

In popular culture edit

The sinking of the ship was dramatised in a 2000 television film called Britannic that featured Edward Atterton, Amanda Ryan, Jacqueline Bisset and John Rhys-Davies. The film was a fictional account featuring a German agent sabotaging the ship, because the Britannic was secretly carrying munitions.

A BBC2 documentary, Titanic's Tragic Twin – the Britannic Disaster, was broadcast on 5 December 2016; presented by Kate Humble and Andy Torbet, it used up-to-date underwater film of the wreck and spoke to relatives of survivors.[102]

Alma Katsu's 2020 novel The Deep was set partly on the Britannic, and on its sister ship the Titanic, and centred around the sinking of both ships.[103]

The Gigantic, the apparent setting of the 2009 escape-room game Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors, references the Britannic as a sister ship of the Titanic retrofitted as a Hospital Ship.[104][non-primary source needed]

Postcards edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Lynch (2012), p. 161.
  2. ^ "HMHS Britannic (1914) Builder Data". MaritimeQuest. from the original on 2 September 2008. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  3. ^ Vladisavljevic, Brana. "Titanic's sister ship Britannic could become a diving attraction in Greece". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
  4. ^ a b Chirnside 2011, p. 275.
  5. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 217.
  6. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 231.
  7. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 220.
  8. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 224.
  9. ^ a b Piouffre 2009, p. 307.
  10. ^ a b Bonsall, Thomas E. (1987). "8". Titanic. Baltimore, Maryland: Bookman Publishing. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-8317-8774-5.
  11. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 12.
  12. ^ Piouffre 2009, p. 41
  13. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 19.
  14. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 14.
  15. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 18.
  16. ^ . ocean-liners.com. Archived from the original on 19 December 2005. Retrieved 12 February 2006.
  17. ^ Bonner, Kit; Bonner, Carolyn (2003). Great Ship Disasters. MBI Publishing Company. p. 60. ISBN 0-7603-1336-9.
  18. ^ "White Star Line". 20thcenturyliners.com. from the original on 24 June 2014. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  19. ^ "24 Apr 1912 – WHITE STAR'S NEXT GREAT LINER. – Trove". Trove.nla.gov.au. 24 April 1912. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  20. ^ "25 Nov 1911 – A MAMMOTH STEAMER. – Trove". Trove.nla.gov.au. 25 November 1911. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  21. ^ The Madison Daily Leader 5 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine 27 November 1911..Retrieved 4 October 2018
  22. ^ Las Vegas Optic: "1,000 FOOT SHIP MAY DOCK IN NEW YORK" 5 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine, 21 November 1911..Retrieved 4 October 2018
  23. ^ Joshua Milford: What happened to Gigantic? 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Website viewed 9 June 2014
  24. ^ a b Mark Chirnside: Gigantic Dossier 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Website viewed 1 May 2012
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  79. ^ Christoph E. Hänggi: Die Britannic-Orgel im Museum für Musikautomaten Seewen So. Festschrift zur Einweihung der Welte-Philharmonie-Orgel; Sammlung Heinrich Weiss-Stauffacher. Hrsg.: Museum für Musikautomaten Seewen SO. Seewen: Museum für Musikautomaten, 2007.
  80. ^ "Sunken Ocean-Liner Britannic's pipe organ found: Rare Welte-Philharmonie Organ Scheduled to Play Again" (PDF). David Rumsey: Organist, Consultant. 23 May 2011. (PDF) from the original on 16 March 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2012.
  81. ^ Museum of Music Automatons Seewen: History of the organ Website viewed 20 November 2023
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  90. ^ Hope, Nicholas (1998). "How We Dived The Britannic" 12 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Bubblevision.com. Retrieved 1 January 2011.
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  95. ^ Pidd, Helen (25 May 2009). "Tributes paid to diver Carl Spencer, killed filming Titanic sister ship". The Guardian. London. from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  96. ^ . divernet.com. Archived from the original on 21 October 2013. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  97. ^ Rosemary E Lunn A little good comes from Brit wreck diver's death 7 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine X-Ray Magazine
  98. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 274.
  99. ^ « White Star Line MV Britannic (III) 1930–1960 The last WSL ship » 20 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine, « Titanic » and Other White Star Ships. Accessed 28 July 2009.
  100. ^ Chirnside 2011, p. 107.
  101. ^ "Southampton scout survived sinking of First World War hospital ship".
  102. ^ Rees, Jasper (5 December 2016). "Titanic's Tragic Twin: The Britannic Disaster felt under-researched but the survivor testimony was grimly fascinating – review". The Daily Telegraph. London. from the original on 6 December 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2016.
  103. ^ "'The Deep' book review – Voyage of nightmares and memories". The New Indian Express. from the original on 17 July 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  104. ^ Chunsoft (10 December 2009). Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors (Nintendo DS). Spike. Level/area: Hospital Room. Seven: 'Chances are, it's the [Gigantic]'

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Mills, Simon (1992). H.M.H.S. "Britannic": Last Titan. Dorset: Waterfront Publications. ISBN 0-946184-71-2.
  • Mills, Simon (2002). Hostage to Fortune: the dramatic story of the last Olympian, HMHS Britannic. Chesham, England: Wordsmith. ISBN 1-899493-03-4.
  • Mills, Simon (2019). Exploring the Britannic: The Life, Last Voyage and Wreck of Titanic's Tragic Twin. London: Adlard Coles. ISBN 978-1-4729-5492-3.
  • Layton, J. Kent (2013). The Edwardian Superliners: a trio of trios. ISBN 978-1-4456-1438-0.
  • Kohler, Richie; Hudson, Charlie (2016). Mystery of the Last Olympian: Titanic's Tragic Sister Britannic. ISBN 978-1930536869.

