The Asian Age

Titanic items fetch many times £ 100,000

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London: More than 100 rare Titanic items, including a menu from the ship’s firstclass restaurant, have fetched several hundred thousand pounds at an auction in the UK, over a century after the ocean liner sank. The menu sold for £ 60,000 and a small locker key went for £ 62,000 at the sale organised by Henry Aldridge & Son Auctioneer­s in Devizes, Wiltshire.

“The auction exceeded our expectatio­ns. The over 100 rare Titanic items have fetched several hundred thousand pounds,” said auctioneer Andrew Aldridge, without giving out the exact figure fetched by the items. Aldridge said the sale attracted interest from bidders across the world.

“The menu, a deck plan and a locker key attracted intense bidding. Interest in Titanic items goes on unabated,” he said. “There was competitio­n for the rarest pieces as people want to own the best items. The items have some amazing stories behind them,” he added.

The menu was part of Lurette’s collection — a series of items once owned by maid Elise Lurette — which sold for a total of £ 100,000.

French- born Lurette was one of about 700 people who survived when the passenger liner hit an iceberg on its maiden voyage on April 14, 1912, killing more than 1,500 people. In her coat pocket was a menu, dated April 12, listing foods such as mutton chops, Melton Mowbray pie and tapioca pudding. A deck plan used by Lurette to help find her way to a lifeboat was sold for £ 33,000, almost double its guide price. A letter by engineer Joseph Bell describing how the Titanic almost hit two other liners, as it left Southampto­n docks, sold for £ 24,000 and a tiny locker key owned by Southampto­n man Sidney Sedunary fetched £ 62,000.

Sedunary’s body was later recovered and his possession­s, his pocket watch and keys to his cabin — number 45 on E deck — were sent to his wife Madge.

 ??  ?? “The menu, a deck plan and a locker key attracted intense bidding. Interest in
Titanic items goes on unabated. There was competitio­n for the rarest pieces as people want to own the best items,” said auctioneer Andrew Aldridge
“The menu, a deck plan and a locker key attracted intense bidding. Interest in Titanic items goes on unabated. There was competitio­n for the rarest pieces as people want to own the best items,” said auctioneer Andrew Aldridge

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