In 2012, James Cameron wrote an article for National Geographic in which he recounted his experiences when exploring the Titanic’s wreckage. Among a myriad of things, each one telling a story about a particular passenger, he encountered a bowler hat that belonged to a man named Henry Harper.
The hat was found in Harper’s D Deck cabin, inside the ruins of his closet, exactly where he left it, as if untouched by time. Harper was an American businessman and one of the few survivors of the Titanic.
The Film Cost More to Produce Than the Ship Did to Build
Now, this is an interesting and quite astounding bit of trivia about the Titanic. Even when adjusted for economic inflation, the 1997 film "Titanic" cost more to produce than it cost to actually build the real-life RMS Titanic.
It is estimated that, back in 1912, the Titanic cost approximately $7.5 million to build, which would be roughly $190 million today. As for the film, it cost $200 million to produce in 1997, which would equal around $360 million nowadays!
Titanic's Remains Could Completely Disappear by 2030
The Titanic shipwreck was found in 1985 near Newfoundland, a Canadian island in the Atlantic Ocean. The ship lay 3,800mts below the surface, and because of how deep it was, the wreckage was very well-preserved by the time it was discovered, even though it had been sitting there for 73 years since the crash.
Considering that by 2019, the Titanic has been lying in the depths of the Atlantic for over 100 years, it is shocking to think that by 2030, the whole wreck could be completely gone. As scientists have explained, due to ocean bacteria eating away at the wreckage, the entire ship could be eroded by then.
Charles Joughin Owes His Life to Two Bottles of Whiskey
The most hard-core fans of the 1997 film "Titanic" will surely remember a scene where a man is briefly, but quite unforgettably, shown chugging down a flask of alcohol before going in the water as the ship is sinking. This character is based on Charles Joughin, one of the cooks aboard the RMS Titanic, that became famous for grabbing two bottles of whiskey as the ship sank.
Thanks to the copious amounts of alcohol in his body, Joughin survived in the frigid waters of the Northern Atlantic ocean for at least two hours, which is incredible considering most people died from hypothermia within 15 minutes. Joughin was able to survive long enough to wait for the next lifeboat to come around, and so became one of the Titanic's survivors.
The One Man That Predicted the Crash
Back in 1912, the Titanic was considered a groundbreaking landmark in the history of transportation and technology. No ship built before it was as technologically advanced or as aesthetically luxurious. This led many people to believe that such a piece of machinery was virtually unsinkable. However, there was one passenger that not only disagreed with this, he actually predicted an "appalling disaster".
The passenger was Charles Melville Hays, the president of the Grand Trunk and Grand Trunk Pacific Railway Companies. Obviously, Hays was extremely knowledgeable when it came to transportation technologies, and when learning more about the Titanic's construction, he had reservations about how safe it actually was to "build bigger and faster ships". Unfortunately, Hays was not only right, he was also one of the 1,500-plus people that died in the water the night of the crash.