External links edit

  • Newsreel footage of the construction of HMHS Britannic, 1914
  • Maritimequest HMHS Britannic Photo Gallery
  • Britannic Home at Atlantic Liners
  • NOVA Online-Titanic's Lost Sister (Companion website to the PBS special Titanic's Lost Sister)
  • Hospital Ship Britannic
  • About the origins of the Britannic Organ
  • Carl Spencer – Daily Telegraph obituary
  • Images of HMHS Britannic 22 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine at the English Heritage Archive
  • British Pathé gallery on the Olympic class
  • Real-time computer animation of the sinking of HMHS Britannic

37°42′05″N 24°17′02″E / 37.70139°N 24.28389°E / 37.70139; 24.28389

hmhs, britannic, other, white, star, liners, with, this, name, britannic, 1874, britannic, 1929, britannic, redirects, here, confused, with, britannia, third, final, vessel, white, star, line, olympic, class, steamships, second, white, star, ship, bear, name, . For other White Star liners with this name see SS Britannic 1874 and MV Britannic 1929 RMS Britannic redirects here Not to be confused with RMS Britannia HMHS Britannic b r ɪ ˈ t ae n ɪ k was the third and final vessel of the White Star Line s Olympic class of steamships and the second White Star ship to bear the name Britannic She was the youngest sister of the RMS Olympic and the RMS Titanic and was intended to enter service as a transatlantic passenger liner She was operated as a hospital ship from 1915 until her sinking near the Greek island of Kea in the Aegean Sea in November 1916 At the time she was the largest hospital ship in the world citation needed His Majesty s Hospital Ship HMHS BritannicHistoryUnited KingdomNameHMHS BritannicOwnerWhite Star LineOperatorRoyal NavyPort of registryLiverpool United KingdomOrdered1911BuilderHarland and Wolff BelfastYard number433 1 Laid down30 November 1911Launched26 February 1914Completed12 December 1915In service23 December 1915Out of service21 November 1916FateSank after striking a German mine set by SM U 73 on 21 November 1916 near Kea in the Aegean SeaGeneral characteristicsClass and typeOlympic class ocean linerTonnage48 158 gross register tonsDisplacement53 200 tonsLength882 ft 9 in 269 1 m overallBeam94 ft 28 7 m Height175 ft 53 m from the keel to the top of the funnelsDraught34 ft 7 in 10 5 m Depth64 ft 6 in 19 7 m Decks9 passenger decksInstalled power24 double ended 5 single ended coal fired boilers 2 Two four cylinder triple expansion reciprocating engines each producing 16 000 hp 12 000 kW for outboard wing propellers one low pressure turbine producing 18 000 hp 13 000 kW for the centre propeller Total 50 000 hp 37 000 kW PropulsionTwo bronze triple blade outboard wing propellers One bronze quadruple blade central propellerSpeed21 knots 39 km h 24 mph 24 knots 44 km h 28 mph maximum Capacity3 309Britannic was launched just before the start of the First World War She was designed to be the safest of the three ships with design changes made during construction due to lessons learned from the sinking of the Titanic She was laid up at her builders Harland and Wolff in Belfast for many months before being requisitioned as a hospital ship In 1915 and 1916 she served between the United Kingdom and the Dardanelles On the morning of 21 November 1916 she hit a naval mine of the Imperial German Navy near the Greek island of Kea and sank 55 minutes later killing 30 people There were 1 066 people on board the 1 036 survivors were rescued from the water and lifeboats Britannic was the largest ship lost in the First World War 3 After the First World War the White Star Line was compensated for the loss of Britannic by the award of SS Bismarck as part of postwar reparations she entered service as RMS Majestic The wreck was located and explored by Jacques Yves Cousteau in 1975 The vessel is the largest intact passenger ship on the seabed in the world 4 It was bought in 1996 and is currently owned by Simon Mills a maritime historian Contents 1 Characteristics 1 1 Post Titanic design changes 2 History 2 1 Conception 2 2 Rumoured name change 2 3 Construction 2 4 Requisition 2 5 First service 2 6 Recalled 2 7 Last voyage 2 7 1 Explosion 2 7 2 Evacuation 2 7 3 Final moments 2 7 4 Rescue 3 Visualised as an ocean liner 3 1 Pipe organ 4 Wreck 5 Legacy 6 In popular culture 7 Postcards 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksCharacteristics editThe original dimensions of Britannic were similar to those of her older sisters but her dimensions were altered whilst still on the building stocks after the loss of Titanic With a gross tonnage of 48 158 she surpassed her older sisters in terms of internal volume but this did not make her the largest passenger ship in service at that time the German SS Vaterland held this title with a significantly higher tonnage 5 The Olympic class ships were propelled by a combined system of two triple expansion steam engines which powered the three bladed outboard wing propellers whilst a low pressure steam turbine used steam exhausted from the two reciprocating engines to power the central four bladed propeller giving a maximum speed of 23 knots 6 Post Titanic design changes edit nbsp An artist s conception of Britannic in her intended White Star liveryBritannic had a similar layout to her sister ships Following the Titanic disaster and the subsequent inquiries several design changes were made to the remaining Olympic class liners With Britannic these changes made before launch included increasing the ship s beam to 94 feet 29 m to allow for a double hull along the engine and boiler rooms and raising six out of the 15 watertight bulkheads up to B Deck Additionally a larger 18 000 horsepower 13 000 kW turbine was added instead of the 16 000 horsepower 12 000 kW units installed on the earlier vessels to make up for the increase in hull width The central watertight compartments were enhanced allowing the ship to stay afloat with six compartments flooded 7 Externally the largest visual change was the fitting of large crane like gantry davits each powered by an electric motor and capable of launching six lifeboats which were stored on gantries the ship was designed to have eight sets of gantry davits but only five were installed before Britannic entered war service with the difference being made up with boats launched by manually operated Welin type davits as on Titanic and Olympic 8 9 Additional lifeboats could be stored within reach of the davits on the deckhouse roof and the gantry davits could reach lifeboats on the other side of the ship providing that none of the funnels was obstructing the way This design enabled all the lifeboats to be launched even if the ship developed a list that would