Description
This book tells the story of wireless communications during the sinking of the Titanic. It begins with warnings of icebergs near the Titanic's course hours before the collision. The story follows senior operator Jack Phillips as he sends distress messages to nearby ships. The SS Virginian receives the Titanic's final, broken message and the rescue of the survivors is recounted.
Published in commemoration of the one-hundredth anniversary of the
Titanics sinking, this book tells the story of that fateful night from an unusual angle: through the many wireless communications sent to and from the land stations and the ships involved as the tragic events unfolded.Drawing on the extensive record of wireless transmissions in the Marconi Archives,
Titanic Calling recounts this legendary story the way it was first heard, beginning with repeated warningsjust hours before the collisionof several large icebergs unusually far south and alarmingly close to the
Titanics course. The story follows senior operator Jack Phillips as he sends distress messages to nearby ships and shows how these urgent calls for help were received and rapidly relayed across the Atlantic in a desperate attempt to save the lives of the
Titanics passengers and crew. Finally, the distant SS
Virginian receives the
Titanics final, broken message. The story concludes with the rescue of the fortunate survivors, who radio messages to loved ones from aboard the RMS
Carpathia while safely on their way to New York.Illustrated throughout with photographs of the messages and including full transcripts of original material, the book also features an introduction to the development of maritime wireless communications and a discussion of the Marconi Archivess
Titanic collection. The forced brevity of the messages lends the narrative a startling sense of immediacy and brings to life to the voices of the individuals involved.