When she first sailed, Olympic was the largest ship in the world, only to be replaced by the Titanic with 46,328 GRT, the result of adding a steel enclosure to her A deck promenade. Today ...
The PromenadeLights from a submersible penetrate the rusted ruin of Titanic’s first-class promenade, once as inviting as a similar deck on the Olympic (right). Before the Titanic sank ...
On this episode of Invisible Iceberg, AccuWeather Founder & Executive Chairman Dr. Joel N. Myers and AccuWeather Network Chief Meteorologist Bernie Rayno share the untold story behind the sinking of ...
The RMS Olympic was the sister to the Titanic and the Britannic—two ships that met tragic ends. It had an illustrious career beginning in 1911. It tried to help rescue survivors during the ...
The Royal Mail Ship Titanic is the second of three ocean liners built for the White Star line by Harland and Wolff in Belfast, the sister ship to the RMS Olympic, which preceded Titanic on the ...
The artifacts from the two sister ships identical to the Titanic, Olympic and Britannic, at the bottom of the ocean, were collected using a robot that picked up the artifacts and placed them into ...
The 7-foot replica was recently donated to the museum, and is a permanent feature of the Navigation Classroom.
The Britannic was the third of the Olympic class of steamships, along with the RMS Olympic and RMS Titanic. The Titanic sank in the North Atlantic in 1912 with the loss of 1,514 lives while the ...
You can still visit it today. The architect of Titanic and its sister ships Olympic and Britannic was Alexander Carlisle. The designer was born in Ballymena and is generally thought to have been ...