normally prevent lifeboats from being launched on the side opposite to the list Several of these davits were placed abreast of funnels defeating that purpose The elevators which previously stopped at A deck could now reach the boat deck 10 The ship carried 48 lifeboats capable of carrying at least 75 people each Thus at least 3 600 people could be carried by the lifeboats which was well above the ship s maximum capacity of 3 309 History editConception edit In 1907 J Bruce Ismay director general of the White Star Line and Lord Pirrie chairman of the Harland amp Wolff shipyard in Belfast had decided to build a trio of ocean liners of unmatched size to compete with the Cunard Line s Lusitania and Mauretania not in terms of speed but in terms of luxury and safety 11 The names of the three vessels were decided at a later date and they showed the intention of the designers regarding their size Olympic Titanic and Britannic 12 Construction of the Olympic and the Titanic began in 1908 and 1909 respectively 13 Their sizes were so large that it was necessary to build the Arrol Gantry to shelter them wide enough to span the two new building slips and allow two ships to be built at a time 14 The three ships were designed to be 270 metres long and to have a gross tonnage of over 45 000 Their designed speed was approximately 22 knots well below that of the Lusitania and Mauretania but still allowing for a transatlantic crossing of less than one week 15 Rumoured name change edit nbsp The Arrol Gantry towering above Britannic circa 1914Although the White Star Line and the Harland and Wolff shipyard always denied it 10 16 some sources claim that Britannic was to be named Gigantic but its name was changed so as not to compete with Titanic or create comparisons 17 1 One source is a poster of the ship with the name Gigantic at the top 18 Other sources are November 1911 American newspapers stating the White Star order for Gigantic being placed as well as other newspapers from around the world both during construction and immediately after the sinking of the Titanic 19 20 21 22 Tom McCluskie stated that in his capacity as archive manager and historian at Harland and Wolff he never saw any official reference to the name Gigantic being used or proposed for the third of the Olympic class vessels 23 24 Some hand written changes were added to the order book and dated January 1912 These only dealt with the ship s moulded width not her name 24 Construction edit nbsp One of Britannic s funnels being transported to Harland amp Wolff shipyards nbsp Britannic right during fitting out in Belfast alongside OlympicBritannic s keel was laid on 30 November 1911 at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast on the gantry slip previously occupied by Olympic 13 months after the launch of that ship and Arlanza launched seven days before 9 The acquisition of the ship was planned to be at the beginning of 1914 25 Due to improvements introduced as a consequence of the Titanic s disaster Britannic was not launched until 26 February 1914 26 which was filmed along with the fitting of a funnel 27 Several speeches were given in front of the press and a dinner was organised in honour of the launching 28 Fitting out began subsequently The ship entered dry dock in September and her propellers were installed 29 Reusing Olympic s space saved the shipyard time and money by not clearing out a third slip similar in size to those used for the two previous vessels In August 1914 before Britannic could commence transatlantic service between New York and Southampton the First World War began Immediately all shipyards with Admiralty contracts were given priority to use available raw materials All civil contracts including Britannic were slowed 30 The naval authorities requisitioned a large number of ships as armed merchant cruisers or for troop transport The Admiralty paid the companies for the use of their ships but the risk of losing a ship in naval operations was high The larger ocean liners were not initially taken for naval use because smaller ships were easier to operate Olympic returned to Belfast on 3 November 1914 while work on Britannic continued slowly 30 Requisition edit nbsp Britannic seen after her conversion to an operative hospital ship c January 1916The need for increased tonnage grew critical as naval operations extended to the Eastern Mediterranean In May 1915 Britannic completed mooring trials of her engines and was prepared for emergency entrance into service with as little as four weeks notice The same month also saw the first major loss of a civilian ocean liner when Cunard s RMS Lusitania was torpedoed near the Irish coast by SM U 20 31 The following month the Admiralty decided to use recently requisitioned passenger liners as troop transports in the Gallipoli Campaign also called the Dardanelles service The first to sail were Cunard s RMS Mauretania and RMS Aquitania As the Gallipoli landings proved to be disastrous and the casualties mounted the need for large hospital ships for treatment and evacuation of wounded became evident Aquitania was diverted to hospital ship duties in August her place as a troop transport would be taken by Olympic in September Then on 13 November 1915 Britannic was requisitioned as a hospital ship from her storage location at Belfast citation needed Repainted white with large red crosses and a horizontal green stripe she was renamed HMHS His Majesty s Hospital Ship Britannic 30 and placed under the command of Captain Charles Alfred Bartlett 32 In the interior 3 309 beds and several operating rooms were installed The common areas of the upper decks were transformed into rooms for the wounded The cabins of B Deck were used to house doctors The first class dining room and the first class reception room on D Deck were transformed into operating rooms The lower bridge was used to accommodate the lightly wounded 32 The medical equipment was installed on 12 December 1915 30 First service edit nbsp Britannic with HMHS Galeka taking on board the wounded at MudrosWhen declared fit for service on 12 December 1915 at Liverpool Britannic was assigned a medical team consisting of 101 nurses 336 non commissioned officers and 52 commissioned officers as well as a crew of 675 people 32 On 23 December she left Liverpool to join the port of Mudros on the island of Lemnos on the Aegean Sea to bring back sick and wounded soldiers 33 She joined with several ships on the same route including Mauretania Aquitania 34 and her sister ship Olympic 35 The four ships were joined a little later by Statendam 36 She made a stopover at Naples before continuing to Mudros in order for her stock of coal to be replenished After