ETCETERA
Titanic locker key sold for £85,000
London: A key which opened a life-jacket locker on the ill-fated Titanic has been sold for a whopping 85,000 pounds at one of the biggest auctions involving Titanic memorabilia in recent years.
It was among 200 items from the liner sold at an auction in Devizes. The key had been predicted to fetch up to £50,000. Auctioneer Andrew Aldridge said the amount the key finally sold for “reflected its importance and unique nature”.
The locker key had belonged to third-class steward Sidney Sedunary, from Berkshire, who perished when the Titanic went down in April 1912, after hitting an iceberg. Aldridge said “Without a doubt [he saved lives]. Here’s a man who sacrificed his life to save others.” The auction in Devizes was one of the biggest involving Titanic memorabilia for many years. RMS Titanic had been four days into a week-long transatlantic crossing from Southampton to New York when the supposedly “unsinkable” ship struck an iceberg on April, 14 1912.
The ship sank less than three hours later on April 15; 1,500 passengers and crew died and 710 survived. A collection of letters written by Chief Officer Henry Wilde, who was second in command on the vessel, fetched 5,000 pounds at the auction. In one of the letters, written onboard Titanic and posted at Queenstown (now Cobh) in Ireland, Wilde indicated he had misgivings about the new ship.
“I still don’t like this ship… I have a queer feeling about it,” he wrote. He had been expecting to take command of another ship, the Cymric, and only signed on to the Titanic on April 9, 1912, the day before it sailed. On March 31, 1912, he said he was “awfully disappointed to find the arrangements for my taking command of the Cymric have altered. I am now going to join the Titanic until some other ship turns up for me”.
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