April 15th 1912: The Sinking Of The Titanic

April 15th is the 110th anniversary of the Sinking of the Titanic! I found this information on the web about Tacoma resident Anna Sjoblom, who was a survivor of the Titanic, I received the information from this site, Titanic Encyclopedia The article appeared in the “Tacoma Daily Ledger.” *Tuesday, April 30, 1912*– Coincidentally, Anna Sjoblom’s birthday was the 14th of April and that was the day the Titanic rammed the iceberg.
Read article from the Daily Ledger (Click to enlarge)



Author: Bruce Caplan

Bruce Caplan is a Seattle native with very eclectic interests. Back in the 70’s he was the sponsor of a 40’s music radio show on KXA in Seattle. When he watched the movie Titanic staring Clifton Webb and Barbara Stanwyck in 1953 Caplan became fascinated with the horrible tragedy. In 1996 his book on the subject was released. It’s now in the 20th printing. A decade ago Caplan began to do a weekly radio show on KIXI. The program is called Radio Trivia and he weekly brings to his audience the best of the best of the comedies from the golden age of radio. Because of Caplan’s interest in true crime, he began a second program on KIXI called Crime Club. On this show he often discuses events with authors of books on criminal subjects and weekly plays the great radio mysteries from long ago. Bruce has lectured throughout our nation and on scores of cruises. His greatest thrill is searching through the goldmine of radio gems of mysteries and comedies from yesteryear and bringing them back to an eager audience of young and old. --- View other articles by Bruce Caplan

1 thought on “April 15th 1912: The Sinking Of The Titanic

  1. From the Tacoma Sunday Ledger April 14, 1929
    Tacoma Woman’s memories of surviving the Titanic, Seventeen years after the tragic event.

    April 14 is a date which will always live in the memory of Mrs. G Kincaid, 1405 South 5th Street, Tacoma. Not because it is her birthday, and that of her, 13 year old son, but because of the horrors she experienced 17 years ago on that date when the steamer Titanic struck an iceberg on her maiden voyage from Southampton and sank with the loss of 1517 persons.

    Yesterday in her home Mrs. Kincaid told of the happenings. The night of April 14, 1912, when as a girl of 18 who could not speak English, she saw unfold for her eyes tragedies which most people do not face in a lifetime.
    “Even now at night sometimes I still dream of the sinking of the ship. I always have such a hard time getting off the liner too,” she said.
    “I wasn’t frightened until after we had been taken aboard the Carpathia – then the things that I saw made impressions on me which I can never forget. From the time the Titanic struck the ice until I got into a lifeboat – it was the third from the last to be launched – I wasn’t afraid.

    “You see, I was only 18 years old and couldn’t speak English, so I hardly knew what it was all about until we were going away from the sinking liner.”

    Climbed emergency ladder

    Mrs. Kincaid smiled as she told how she climbed up a small emergency ladder from third class accommodations to the top deck.
    “I thought that the boat couldn’t sink into the water as far at this upper deck. There was another girl climbing ahead of me. We passed a window and we looked in. I’ll never forget the view of that deserted banquet table – the silver – it was very beautiful to me. The other girl wanted to kick the window out and go in, but I told her they might make us pay for the broken window.”

    Mrs. Kincaid, who at the time of the disaster was Miss Anna Sjöblom, was being sent by her mother from Finland to her father and brother who were working in logging camps near Olympia. She had planned to sail on the Philadelphia, but because of a Seamen’s strike [sic, coal strike] she sailed on the Titanic instead.

    “I was in bed when I felt the boat lurch at about 11:45 p.m. I didn’t become alarmed because I thought that they had just stopped the boat quickly for some reason.
    “Pretty soon a gentleman came into my stateroom and got the lifebelts out. He put one on a woman friend of his and handed me one. Then they started climbing to the top deck. I stayed in my cabin until 1 a.m. I was seasick.”

    It had been a gay night Mrs. Kincaid said, with a big party in the first class saloon and a dance in the third class quarters.
    “There was a lot of confusion with people running around, some crying, some swearing and others playing. A man friend of mine came up to me and fastened my lifebelt. He said he was going back to his cabin and go to bed because he would rather die there.”

    Mrs. Kincaid then told how she, stood by the rail on the top deck watching people get into the lifeboats but being ill she didn’t care whether she got into one or not.
    “The boat was listing heavily in the bow. Someone gave me a push towards a boat and I got in. I saw a young boy climb into a lifeboat, but he was thrown onto the deck by an officer. He tried another and the same thing happened. Then he got into a third and when they tried to force him out he drew a gun and stayed.”

    “Our boat was swung over the side,” Mrs. Kincaid continued, “and we were almost to the water when another came down and was only several feet above us when men cut the ropes which held our boat and we got away before being crushed.”

    “The sea was calm but with the usual swells and it was awfully cold. Before the lights went out on the Titanic, I got a view of the iceberg which we had struck.
    “Screams – I have never heard such screams. They came from the hundreds of people who were floating about us. They were piercing! I had been brought up to believe in a hell after death but now I think I was through a hell that night.”

    “We could see the Titanic with her nose down every time we came up on a swell. Then we would go down and she was lost to sight.”
    Asked about the band playing aboard the sinking liner, Mrs. Kincaid said:
    “yes, the band was playing, but I don’t know that it was “Nearer my God to Thee,” until I read it in the papers. You see I was awfully green.”

    “Soon there came the noise of an explosion and for a minute there was a silence which was terrifying. Then the screaming started again in the darkness now.” It was 1:45 when the Titanic took her final plunge and the small boats made their way in the darkness until morning when the Carpathia was sighted at 5 am. There were 60 people in the boat in which Mrs. Kincaid was riding.

    “I recall one terrible experience in that little boat,” she said. “There was a Swedish gentleman whose wife died in our boat. They lifted her overboard, but her husband held onto her arms and dragged her along. His hair went white, and he aged years in those few hours. He went insane and died about the Carpathia.”
    “Nothing has ever looked so good to me as the lights of the Carpathia. We saw them at about 5 am and meet her at 8. A storm came up at 9 am so it was lucky that we reached her when we did.”

    It was after boarding the Carpathia that the tragedy hit the Tacoma woman with full force, she said. There were mothers with their children searching for fathers who had drowned. Persons were dying and others were going insane, as a result of the terrible things they had seen.
    “I believe I am the only person in Tacoma who was aboard the Titanic. It is not a nice experience to recall but one which is difficult to forget. Yes, April 14 is quite an anniversary day for me.”

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