she returned she spent four weeks as a floating hospital off the Isle of Wight 37 The third voyage was from 20 March 1916 to 4 April The Dardanelles was evacuated in January 38 At the end of her military service on 6 June 1916 Britannic returned to Belfast to undergo the necessary modifications for transforming her into a transatlantic passenger liner The British government paid the White Star Line 75 000 to compensate for the conversion The transformation took place for several months before being interrupted by a recall of the ship back into military service 39 Recalled edit The Admiralty recalled Britannic back into service as a hospital ship on 26 August 1916 and the ship returned to the Mediterranean Sea for a fourth voyage on 24 September of that year 40 On 29 September on her way to Naples she encountered a violent storm from which she emerged unscathed 41 She left on 9 October for Southampton Then she made a fifth trip which was marked by a quarantining of the crew when the ship arrived at Mudros now Moudros because of food borne illness 42 Life aboard the ship followed a routine At six o clock the patients were awakened and the premises were cleaned up Breakfast was served at 6 30 AM then the captain toured the ship for an inspection Lunch was served at 12 30 PM and tea at 4 30 PM Patients were treated between meals and those who wished to go for a walk could do so At 8 30 PM the patients went to bed and the captain made another inspection tour 33 There were medical classes available for training the nurses 43 Last voyage edit nbsp The location of Kea in the Cyclades archipelago in the Aegean Sea nbsp The channel between Makronisos near top and Kea bottom Britannic sank closer to Kea After completing five successful voyages to the Middle Eastern theatre and back to the United Kingdom transporting the sick and wounded Britannic departed Southampton for Lemnos at 14 23 on 12 November 1916 her sixth voyage to the Mediterranean Sea 32 The ship passed Gibraltar around midnight on 15 November and arrived at Naples on the morning of 17 November for her usual coaling and water refuelling stop completing the first stage of her mission 44 A storm kept the ship at Naples until Sunday afternoon when Captain Bartlett decided to take advantage of a brief break in the weather and continue The seas rose once again as Britannic left the port By the next morning the storms died and the ship passed the Strait of Messina without problems Cape Matapan was rounded in the first hours of 21 November By morning Britannic was steaming at full speed into the Kea Channel between Cape Sounion the southernmost point of Attica the prefecture that includes Athens and the island of Kea 44 There were 1 066 people on board 673 crew 315 Royal Army Medical Corps RAMC 77 nurses and the captain 45 Explosion edit nbsp Some newspapers printed reports that the sinking was caused by one of two torpedoes launched by respective German submarines whose commanders would have known the ship being northbound did not carry combatants 46 The report stated that after the explosion there was perfect order and not the slightest panic and that the women of course were saved first 46 At 08 12 am European Eastern Time on 21 November 1916 HMHS Britannic was rocked by an explosion after hitting a mine and sank 55 minutes later 47 It was later revealed that the mines were planted in the Kea Channel on 21 October 1916 by SM U 73 under the command of Gustav Siess de The reaction in the dining room was immediate doctors and nurses left instantly for their posts but not everybody reacted the same way as further aft the power of the explosion was less felt and many thought the ship had hit a smaller boat Captain Bartlett and Chief Officer Hume were on the bridge at the time and the gravity of the situation was soon evident 48 The explosion was on the starboard 48 side between holds two and three The force of the explosion damaged the watertight bulkhead between hold one and the forepeak 47 The first four watertight compartments were filling rapidly with water 47 the boiler man s tunnel connecting the firemen s quarters in the bow with boiler room six was seriously damaged and water was flowing into that boiler room 47 Bartlett ordered the watertight doors closed sent a distress signal and ordered the crew to prepare the lifeboats 47 An SOS signal was immediately sent out and was received by several other ships in the area among them HMS Scourge and HMS Heroic but Britannic heard nothing in reply Unknown to either Bartlett or the ship s wireless operator the force of the first explosion had caused the antenna wires slung between the ship s masts to snap This meant that although the ship could still send out transmissions by radio she could no longer receive them 49 Along with the damaged watertight door of the firemen s tunnel the watertight door between boiler rooms six and five failed to close properly 47 Water was flowing further aft into boiler room five Britannic had reached her flooding limit She could stay afloat motionless with her first six watertight compartments flooded There were five watertight bulkheads rising all the way up to B Deck 50 Those measures had been taken after the Titanic disaster Titanic could float with only her first four compartments flooded 51 The next crucial bulkhead between boiler rooms five and four and its door were undamaged and should have guaranteed the ship s survival However there were open portholes along the front lower decks which tilted underwater within minutes of the explosion The nurses had opened most of those portholes to ventilate the wards against standing orders As the ship s angle of list increased water reached this level and began entering aft from the bulkhead between boiler rooms five and four With more than six compartments flooded Britannic could not stay afloat 51 Evacuation edit nbsp A depiction of Britannic s sinkingOn the bridge Captain Bartlett was already considering efforts to save the ship Only two minutes after the blast boiler rooms five and six had to be evacuated In about ten minutes Britannic was roughly in the same condition Titanic had been in one hour after the collision with the iceberg Fifteen minutes after the ship was struck the open portholes on E Deck were underwater With water also entering the ship s aft section from the bulkhead between boiler rooms four and five Britannic quickly developed a serious list to starboard due to the weight of the water flooding into the starboard side 52 With the shores of the Greek island Kea to the right Bartlett gave the order to navigate the ship towards the island in an attempt to beach the vessel The effect of the ship s starboard