A Snapshot of the Many and Various Criminals Aboard the Titanic (2024)

At the recent Left Coast Crime conference in Tucson, Arizona, an author panelist was asked how long she could keep writing stories about her early 20th-century character. Half-jokingly, the author replied that she could perhaps kill them off soon: “After all, the Titanic sunk in 1912!”

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Titanic was just one of over 1,600 vessels built at the still-working Harland & Wolff shipyard in Belfast, in the north of Ireland, yet despite the fact it happened over a century ago, no other oceanic story still fascinates us as much as this tragedy.

Countless movies, programs, websites and documentaries have explored every conceivable aspect of the disaster, while the many hundreds of literary offerings connected to the Titanic encompass fiction and non-fiction, every genre, for every age group.

Alex Scarrow’s Candle Man combines the Titanic with other historical events, offering the tantalizing premise that, as the ship was going down, a man revealed the truth about the identity of Jack the Ripper. That was an instant purchase, at least for me, Jack the Ripper of course being the source for even more books, movies and documentaries than the doomed ocean liner.

There are numerous books about the night of April 14th/15th, with Walter Lord’s A Night To Remember still considered to be one of the most realistic accounts, while you can fill a wheelbarrow with doorstop-heavy tomes of scientific and technical accounts.

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At the moment there are a number of Titanic-themed exhibitions taking place around the world too, including in Las Vegas, New York and, recently, in my own backyard of Hollywood.

Besides the movies, I wasn’t sure what connection Hollywood could have to Titanic, but it turns out one of the survivors is buried at the celebrity-filled Hollywood Forever Cemetery, just a short drive from my house. A tributary plaque to her husband, whose body was never found, is in the same mausoleum.

The Hollywood exhibit also had a picture of “professional gambler” George Brereton, a truly dedicated conman. Just hours after being rescued from a lifeboat, he had already allegedly been working another First-Class passenger/survivor by trying to involve him in a horse-racing scam.

Later, fast-talking card sharp Jean (Barabra Stanwyck) in The Lady Eve (1941) confirmed for us that cruise ships were a smorgasbord of potential crime, while today’s true crime shows often feature murder-mysteries that take place on such floating palaces.

This in turn made me wonder whether there were any real-life felons on the Titanic.

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The luxury liner certainly had plenty of gold, silver, jewelry and money on board, both on wrists, necks and hairdos, as well as in wallets, purses and safes, while there were naturally rumors of more illicit cargos (and 1980 flop Raise the Titanic! even suggested it held a mysterious nuclear mineral).

Rich pickings for criminals then, and since maritime law and territorial waters are such gray areas, there seemed to be potential for another take on the famous disaster.

Alas, I should have known that this had already been fascinatingly and deeply researched on www.encyclopedia-titanica.org, among others, and that Titanic had already been used as the background to mix with fictional crime.

There was Max Allan Collins’ The Titanic Murders, and behemoth author James Patterson had gotten in on the act in one of his co-authored BookShots, Taking the Titanic, which was based around a heist onboard.

The statistics however, as they often do, proved to be rather misleading. At first glance, the Titanic seemed like it was infested with criminals of all stripes, yet the research included acts and allegations about passengers from before and after the four-day voyage.

Out of the 2,240 passengers on the Titanic, the convictions of several dozen – men and a number of women – included the more predictable thievery, drunkenness, assault and deception, but also smuggling, “prevarication”, bigamy, spying, kidnapping, preaching illegal religious ceremonies, and protesting as suffragettes.

That said, Christoher Shulver, a Titanic fireman (boiler room worker) who survived the sinking, was a thief with a long record. No wonder he had signed up as “J. Dilley.”

Another fireman, George McGough, who also survived, had been convicted of murder in Brazil in 1900. During a fight, he pushed shipmate John Dwyer into an open hold. Dwyer fell 20 feet and bled to death from his injuries, and McGough was subsequently sentenced to 15 months for manslaughter back in England.

More notably, Robert Hichens, the quartermaster who was actually at the helm of the Titanic when he tried – unsuccessfully – not to hit the fatal iceberg, served four years for attempted murder later in 1933. After drinking heavily, he had gone to see a man he thought had swindled him in the sale of – believe it or not – a small charter boat. When they began arguing, Hichens pulled out a pistol and opened fire.

As for Brereton, it’s possible his post-Titanic idea may have made it to the racetrack, but in Ohio in early 1915 his luck ran out when he was fined and sentenced to two years in prison for his part in a horse racing scam.

Unbelievably, one of his four accomplices, who was also fined and jailed, was Harry H. Homer, a career scammer – and fellow survivor of Titanic. Did they meet in the aftermath and cook up the scheme together?

By 1923 Brereton was living in California and continuing his nefarious ways, again being arrested in 1933 at, of all places, Yosemite National Park, in relation to another false horse-racing deal worth some $27,000 (over $610,000 today). He committed suicide in 1942, some 20 years after his first wife – distraught over the death of their son – had done the same.

