Captain of the Carpathia

The seafaring life of Titanic Hero Sir Arthur Henry Rostron

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A Boy and the Sea

by Barbara Clements

How did a boy who lived in Bolton, England, almost 30 miles inland, develop a longing to go to sea? His family was in the cotton-bleaching business. Bolton was known for its bleach works and had little connection with the sea. Yet, Arthur Rostron knew by the age of six that he wanted to go to sea. We can only guess because Rostron did not mention how his interest developed when he wrote his memoires.

Non-Fictional Sea Stories

For over 300 years before Rostron’s birth, English ships had been embarking voyages of discovery and emigration. England still held Canada and other colonies in the Americas. Captain James Cook, had made several voyages to discover the eastern coast of Australia and the Hawaiian Islands. HMS Beagle had carried the young Charles Darwin on a voyage that gave him world-changing ideas.

All of these stories appeared in newspapers and books and general conversation. Young Arthur would probably have heard of or even read many of these stories of the sea.

Fictional Sea Stories

There is always the Odyssey and the adventures of Odysseus to inspire a young boy learning Latin. Swift’s Travels Into Several Remote Nations of the World. By Lemuel Gulliver, better known as Gulliver’s Travels, was published in 1726 and was popular from the start. Arthur probably did not read any of the stories of Sinbad the Sailor because they did not reach a wide English-reading audience until the late nineteenth century.

To really inspire a young man in the mid-nineteenth century there were the books of Frederick Marryat who invented the nautical fiction genre. Marryat was born in London in 1792. He tried to run off to join the Navy several times and finally, at fourteen, did so. His father, a member of Parliament, obtained a place for Frederick as a midshipman on board HMS Imperieuse.

Marryat had a distinguished naval career. Promoted to commander in 1815 at the end of the Napoleonic Wars, he was assigned to take news of Napoleon’s death to England in 1821. Marryat also developed a flag signaling system known as Marryat’s Code.

He began writing novels while still in the navy, and the modest success of his first, The Naval Officer, lead him to resign his commission in November 1830. Marryat eventually published 26 books, most of them novels involving seafaring.

His novels were very successful and influenced writers such as C. S. Forester and Patrick O’Brian. Mark Twain, Joseph Conrad, and Earnest Hemingway also admired his books. Set in the time of the Napoleonic Wars Marryat’s fiction involved young men working their way up into command.

His Influences

We don’t know which stories inspired Rostron, but many possibilities could have inspired a land-bound boy to want a career at sea.

Filed Under: Rostron

One Hundred Percent Sailorman: The Life of “Titanic Hero” Sir Arthur Henry Rostron

by Barbara Clements

Maritime Museum of the Atlantic

Eric is scheduled to talk about Sir Arthur Henry Rostron at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax, Nova Scotia on July 19 at 7:30. The talk is titled, One Hundred Percent Sailorman: The Life of “Titanic Hero” Sir Arthur Henry Rostron.

 

 

If you are in Halifax at that time, drop on by!

Filed Under: C.O.T.C. Book, Rostron

Sir Arthur Rostron, Celebrity

by Barbara Clements

Sir Arthur Rostron cigarette card

Digital Collections, The New York Public Library

This tobacco card shows Sir Arthur Rostron. It is #28 in a series of 32 famous English ships and officers. While the card mentions that Rostron was captain of the Carpathia, there is no reference to the rescue of Titanic survivors.

Before People magazine, before cereal boxes, even before moving pictures, there were tobacco, cigarette, and trade cards. These cards provided people a way to see the world outside their own neighborhoods. Nineteenth-century newspapers carried few pictures and picture magazines were unknown.

These little cards carried images of the well-known beauties of the day, military heros, business magnates, baseball and cricket players. They also had pictures of places, animals, and plants from around the world. The cards provided a window to the world for people who would see very little during their lifetimes.

The cigarette cards (tobacco cards in the UK) were used as stiffeners in cigarette packs. In 1850s some enterprising soul figured out that they could be used for advertising. By issuing a series of cards on one topic and encouraging people to collect the whole set, cigarette companies could encourage people to buy their brand. Companies in other trades also issued cards. One side would carry a picture and the reverse would have some explanation of the picture and an advertisement for a company or brand.

The cards were issued up until World War II created a shortage of paper. By the end of the war, there were movies, newspapers carried pictures and there were magazines with lavish pictures of movie stars. There was no place for the cards except for collectors. The largest cigarette card collection in the world contains over two million cards. It was bequeathed to British Museum in 1995.

 

Filed Under: Rostron

Rostron’s Mauretania

by Barbara Clements

View Pathé silent newsreel footage of the legendary Mauretania in 1924. Arthur Rostron’s favorite ship lies at anchor receiving passengers via tender. The film gives good views of the ship from many angles, including from directly ahead showing the fine lines of her hull. Captain Rostron appears in the last twelve seconds of the video, holding a chart and with binoculars.

Filed Under: Mauretania, Rostron

Rostron reads Rostron.

by Eric Clements

In 1931 Commodore Sir Arthur Rostron retired from Cunard. In that same year he wrote Home from the Sea, his memoir of his forty-four years of adventures afloat. Here he reads excerpts from Chapter V, “The Loss of the Titanic.”

Filed Under: Rostron

About the Author

AuthorEric Clements is professor of history at Southeast Missouri State University. The Atlantic liners were his earliest historical interest, an interest that led him to serve an enlistment in the U.S. Coast Guard and to write Captain of the Carpathia. His unpublished research projects include writing a history of the Second World War-era, U.S. Coast Guard cutter Mohawk for his master's thesis and two vessel histories for the "Historic American Engineering Record."

 

He is also the author of After the Boom in Tombstone and Jerome, Arizona: Decline in Western Resource Towns (University of Nevada Press, 2003, reissued 2014), and of numerous articles and book reviews about the history and historic preservation of the American West.

Around the Web

From CNN: Titanic Survivor's letter: 'Disgraceful' treatment after rescue (2015)

From Smithsonian: Why the Titanic Still Fascinates Us (2012)

From YouTube: Scenes from Capathia's arrival in New York, 18 April 1912 (2014)

From History Channel: 5 Things You May Not Know About Titanic's Rescue Ship (2012)

From NUMA: Wreck of the Carpathia, Titanic's Rescuer, Found (2000)

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