list and the weight of the rudder made attempts to navigate the ship under its own power difficult and the steering gear was knocked out by the explosion which eliminated steering by the rudder The captain ordered the port shaft driven at a higher speed than the starboard side which helped the ship move towards the island 52 At the same time the hospital staff prepared to evacuate Bartlett had given the order to prepare the lifeboats but he did not allow them to be lowered into the water Everyone took their most valuable belongings with them before they evacuated The chaplain of the ship recovered his Bible The few patients and nurses on board were assembled Major Harold Priestley gathered his detachments from the Royal Army Medical Corps to the back of the A deck and inspected the cabins to ensure no one was left behind 52 While Bartlett continued his desperate manoeuvre the ship listed more and more The other crew members began to fear that the list would become too large so they decided to put the first lifeboat onto the water without waiting for the order to do so 52 Bartlett then decided to stop the ship and her engine Before he could do so two lifeboats were put onto the water on the port side without permission by Third Officer Francis Laws The still turning partly surfaced propeller sucked the two lifeboats into it mincing them along with their passengers 51 Bartlett was then finally able to stop the propellers before they could suck in any more lifeboats 53 Final moments edit By 08 50 most of those on board had escaped in the 35 successfully launched lifeboats At this point Bartlett concluded that the rate at which Britannic was sinking had slowed so he called a halt to the evacuation and ordered the engines restarted in the hope that he might still be able to beach the ship 54 At 09 00 Bartlett was informed that the rate of flooding had increased due to the ship s forward motion and that the flooding had reached D deck Realising that there was now no hope of reaching land in time Bartlett gave the final order to stop the engines and sounded two final long blasts of the whistle the signal to abandon ship 55 As water reached the bridge he and Assistant Commander Dyke walked off onto the deck and entered the water swimming to a collapsible boat from which they continued to coordinate the rescue operations 56 Britannic gradually capsized to starboard and the funnels collapsed one after the other as the ship rapidly sank By the time the stern was out of the water the bow had already slammed into the seabed As Britannic s length was greater than the depth of the water the impact caused major structural damage to the bow before she slipped completely beneath the waves at 09 07 55 minutes after the explosion 55 Violet Jessop who was one of the survivors of the Titanic and had also been on board when the Olympic collided with HMS Hawke described the last seconds 57 She dipped her head a little then a little lower and still lower All the deck machinery fell into the sea like a child s toys Then she took a fearful plunge her stern rearing hundreds of feet into the air until with a final roar she disappeared into the depths the noise of her going resounding through the water with undreamt of violence When the Britannic came to rest she became the largest ship lost in the First World War and the world s largest sunken passenger ship 58 Rescue edit nbsp Survivors of Britannic on board HMS Scourge nbsp Captain John Cropper of the RAMC who died in the sinking 59 Compared to Titanic the rescue of Britannic was facilitated by three factors The temperature was higher 20 C 68 F 60 compared to 2 C 28 F 61 for Titanic more lifeboats were available 35 were successfully launched and stayed afloat 62 compared to Titanic s 20 63 and help was closer it arrived less than two hours after first distress call 62 compared to three and a half hours for Titanic 64 The first to arrive on the scene were fishermen from Kea on their caique who picked many survivors from the water 65 At 10 00 HMS Scourge sighted the first lifeboats and 10 minutes later stopped and picked up 339 survivors Armed boarding steamer HMS Heroic had arrived some minutes earlier and picked up 494 66 Some 150 had made it to Korissia Kea where surviving doctors and nurses from Britannic were trying to save the injured using aprons and pieces of lifebelts to make dressings A little barren quayside served as their operating room citation needed Scourge and Heroic had no deck space for more survivors and they left for Piraeus signalling the presence of those remaining at Korissia HMS Foxhound arrived at 11 45 and after sweeping the area anchored in the small port at 13 00 to offer medical assistance and take on board the remaining survivors 66 At 14 00 the light cruiser HMS Foresight arrived Foxhound departed for Piraeus at 14 15 while Foresight remained to arrange the burial on Kea of RAMC Sergeant William Sharpe who had died of his injuries Another two survivors died on the Heroic and one on the French tug Goliath The three were buried with military honours in the Piraeus Naval and Consular Cemetery 67 The last fatality was G Honeycott who died at the Russian Hospital at Piraeus shortly after the funerals citation needed In total out of the 1 066 people on board 1 036 people survived the sinking Thirty people lost their lives in the disaster 68 but only five were buried others were not recovered and are honoured on memorials in Thessaloniki the Mikra Memorial and London Another 38 were injured 18 crew 20 RAMC 69 Survivors were accommodated in the warships that were anchored at the port of Piraeus while nurses and officers were hosted in separate hotels at Phaleron Many Greek citizens and officials attended the funerals Survivors were sent home and few arrived in the United Kingdom before Christmas 70 In November 2006 Britannic researcher Michail Michailakis discovered that one of the 45 unidentified graves in the New British Cemetery in the town of Hermoupolis on the island of Syros contained the remains of a soldier collected from the church of Ag Trias at Livadi the former name of Korissia Maritime historian Simon Mills contacted the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Further research established that this soldier was a Britannic casualty and his remains had been registered in October 1919 as belonging to a certain Corporal Stevens 71 When the remains were moved to the new cemetery at Syros in June 1921 it was found that there was no record relating this name with the loss of the ship and the grave was registered as unidentified Mills provided evidence that this man could be Sergeant Sharpe and the case was considered by the Service