Good or bad, every victim and survivor is listed in a new exhibit at the Titanic Belfast museum, whose silver, star-shaped building sits at the head of the slipways where the Titanic and many others were launched.

There are rare artifacts in the museum as well, including a deckchair and a lifejacket from Titanic, and the million-dollar (auction value) violin belonging to bandleader Wallace Hartley. He and his seven fellow musicians famously kept performing while the ship slid under the waves, and their stories were told in Steve Turner’s And The Band Played On.

As we approach the 111th anniversary, the real facts are that over 1,500 people died in the disaster, just like in many other events in history whose repercussions are still felt today. It’s something to remember next time you watch a YouTube video or open the latest Titanic book.

historyJames Bartlettmaritime crimemaritime historyTitanic

A Snapshot of the Many and Various Criminals Aboard the Titanic (2024)

FAQs

Were there any criminals on the Titanic? ›

Out of the 2,240 passengers on the Titanic, the convictions of several dozen – men and a number of women – included the more predictable thievery, drunkenness, assault and deception, but also smuggling, “prevarication”, bigamy, spying, kidnapping, preaching illegal religious ceremonies, and protesting as suffragettes.

Who went to jail for the Titanic sinking? ›

Robert Hichens: How 'man who sank the Titanic' spiralled into depression before being jailed for attempted murder. The man at the wheel of the Titanic when it struck a fateful iceberg in 1912 has not been remembered well throughout history.

Who is the most famous survivor of the Titanic? ›

'The Unsinkable' Molly Brown

Molly Brown. She is standing regally, holding a parasol. She's probably the most famous survivor of the Titanic and there's much more to her story than making it to land after watching the ship sink to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean on April 15, 1912.

Are there still skeletons in the Titanic wreckage? ›

Some 1,160 people went down with the Titanic. but no bodies have ever been found.

What famous person died on Titanic? ›

DIED: John Jacob Astor, millionaire

Astor was a member of the prominent Astor family and helped build the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York City. He was also an inventor, a science-fiction novelist, and a veteran of the Spanish-American War. He was traveling with his wife, Madeleine, in Europe when she became pregnant.

Who was the killer on the Titanic? ›

William Mintram (March 1866 – 15 April 1912) was a fireman (stoker) on the RMS Titanic until it struck an iceberg on 14 April 1912. William worked for White Star Line after his release from prison for the murder of his wife.

Why did the Californian not respond to the Titanic? ›

The report did concede that even if "proper action had been taken", Californian could not have arrived on the scene until "well after the sinking". It also noted that when he did know of Titanic's distress, Lord twice took his ship across an ice field to help search for survivors.

Who was the richest man that died on the Titanic? ›

John Jacob Astor, 47, was the wealthiest man aboard the ship and would have been a billionaire by today's standards, with an estimated net worth of $87 million at the time – roughly $2.75 billion today.

Did anyone not in a lifeboat survive the Titanic? ›

A total of 1,503 people lost their lives when the Titanic sank in the North Atlantic Ocean. Many of them had not made it into a boat. Only 706 people survived in the lifeboats until later that morning when they were rescued by the RMS Carpathia.

Who was the real woman who survived the Titanic? ›

Molly Brown. Molly Brown, whose full name was Margaret Brown, was born in 1867 and was an American socialite and philanthropist. She was a first class passenger on board Titanic and is best known for her survival of the Titanic disaster, sharing Lifeboat 6 with fellow survivor Elsie Bowerman.

What is the most expensive thing found on the Titanic? ›

Perhaps the most valuable item lost during the sinking of the Titanic, Merry-Joseph Blondel's painting, La Circassienne au bain, would be worth around R55 million if it wasn't at the bottom of the ocean.

What was found eating the Titanic? ›

One of these is a species of bacteria -- named Halomonas titanicae after the great ship -- that lives inside icicle-like growths of rust, called "rusticles." These bacteria eat iron in the ship's hull and they will eventually consume the entire ship, recycling the nutrients into the ocean ecosystem.

What is a hidden fact about Titanic? ›

The Titanic had a swimming pool on board

In first class there were many new attractions such as squash courts, a Turkish bath, a gymnasium, a barber shop and also the first swimming pool on board a ship.

Was anyone convicted for the Titanic? ›

The ship complied with all the regulations of the time, and while there was huge loss of life, no actual crime had been committed, so no charges were made.

Was there a safe found on the Titanic? ›

A purser's safe brought up from the wreck last summer contained an assortment of gold-colored British coins, whose value was estimated by an expert at about $5,000.

Did anyone who was on the Titanic when it sank survive? ›

Around 2,200 people were aboard the RMS Titanic when it set sail across the Atlantic Ocean toward New York City. Of those people, only around 700 survivors made it into lifeboats after the ship collided with an iceberg off the coast of Greenland.

Has anyone been inside the Titanic wreck? ›

Fewer than 250 people in the world have visited the shipwreck at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean since its discovery in 1985. Among them is the film director James Cameron, who directed the 1997 movie Titanic. Eight-day Titanic diving tours for tourists conducted by OceanGate cost $250,000 per guest, the BBC reported.

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