W.T. Stead & the Titanic
The loss of the Titanic has involved The Army in the loss of a true friend, for there is, alas! only too much ground for believing that W. T. Stead is among the lost… Bramwell Booth (War Cry, April 27, 1912)
According to folklore, the supposedly clairvoyant W.T. Stead had foreseen his death on the Titanic decades earlier. Subsequently, when the stricken vessel began to sink, rather than try to save himself, he instead spent his last two hours on earth quietly reading a book in the first class smoking room. Or, so the story goes..
Despite widespread belief in this fanciful account of Stead’s final hours, its only written source seems to be Walter Lord’s quintessential retelling of the tragedy, A Night to Remember, published in 1956 and later made into a movie of the same name. In the latter (the only Titanic film to depict Stead) the editor’s calmness in the height of the disaster is admiringly observed by the ship’s designer, Thomas Andrews. In the book, however, the scene is described by survivor George Kemish, a fire stoker, who escaped in lifeboat no. 9 and later went on to correspond with the book’s author about his experience… Read More
Press Reports
- William T. Stead: Editor, Reformer (The Gleaner, April 25, 1912)
- W. T. Stead. A London Memorial. Journalists’ Tributes (The Times, July 6, 1920)
- Stead and Astor Cling to Raft (Worcester Telegram, April 20, 1912)
- William T. Stead – English Editor and “Author of If Christ Came to Chicago” (NY Times, April 16, 1912)
- Stead Prophesied a Violent Death (NY Times, April 23, 1912)
- Mr. W. T. Stead: Ex-Editor of the Northern Echo (The Northern Echo, April 17, 1912)
- The Sinking of the Titanic: Mr. W. T. Stead’s Career. (The Times, April 18, 1912)
- Story Mr. Stead Could have Told (The Daily Mirror, April 18, 1912)
- Fate of Mr. W. T. Stead (The Daily Mirror, April 20, 1912)
- Memorial Service for Mr. Stead (The Times, April 26, 1912)
- Stead’s Brother Indignant (The Providence Journal, April 20, 1912)
- Mr. Stead’s Will (The Times, June 11, 1912)
Tributes
- E.T. Cook on the Death of W T Stead (Contemporary Review, 1912)
- Henry Scott Holland on the Death of W T Stead (Contemporary Review, 1912)
- Millicent Garrett Fawcett on the Death of W T Stead (Contemporary Review, 1912)
- W T Stead – the Loss of a True Friend by Bramwell Booth (War Cry, April 27, 1912)
Miscellanous
- Letter from Stead to Mr. R. Penny (April 19, 1912 )
- Letter from Stead to the editor of the American Review of Reviews (April, 1912 )
- Telegram from Edith Harper April 18, 1912 (awaiting news after Titanic tragedy)
Related Texts
- From the Old World to the New by W. T. Stead (Review of Reviews, December, 1892)
- How the Mail Steamer went Down in Mid Atlantic (March 22, 1886)