Cobden
Practically Family
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Story said:(Sept. 22) -- A novelist whose grandfather survived the Titanic's sinking has revealed a long-held family secret: that the man behind the ship's wheel turned it the wrong way, crashing into an iceberg and causing the ship's demise.
Louise Patten's grandfather Charles Lightoller was second officer on the Titanic's maiden -- and only -- voyage when it sank in April 1912. He was in his cabin when the boat struck the iceberg, and vowed to stay with the ship rather than go to a lifeboat. As it sank, he jumped into the water and was sucked down into the depths -- but then miraculously thrown back to the surface by an underwater explosion, and picked up by a lifeboat.
http://www.aolnews.com/world/articl...ring-error-sank-titanic/19643621?ncid=webmail
An intriguing theory, that falls down on the fact that Hitchins previous vessel was the HMT Dongola, a steam ship, and the lines he had previously served with also exclusively used steamships. Making a mistake like that would be like a modern driver hitting the accelerator instead of the brake as the right hand pedal on a Model T was the brake...
So, basically, rubbish.
However, the much vaunted safety improvements made after the Titanic's sinking did have, in one instance, a rather counterproductive effect: the extra lifeboats were a contributing factor in the capsizing of the the SS Eastland...