Irish Central

Rare photo shows mass burial for Titanic victims

- Michelle K. Smith

A rare photo of a mass funeral for Titanic victims was discovered just over a century a er the 1912 tragedy.

The picture is thought to have been just days a er the Titanic famously sank on April 15, 1912, during its maiden voyage. The black and white photograph shows victims stacked in body bags aboard the rescue ship the CS Mackay-Bennett.

On the right-hand side of the photo, two men push a body bag into the sea while a reverend leads a funeral service. Priest praying over the bodies of Titanic victims before mass burial at sea - April, 1912. pic.twitter.com/FvRS8qMlcv

- History Collection (@HistoryCol­lect2) April 4, 2019 RD 'Westy' Legate, 4th officer of the CS Mackay-Bennett, reportedly kept the picture with his belongings, only to be discovered by a descendant decades later. In 2013, Henry Aldridge & Son auctioneer Henry Aldridge said about the photo: “It has always been said that the process was dignified and organized but piles of bodies are neither of those. The bodies are piled up waisthigh.”

“This picture shows the dirty side of the business.”

The rare photo, like many other artifacts from the events surroundin­g the Titanic disaster, was put to auction in October 2013 and was expected to fetch between $5,000 and $8,000 at auction, though the final selling price was not disclosed.

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Titanic pictured in Cobh Harbour off the coast of Ireland.

The Belfast-built Titanic hit an iceberg off the coast of Newfoundla­nd on April 15, 1912, on its maiden voyage to New York. Previously called “unsinkable” because it could stay afloat with four of its chambers flooded, the Titanic sank a er five of its chambers filled with water. Titanicʼs owners, The White Star Line, contracted the CS MackayBenn­ett to collect the bodies.

She le Nova Scotia on April 17 and arrived at the wreck site on April 21.

The Mackay-Bennett collected 306 bodies and 166 of these were given a burial at sea. Burials were given on the evenings of April 21, 22, 23, and on the a ernoon of April 24 when the photograph is thought to have been taken.

The Daily Mail quoted Aldridge, “The Titanic has a beginning, middle, and end. This isnʼt one of the most pleasant or glamorous but it brings a certain level of realism to the story.” * Originally published in 2013, updated in April 2024.

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