Personnel and Veterans Agency 71 A new headstone for Sharpe was erected and the CWGC has updated its database 72 Visualised as an ocean liner editThe plan of Britannic showed that she was intended to be more luxurious than her sister ships in order to compete with SS Imperator SS Vaterland and RMS Aquitania Enough cabins were provided for passengers divided into three classes The White Star Line anticipated a considerable change in its customer base Thus the quality of the Third Class intended for migrants was lowered when compared to that of her sisters while the quality of the Second Class increased In addition the number of crew planned was increased from about 860 880 onboard Olympic and Titanic to 950 aboard Britannic 73 The quality of the First Class was also improved Children began to appear as part of the clientele that needed to be satisfied and thus a playroom for them was built on the boat deck 74 Similar to her two sister ships the first class amenities included the Grand Staircase but Britannic s amenities were more sumptuous with worked balustrades decorative panels and a pipe organ 75 The A Deck of the ship was devoted in its entirety to the First Class being fitted with a salon two veranda cafes a smoking room and a reading room 76 The B Deck included a hair salon post office and redesigned deluxe Parlour Suites dubbed Saloons in the Builder s Plans 77 The most important addition was that of individual bathrooms in almost every First Class cabin which would have been a first on an ocean liner Aboard the Olympic and Titanic most passengers had to use public bathrooms 78 These facilities were installed but were soon removed because the ship was converted to a hospital ship and were never re installed because the ship sank before she could enter transatlantic service so the planned facilities were either cancelled destroyed reused on other vessels like the Olympic or Majestic or just never used 30 Of these accessories only a large staircase and a children s playroom remained installed Under the glass dome was a white wall above the first class staircase instead of a clock and a large painting nbsp Welte philharmonic organ on Britannic in a company catalogue of 1914Pipe organ edit A Welte philharmonic organ was planned to be installed on board Britannic but because of the outbreak of war the instrument never made its way to Belfast from Germany 30 After the War it wasn t claimed by Harland and Wolff since Britannic sank before she could have ever entered transatlantic service It also wasn t installed on Olympic or Majestic since White Star Line didn t want it For a long time it was thought that the organ was lost or destroyed 30 In April 2007 the restorers of a Welte organ now in the Museum fur Musikautomaten de in Seewen Switzerland detected that the main parts of the instrument were signed by the German organ builders with Britanik 79 A photograph of a drawing in a company prospectus found in the Welte legacy in the Augustiner Museum in Freiburg proved that this was the organ intended for Britannic It was found that Welte had first sold the organ to a private owner in Stuttgart instead Later in 1937 it had been transferred to a company s concert hall in Wipperfurth where it was eventually acquired by the founder of the Swiss Museum of Music Automatons in 1969 At the time the museum was still unaware of the organ s original history 80 81 The museum maintains the organ in working condition and it is still used for fully automated and manual performances Wreck edit nbsp nbsp class notpageimage The wreck s location off the coast of Greece The wreck of HMHS Britannic is at 37 42 05 N 24 17 02 E 37 70139 N 24 28389 E 37 70139 24 28389 in about 400 feet 122 m of water 4 It was discovered on 3 December 1975 by Jacques Cousteau who explored it 82 73 In filming the expedition Cousteau also held conference on camera with several surviving personnel from the ship including Sheila MacBeth Mitchell a survivor of the sinking 83 In 1976 Cousteau entered the wreck with his divers for the first time 84 He expressed the opinion that the ship had been sunk by a single torpedo basing this opinion on the damage to her plates 85 The giant liner lies on her starboard side hiding the zone of impact with the mine There is a huge hole just beneath the forward well deck The bow is heavily deformed and attached to the rest of the hull only by some pieces of C Deck The crew s quarters in the forecastle were found to be in good shape with many details still visible The holds were found empty 84 The forecastle machinery and the two cargo cranes in the forward well deck are well preserved The foremast is bent and lies on the seabed near the wreck with the crow s nest still attached The bell thought to be lost was found in a dive in 2019 having fallen from the mast and is now lying directly below the crow s nest on the seabed Funnel number 1 was found a few metres from the Boat Deck Funnel numbers two three and four were found in the debris field located off the stern 84 Pieces of coal lie beside the wreck 86 In mid 1995 in an expedition filmed by NOVA Dr Robert Ballard best known for having discovered the wrecks of Titanic in 1985 and the German battleship Bismarck in 1989 visited the wreck using advanced side scan sonar Images were obtained from remotely controlled vehicles but the wreck was not penetrated Ballard found all the ship s funnels in surprisingly good condition Attempts to find mine anchors failed 87 In August 1996 the wreck was bought by Simon Mills who has written two books about the ship Britannic The Last Titan and Hostage To Fortune 88 In November 1997 an international team of divers led by Kevin Gurr used open circuit trimix diving techniques to visit and film the wreck in the newly available DV digital video format 87 In September 1998 another team of divers made an expedition to the wreck 89 90 Using diver propulsion vehicles the team made more man dives to the wreck and produced more images than ever before including video of four telegraphs a helm and a telemotor on the captain s bridge 91 In 1999 GUE divers acclimated to cave diving and ocean discovery led the first dive expedition to include extensive penetration into Britannic Video of the expedition was broadcast by National Geographic BBC the History Channel and the Discovery Channel 92 In September 2003 an expedition led by Carl Spencer dived into the wreck 93 This was the first expedition to dive Britannic where all the bottom divers were using closed circuit rebreathers CCR Diver Leigh Bishop brought back some of the first photographs from inside the wreck and his diver partner Rich Stevenson found that several watertight doors were