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An Inauspicious Beginning?

Just after noon on Wednesday 10 April 1912, with all her passengers and crew safely on board, the gang-planks were drawn up and RMS Titanic set sail from Southampton. As she was pulled from her berth by the tugboat Vulcan, throngs of people gathered on the dock to cheer her off, while hundreds of passengers congregated on her decks, waving farewell to the crowds below.

Tentatively at first, the colossal ship turned to port side and began to make her way down the narrow corridor of water, which gave way to the River Test, and which would in turn carry Titanic into the harbour. Slowly gathering speed, she glided past a number of ships, including the Oceanic and the New York, which were moored in the channel.

Titanic’s bulk made the task of manoeuvring the mammoth vessel down the narrow strait difficult – at one point there was hardly eighty feet between Titanic and the stationary vessels. Spectators looked on nervously, fearing a collision. However, as Titanic’s bow drew level with that of the New York, it seemed the danger had passed.

Then, quite without warning, the thick ropes which tethered the New York

Titanic: History in an Hour

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