Yorkshire Post

Hollywood joins bid to rescue Titanic’s treasures

Director James Cameron joins diver who discovered wreck of doomed liner in appeal to save rare artefacts

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

THE REPLICA of the grand staircase on the Titanic from which Dr Bob Ballard spoke yesterday was missing one of its embellishm­ents.

A decorative bronze cherub was lost in limbo, its future threatened by a financial crisis.

It was Dr Ballard’s mission, he said, to bring it home to Britain.

The cherub is among some 5,500 artefacts recovered from the Titanic’s undersea grave over the course of seven expedition­s between 1987 and 2004.

The others include the ship’s whistles, jewellery, luggage, porcelain dishes, floor tiles, silver cutlery and an unopened bottle of champagne.

The American company which owns them has filed for bankruptcy, and the fear that the collection will be broken up was what had brought Dr Ballard to Belfast, where Titanic was built.

There, in the museum dedicated to the ship and more than 1,500 people who died on its maiden voyage in 1912, he launched a £14m appeal for their rescue.

Speaking from a podium halfway up the oak staircase, one of several faithful replicas in the museum, he said: “I’m lending my voice to this campaign as it is the right thing to do.

“This bid is the only viable option to retain the integrity of the Titanic collection. The collection deserves to be returned home to where its journey began.”

Dr Ballard, who had discovered the wreck of Titanic in 1985, he was joined via videolink by James Cameron, the Hollywood director of the 1997 epic, who said he felt a “deep responsibi­lity” to the ship.

“Once Titanic is in your life, it doesn’t leave easily,” said Mr Cameron, who has made 33 dives to its grave over a 10-year period.

“You feel responsibl­e to get the story right and honour the dead and the tragedy,” he said.

“I went to the wreck site for a purpose, to film the Titanic for a movie but I came away with a sense of a greater purpose which is to tell that story by whatever means.”

The bid for the collection of artefacts, which also includes a section of the ship’s hull, is a joint initiative by the Belfast museum, the Titanic Foundation, National Museums Northern Ireland and the National Maritime Museum.

Mr Cameron and Dr Ballard met museum executives at the American headquarte­rs of the National Geographic Society a year ago. Following the meeting, the society pledged $500,000 to help with fundraisin­g.

Its chief executive Michael Ulica said: “The Titanic disaster was an unpreceden­ted tragedy that captivated the world and still resonates with many people today.

“The repatriati­on of the shipwreck’s artefacts presents an historic opportunit­y to honour the Titanic’s legacy and the memories of all who perished.”

Mr Cameron, who observed that he had “spent more time on the ship than the captain did”, added: “One of the concerns is that the collection would be broken up, sold privately; the bankruptcy court might award the company the opportunit­y to break up the collection, to sell it piecemeal and it would disappear from the public eye.

“That’s why people who feel some responsibi­lity around Titanic have stepped up.

“If it’s sold privately that would be wrong; it’s a part of the world heritage. It’s an incredible piece of history.”

Once Titanic is in your life, it doesn’t leave easily.

Film director James Cameron.

 ?? MAIN PICTURE: GRANGER/REX/SHUTTERSTO­CK. ?? PIECES OF HISTORY: Top, the Titanic just before leaving Southampto­n on her maiden voyage on April 10, 1912; above from left, a model of the wreck of the ship at the Titanic Belfast museum, inset, during the launch of the bid; James Cameron, the director of the blockbuste­r film based on the tragedy, is backing the initiative.
MAIN PICTURE: GRANGER/REX/SHUTTERSTO­CK. PIECES OF HISTORY: Top, the Titanic just before leaving Southampto­n on her maiden voyage on April 10, 1912; above from left, a model of the wreck of the ship at the Titanic Belfast museum, inset, during the launch of the bid; James Cameron, the director of the blockbuste­r film based on the tragedy, is backing the initiative.

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