open It has been suggested that this was because the mine strike coincided with the change of watches Alternatively the explosion may have distorted the doorframes A number of mine anchors were located off the wreck by sonar expert Bill Smith confirming the German records of U 73 that Britannic was sunk by a single mine and the damage was compounded by open portholes and watertight doors Spencer s expedition was broadcast extensively across the world for many years by National Geographic and the UK s Channel 5 94 In 2006 an expedition funded and filmed by the History Channel brought together fourteen skilled divers to help determine what caused the quick sinking of Britannic 94 After preparation the crew dived on the wreck site on 17 September Time was cut short when silt was kicked up causing zero visibility conditions and the two divers narrowly escaped with their lives One last dive was to be attempted on Britannic s boiler room but it was discovered that photographing this far inside the wreck would lead to violating a permit issued by the Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities a department within the Greek Ministry of Culture Partly because of a barrier in languages a last minute plea was turned down by the department The expedition was unable to determine the cause of the rapid sinking but hours of footage were filmed and important data was documented The Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities later recognised the importance of this mission and extended an invitation to revisit the wreck under less stringent rules On 24 May 2009 Carl Spencer drawn back to his third underwater filming mission of Britannic died in Greece due to equipment difficulties while filming the wreck for National Geographic 95 In 2012 on an expedition organised by Alexander Sotiriou and Paul Lijnen divers using rebreathers installed and recovered scientific equipment used for environmental purposes to determine how fast bacteria are eating Britannic s iron compared to Titanic 96 On 29 September 2019 a British technical diver Tim Saville died during a 120 m 393 ft dive on Britannic s wreck 97 Legacy editHaving her career cut short in wartime never having entered commercial service and having had few victims Britannic did not experience the same notoriety as her sister ship Titanic After being largely forgotten by the public she finally gained fame when her wreck was discovered 98 Her name was reused by the White Star Line when it put MV Britannic into service in 1930 That ship was the last to fly the flag of the company when it retired in 1960 99 After Germany capitulated at the end of the First World War followed by the Treaty of Versailles Germany handed over some of its ocean liners as war reparations two of which were given to the company The first the Bismarck renamed Majestic replaced the Britannic The second the Columbus renamed the Homeric compensated for other ships lost in the conflict 100 The last survivor George Perman died in 2000 At the time of the sinking he was a 15 year old scout working on Britannic 101 In popular culture editThe sinking of the ship was dramatised in a 2000 television film called Britannic that featured Edward Atterton Amanda Ryan Jacqueline Bisset and John Rhys Davies The film was a fictional account featuring a German agent sabotaging the ship because the Britannic was secretly carrying munitions A BBC2 documentary Titanic s Tragic Twin the Britannic Disaster was broadcast on 5 December 2016 presented by Kate Humble and Andy Torbet it used up to date underwater film of the wreck and spoke to relatives of survivors 102 Alma Katsu s 2020 novel The Deep was set partly on the Britannic and on its sister ship the Titanic and centred around the sinking of both ships 103 The Gigantic the apparent setting of the 2009 escape room game Nine Hours Nine Persons Nine Doors references the Britannic as a sister ship of the Titanic retrofitted as a Hospital Ship 104 non primary source needed Postcards editPostcards of Britannic nbsp Britannic in the shipyard before her launch nbsp Britannic at sea in her intended White Star liveryReferences edit a b Lynch 2012 p 161 HMHS Britannic 1914 Builder Data MaritimeQuest Archived from the original on 2 September 2008 Retrieved 9 August 2008 Vladisavljevic Brana Titanic s sister ship Britannic could become a diving attraction in Greece Lonely Planet Retrieved 9 October 2021 a b Chirnside 2011 p 275 Chirnside 2011 p 217 Chirnside 2011 p 231 Chirnside 2011 p 220 Chirnside 2011 p 224 a b Piouffre 2009 p 307 a b Bonsall Thomas E 1987 8 Titanic Baltimore Maryland Bookman Publishing p 54 ISBN 978 0 8317 8774 5 Chirnside 2011 p 12 Piouffre 2009 p 41 Chirnside 2011 p 19 Chirnside 2011 p 14 Chirnside 2011 p 18 HMHS Britannic ocean liners com Archived from the original on 19 December 2005 Retrieved 12 February 2006 Bonner Kit Bonner Carolyn 2003 Great Ship Disasters MBI Publishing Company p 60 ISBN 0 7603 1336 9 White Star Line 20thcenturyliners com Archived from the original on 24 June 2014 Retrieved 14 July 2014 24 Apr 1912 WHITE STAR S NEXT GREAT LINER Trove Trove nla gov au 24 April 1912 Retrieved 27 February 2022 25 Nov 1911 A MAMMOTH STEAMER Trove Trove nla gov au 25 November 1911 Retrieved 27 February 2022 The Madison Daily Leader Archived 5 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine 27 November 1911 Retrieved 4 October 2018 Las Vegas Optic 1 000 FOOT SHIP MAY DOCK IN NEW YORK Archived 5 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine 21 November 1911 Retrieved 4 October 2018 Joshua Milford What happened to Gigantic Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Website viewed 9 June 2014 a b Mark Chirnside Gigantic Dossier Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Website viewed 1 May 2012 Chirnside 2011 p 216 Chirnside 2011 p 242 Launch footage Archived 11 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine and Funnel fitting Archived 21 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine British Pathe Retrieved 18 February 2013 Chirnside 2011 p 238 Chirnside 2011 p 239 a b c d e f g Chirnside 2011 p 240 Le Goff 1998 p 50 a b c d Chirnside 2011 p 241 a b Chirnside 2011 p 243 Chirnside 2011 p 92 Chirnside 2011 p 94 HMHS Britannic Archived 14 April 2012 at Wikiwix WebTitanic Accessed 5 April 2011 Chirnside 2011 p 244 Chirnside 2011 p 245 Chirnside 2011 p 246 Chirnside 2011 p 247 Chirnside 2011 p 249 Chirnside 2011 p 250 Chirnside 2011 p 254 a b Chirnside 2011 p 253 Sinking Hospital Ship HMHS Britannic Archived from the original on 10 August 2015 a b Hospital Ship Britannic Sunk 50 Lives Lost The New York Times 23 November 1916 p 1 a b c d e f Chirnside 2011 p 260 a b Chirnside 