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The Lusitania Sinking - Eyewitness Accounts from Survivors (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R498
Discovery Miles 4 980
You Save: R110
(18%)
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The Lusitania Sinking - Eyewitness Accounts from Survivors (Hardcover)
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List price R608
Loot Price R498
Discovery Miles 4 980
You Save R110 (18%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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*Shortlisted for the 2019 Mountbatten Award* "We went up on deck
and were looking around when the awful crash came. The ship listed
so much that we all scrambled down the deck and for a moment
everything was in confusion. When I came to myself again I glanced
around but could find no trace of Mr Prichard. He seemed to have
disappeared." - Grace French The sinking of the Lusitania is an
event that has been predominantly discussed from a political or
maritime perspective. For the first time, The Lusitania Sinking
tells the story in the emotive framework of a family looking for
information on their son's death. On 1 May 1915, the 29-year-old
student Preston Prichard embarked as a Second Class passenger on
the Lusitania, bound from New York for Liverpool. By 2pm on the
afternoon of 7 May, the liner was approaching the coast of Ireland
when she was sighted by the German submarine U-20\. A single
torpedo caused a massive explosion in the Lusitania's hold, and the
ship began sank rapidly. Within 20 minutes she disappeared and
1,198 men, women and children, including Preston, died. Uncertain
of Preston's fate, his family leaped into action. His brother
Mostyn, who lived in Ramsgate, travelled to Queenstown to search
morgues but could find nothing. Preston's mother wrote hundreds of
letters to survivors to find out more about what might have
happened in his last moments. The Lusitania Sinking compiles the
responses received. Perhaps sensing his fate, Prichard had put his
papers in order before embarking and told a fellow student where to
find his will if anything happened to him. During the voyage, he
was often seen in the company of Grace French, quoted above. Alice
Middleton, who had a crush on him but was too shy to speak to him
throughout the entire voyage, remembered that he helped her in
reaching the upper decks during the last moments of the sinking:
"[The Lusitania] exploded and down came her funnels, so over I
jumped. I had a terrible time in the water, 41/2 hours bashing
about among the wreckage and dead bodies... It was 10.30 before
they landed me at the hospital in an unconscious condition. In
fact, they piled me with a boat full of dead and it was only when
they were carrying the dead bodies to the Mortuary that they
discovered there was still life in me."
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