Gareth Russell, photo by Kelvin Boyes |
Gareth Russell is the author of the new book The Ship of Dreams: The Sinking of the Titanic and the End of the Edwardian Era. His other books include Young and Damned and Fair and An Illustrated Introduction to the Tudors. He lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
Q: Why did you decide to write this book about the Titanic,
and what do you think accounts for the ongoing fascination with the ship and
its fate?
A: I was born and grew up in Belfast, the city where the
Titanic was built.
My great-grandfather, Tommy, told me stories of seeing the
ship leave Belfast in April 1912, as well as of the grief his father, and
thousands of others, felt when news broke that "the great ship,
Titanic," as they called it, had sunk on its inaugural voyage with such a
heavy loss of life.
So, I've grown up with the Titanic and as I've developed as
a historian I wanted to marry the two - the Titanic's tragedy into the wider
world that created, and destroyed, the ship.
Q: You focus on six people in the book--how did you choose
them, and what do you think each represents?
A: Great question. The book focusses mainly on six
passengers, all from First Class.
That, in itself, was a selection of sorts which I should
explain: firstly, I am fascinated by what makes privilege form, sustainable,
and precarious, then how it behaves when it begins to disintegrate. With the
Titanic sailing on the eve of an era, with a cataclysm round the corner,
modernity was shaking the class system.
Secondly, and more pragmatically, the upper classes at the
time left far more material remains by way of letters and writing than
passengers in Second or Third Class, which meant that inevitably if I set a
First Class life alongside a narrative of a passenger from Second or Third, the
latter would be less full in terms of detail, which I didn't think was
especially fair - nor satisfying for a reader.
That was because I wanted to really focus in, to show the
elite as being a relatively heterogeneous group, which they were.
I made a brief chart of the six kinds of "wealth"
that existed in the 1910s, then went through the Passenger List to lift out the
names of individuals who might correlate to that bit of society.
Then, I researched those individuals and narrowed it down
based on how interesting and relevant they were. I wanted each life I focused
on to tell a fascinating personal story but also to be a window into their
class.
The Countess of Rothes - suffragette, socialite, Red Cross
nurse - represented the old world of the aristocracy.
Thomas Andrews, the ship's designer, was a "son of the
British Empire," a man whose family had unambiguously benefitted from the
industrial expansion offered by Victorian and then Edwardian Britain. (He also
grew up in the town where I practiced for two of my failed driving tests, and
one of the successful, in Northern Ireland. So, it's always nice to have a
connection!)
John Thayer was a plutocrat, a participant in the age of the
American railway tycoon, as America rose to become the greatest economic
superpower on earth, a process which looked set to guarantee security for the
next generation, symbolised by his son, Jack, who was travelling on board with
him.
There was a new kind of privilege emerging in the form of
celebrity, so silent movie star and model Dorothy Gibson was picked for that -
and what a life she had!
Finally, I wanted to show that being in the upper classes
didn't safeguard everyone in it from some of the horrible prejudices of the
era, hence Ida Straus, first-generation American, philanthropist, and ardent
campaigner against anti-Semitism. Put together, I hope they give a feel of the
extraordinary changes happening in 1912.
Q: How did you research the book, and did you learn anything
that particularly surprised you?
A: I started with timelines, constructing an hour by hour
timetable of the voyage and, crucially, the sinking. I checked deck plans and
everything I could on the Titanic.
But there are two forces mentioned in the subtitle, so I
then went off to research private letters as well as social histories of the
forces I was dealing with that impacted my chosen figures - the question of
Irish independence, the decline of the British aristocracy, how movies were
made in 1911 and 1912, how Jewish immigrants experienced life in America before
the First World War.
I had great fun reading travel guides for first-class
passengers, some of which are still preserved in the Bodleian Library at
Oxford. I reached out to people and societies with private archives, like the
Straus Historical Society, who could not have been more helpful nor
encouraging.
So much surprised me, but truth be told it was the letters
of eyewitnesses which, twice, made me cry and I'm not much of a cryer.
Once, I found a tear on my face while sitting in a Belfast
library, reading about a woman who realised both her children had drowned. This
might sound absurd, but: the overwhelming pummelling impact of the trauma on
the survivors stripped a lot of the glamour from the Titanic for me - and
that's a good thing.
I was also very surprised to discover that Isidor Straus,
who served as a Democratic congressman for New York's 18th and co-owned Macy's,
had also been a blockade runner for the Confederacy during the Civil War.
It showed me how convoluted and complex identities could be,
as well as the moral quagmire of History. It was a fascinating story, which I
relate in full - and, I hope, sensitively - in the book.
Q: The book's subtitle is "The Sinking of the Titanic
and the End of the Edwardian Era." How would you describe the relationship
between the ship's sinking and the end of the era marked by the life of
England's King Edward VII, who had died two years earlier?
A: That's a really interesting point, because Edward VII
died in 1910, as you say.
I describe his funeral in chapter one, because the Countess
of Rothes attended it, and also because it was the symbolic, but not actual,
end of the era. In much the same way as the Titanic was a symbolic shattering
of Edwardian values but not their actual finale, I suppose.
It's very interesting, and telling I think, that we still
refer to it as the Edwardian era up until the Great War broke out in 1914. Even
though Edward's son, George V, was king for four of those years, I think the
era remained tied to the image of Edward VII in its opulence and confidence,
even as it sank into its twilight.
And it's that confidence and opulence which made ship like
the Titanic possible - she was a symbol of ocean-going might, yet she sank
disastrously. She was born from Edwardian confidence, yet her ending tapped
into and exacerbated the fears, the collective neuroses, lurking beneath that
confidence.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I've a few ideas and the luxury of a little time, so I'm
weighing up what to commit to next. It's a huge chunk of your life, because you
live for years with whatever you're writing. So, one or two ideas which I'm
narrowing down soon!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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