2011 p 259 Chirnside 2011 p 256 Chirnside 2011 p 261 a b c Chirnside 2011 p 258 a b c d Chirnside 2011 p 257 Chirnside 2011 p 259 Chirnside 2011 p 260 a b Chirnside 2011 p 261 Britannic Archived 6 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Titanic titanic com Accessed 12 July 2009 Gleick Elizabeth Carassava Anthee 26 October 1998 Deep Secrets Time International South Pacific Edition No 43 p 72 PBS Online Lost Liners Britannic PBS Archived from the original on 14 October 2008 Retrieved 9 November 2008 CWGC record for John Cropper Archived from the original on 28 July 2017 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Chirnside 2011 p 262 Lord 2005 p 149 a b Chirnside 2011 p 266 Lord 2005 p 103 Brewster amp Coulter 1998 pp 45 and 62 Chirnside 2011 pp 261 262 a b Chirnside 2011 p 262 Cemetery Details CWGC www cwgc org Retrieved 26 September 2021 Chirnside 2011 pp 325 327 Crew Lists Hospital Ship HMHS Britannic Archived from the original on 15 August 2015 Chirnside 2011 p 264 a b Mills Simon 2009 The Odyssey of Sergeant William Sharpe Titanic Commutator Titanic Historical Society 33 186 CWGC Record for Sharpe CWGC Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 a b Chirnside 2011 p 296 Chirnside 2011 p 225 RMS Britannic A deck Hospital Ship Britannic on The Internet Archive Accessed 7 April 2011 Chirnside 2011 p 226 RMS Britannic B deck Hospital Ship Britannic on The Internet Archive Accessed 7 April 2011 Chirnside 2011 p 227 Christoph E Hanggi Die Britannic Orgel im Museum fur Musikautomaten Seewen So Festschrift zur Einweihung der Welte Philharmonie Orgel Sammlung Heinrich Weiss Stauffacher Hrsg Museum fur Musikautomaten Seewen SO Seewen Museum fur Musikautomaten 2007 Sunken Ocean Liner Britannic s pipe organ found Rare Welte Philharmonie Organ Scheduled to Play Again PDF David Rumsey Organist Consultant 23 May 2011 Archived PDF from the original on 16 March 2012 Retrieved 15 April 2012 Museum of Music Automatons Seewen History of the organ Website viewed 20 November 2023 Britannic Jacques Cousteau s Search for Titanic s Sister Ship Britannic Full Documentary YouTube 5 September 2014 Archived from the original on 17 January 2017 Retrieved 12 December 2016 The Independent Archived 21 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine obituary Sheila Macbeth Mitchell Friday 18 March 1994 Retrieved 29 February 2016 a b c Chirnside 2011 p 276 British Red Cross ship hit by torpedo The Times No 59868 London 23 November 1976 col F p 8 Chirnside 2011 p 277 a b HMHS Britannic Expedition Summary 1976 1999 Marconigraph on The Internet Archive Accessed 7 April 2011 Chirnside 2011 p 284 Chirnside 2011 pp 282 284 Hope Nicholas 1998 How We Dived The Britannic Archived 12 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Bubblevision com Retrieved 1 January 2011 Hope Nicholas 1998 HMHS Britannic Video Archived 12 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Bubblevision com Retrieved 1 January 2011 HMHS Britannic Ocean Discovery Archived from the original on 13 May 2008 Retrieved 14 August 2008 The Wreck Hospital Ship Britannic on The Internet Archive Accessed 7 April 2011 a b in French Plongee par 120 m de fonds Archived 2 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine La Derniere Heure Accessed 28 July 2009 Pidd Helen 25 May 2009 Tributes paid to diver Carl Spencer killed filming Titanic sister ship The Guardian London Archived from the original on 8 March 2016 Retrieved 3 May 2012 Project Britannic divernet com Archived from the original on 21 October 2013 Retrieved 11 November 2013 Rosemary E Lunn A little good comes from Brit wreck diver s death Archived 7 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine X Ray Magazine Chirnside 2011 p 274 White Star Line MV Britannic III 1930 1960 The last WSL ship Archived 20 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Titanic and Other White Star Ships Accessed 28 July 2009 Chirnside 2011 p 107 Southampton scout survived sinking of First World War hospital ship Rees Jasper 5 December 2016 Titanic s Tragic Twin The Britannic Disaster felt under researched but the survivor testimony was grimly fascinating review The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 6 December 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2016 The Deep book review Voyage of nightmares and memories The New Indian Express Archived from the original on 17 July 2020 Retrieved 15 July 2020 Chunsoft 10 December 2009 Nine Hours Nine Persons Nine Doors Nintendo DS Spike Level area Hospital Room Seven Chances are it s the Gigantic Bibliography editBrewster Hugh Coulter Laurie 1998 882 1 2 Amazing Answers to your Questions about the Titanic Madison Press Book ISBN 978 0 590 18730 5 Chirnside Mark 2011 2004 The Olympic Class Ships Stroud Tempus ISBN 978 0 7524 2868 0 Lord Walter 2005 1955 A Night to Remember New York St Martin s Griffin ISBN 978 0 8050 7764 3 Le Goff Olivier 1998 Les Plus Beaux Paquebots du Monde in French Solar ISBN 9782263027994 Lynch John 2012 Belfast Built Ships The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 6539 5 Piouffre Gerard 2009 Le Titanic ne repond plus in French Larousse ISBN 978 2 263 02799 4 Further reading editMills Simon 1992 H M H S Britannic Last Titan Dorset Waterfront Publications ISBN 0 946184 71 2 Mills Simon 2002 Hostage to Fortune the dramatic story of the last Olympian HMHS Britannic Chesham England Wordsmith ISBN 1 899493 03 4 Mills Simon 2019 Exploring the Britannic The Life Last Voyage and Wreck of Titanic s Tragic Twin London Adlard Coles ISBN 978 1 4729 5492 3 Layton J Kent 2013 The Edwardian Superliners a trio of trios ISBN 978 1 4456 1438 0 Kohler Richie Hudson Charlie 2016 Mystery of the Last Olympian Titanic s Tragic Sister Britannic ISBN 978 1930536869 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Britannic ship 1915 Newsreel footage of the construction of HMHS Britannic 1914 Maritimequest HMHS Britannic Photo Gallery Britannic Home at Atlantic Liners NOVA Online Titanic s Lost Sister Companion website to the PBS special Titanic s Lost Sister Hospital Ship Britannic About the origins of the Britannic Organ Carl Spencer Daily Telegraph obituary Images of HMHS Britannic Archived 22 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine at the English Heritage Archive HMHS Britannic at Titanic and Co British Pathe gallery on the Olympic class Real time computer animation of the sinking of HMHS Britannic 37 42 05 N 24 17 02 E 37 70139 N 24 28389 E 37 70139 24 28389 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HMHS Britannic amp oldid 1188268584, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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