I decided since the Titanic exhibit is finally in town to visit the grave of a Titanic survivor buried in Detroit. You can read about it here:
http://www.motorgay.net/2012/03/detr...s-titanic.html
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I decided since the Titanic exhibit is finally in town to visit the grave of a Titanic survivor buried in Detroit. You can read about it here:
http://www.motorgay.net/2012/03/detr...s-titanic.html
awesome...thanks for sharing
There was Frank Goldsmith too-he lived in Cotktown & would cry whenever somebody hit a home run, because he said it was the same sound the passengers made when the ship sank: http://www.titanic1.org/articles/tit...ndpresent4.asp
Titanic Survivor Michael "Ty" Joseph is buried in Resurrection Cemetery, Clinton Township.
Both men have entries on the Findagrave site.
You mean the Titanic exhibit is buried with the survivor?? Doesn't make sense....
Kidding ;)
Somewhat off topic is a link I found in the same blog posted in the first message above. It's a collage of photos which were taken in East Germany just after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Those buildings pictures made some amazing transformations and "Motorgay" asks himself if this is not possible for Detroit. There are some interesting parallels there.
Here's the link.
I think this building really takes the cake! This is what the building looked like in 1990. Nothing was done to it after the bombardments of WWII. The upper portion was gone.
http://cdn3.spiegel.de/images/image-...eryV9-ctqy.jpg
And now look at what they've done! I'm sure some library pictures were used to reconstruct this building but the transformation is staggering!!!
http://cdn2.spiegel.de/images/image-...eryV9-mtpq.jpg
Unbelievable!
Sort of on the subject of Woodmere, I don't know if scrappers did this, this crypt is missing one of it's heavy doors. The door has a green color, maybe copper? Also, in the second photo, vandalism? Although, I did see some of these crypts that have large marble slabs, some of them, the slabs are "bowed" I don't know what would cause a solid marble slab to bow.
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i took pics of those mausoleums...couldn't believe someone could be so disrespectful. and the one with the missing marble really creeped me out. quite a few of the tombs at that cemetery were in similar shape [[missing doors, broken windows, etc.).
I went to the Titanic exhibit yesterday. There is a nice write-up of David Vartanian on the wall in the room that shows the names of the passengers [[and whether they survived or not).
A considerable number of Titanic surivors ended up living in the Detroit area. The second-to-last living American female survivor was Winifred Quick Van Tongerloo who lived in Detroit many years and passed away in Lansing in 2002 age 98, at which point only one American survivor remained, a woman named Lilian Asplund in Massachusetts .
Also, I believe Ty Joseph may have been the last American male survivor to pass away. Encyclopedia titanica web site is down currently, I tried to search the site for info on Mr. Joseph.
http://articles.latimes.com/1991-05-21/news/mn-2124_1_joseph-titanic-michael
I've been planning to go to this exhibit. I went to the 2004 exhibit at the Detroit Science Center and was very impressed with how it was presented. I've been wondering if this is essentially the same exhibit with a few more or less artifacts. Has anyone been to both?
I'm assuming it's going to be particularly crowded this weekend since Sunday is the centenary anniversary of the sinking.
This article has a list of the 60-ish Michigan-bound Titanic passengers and their survivor/casualty status following the sinking.
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/2...|img|FRONTPAGE
I just noticed -- and maybe the pic isn't big enough -- but it sure looks like the ship on that tombstone is the Olympic, not the Titanic.
Olympic was the older sister ship her gave her name to that class of ocean liner.
You can tell the difference between the ships because the forward end of Titanic's promenade deck was enclosed. Olympic's was not. More original images exist of Olympic from that time because it was the highly touted first ship of that class and, obviously, it didn't sink.
Images of Olympic are very commonly confused with Titanic. I was a Titanic buff as a kid, before Bob Ballard discovered the wreck in 1985, and I still remember a lot of nerdy stuff like that.