| Morgan
Robertson Had a Sinking Feeling
Whenever there is a tragic event, there
are soothsayers and other psychic individuals who rush forward with their
tales of how the birds in their backyard hung upside down from the clothesline
by one leg, and forecast the disaster. But there is usually no real proof
to back up their claims.
This wasn’t the case, with the sinking
of the Titanic in 1912. Fourteen years before the ship went down, Morgan
Robertson published a book called Futility, in which a ship called the
Titan, sank. The great ship had been built with 19 water-tight compartments
and was capable of staying afloat, even if nine of them were full of water.
Because of the latest technology that went into her creation, and made
it so superior, the Titan carried only the minimum number of lifeboats
required: 24, with places for 500 of her 3,000 passengers.
Eventually, in his book, the Titan struck
an iceberg on the starboard side, while in the North Atlantic on her maiden
voyage. The month was April. Only 13 people survived.
In 1912, perhaps capitalizing on the bizarre
event forecast in his story, Robertson had his book reprinted under the
title Wreck of the Titan. In it, the outstanding similarities remained
the same as the 1898 version. He did change a few “minor” details, which
in no way altered the outcome, or the potential for disaster. He increased
the weight to slightly more than the real Titanic, and upped the horsepower
to 50% more than the real ship. What he was trying to prove with those
alterations, nobody knows.
Robertson himself, was the son of a Great
Lakes ship captain. He would run away as a teenager, to join the Merchant
Marine, rising to the rank of First Mate, before leaving the sea. He died
in March of 1915, in Atlantic City, where his body was found in front of
an open window, overlooking the ocean.
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