Home





Our Travel Series

Honeymoon Travel
Travel In America
Travel In Canada
Travel With Children
Hiking And Camping
More Travel Articles

Our Travel Section


Vacation to the Coast
and stay in a
Beach Vacation Rental


Travel Spain/Portugal
Cheap Flights
Travel Resource Center


go card usa





Travel Articles

Budget Travel Secrets

Choosing the right accommodation for the budget traveler

Cruise line adventures for the budget traveller

Finding Great online deals for the budget traveler

Getting the cheapest deal on your airfare

How to get the best deals on your vacation

Money saving tips for the young traveler

Package deals - A good strategy for the budget traveler

Travel and Learn on a Budget



Sitemap
Link Partners
Contact Us



Save 50-75% on Flights and Hotels Using Special Travel Agent Only Rates

Read more here >>








 

Maritime Museum Halifax
And The Story Of The Doomed Ocean Liner Titanic

 

The story of the doomed ocean liner Titanic has captured the imagination of people all over the world since the day it sank. Halifax, in Nova Scotia, Canada is a largely unknown part of Titanic history.

After the Titanic sank, the White Star Line chartered four ships from Canada to search for survivors. Two of them, the MacKay-Bennett and the Minia, were from Halifax.

Of the 328 bodies recovered from the disaster site, 119 were so badly damaged or deteriorated they were buried at sea. The remaining 209 were brought to Halifax for identification, where possible. 150 of those people were buried in one of three Halifax cemeteries, based on religion (Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish), giving Halifax one of the largest concentrations of Titanic passenger burials in the world.

The Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax houses the largest collection of wooden Titanic artifacts in the world in their permanent exhibit, Titanic: The unsinkable ship and Halifax, which opened in 1998.

One of the centerpieces of the collection is a wooden deck chair, one of the only intact ones in the world known to match those in photos of the ship. A grandchild of Reverend Henry W. Cunningham gave the chair to the museum. Reverend Cunningham received the chair in recognition for his services in conducting many of the sea burials for Titanic victims.

One of the most moving items on display is the log of wireless operator Robert Hunston, from Cape Race, Newfoundland. It is a condensed log of all the distress calls from the ocean liner the night it sank. Reading the log brings home the reality of the disaster and the amazingly short time in which it occurred.

For more information on Halifax's role in the Titanic aftermath, visit the city's Titanic web page at http://www.halifax.ca/history/titanicmain.html.





The Ultimate Disney World Saving

“See How Easily You Can
Have A Disney World Vacation For A
Fraction Of What Others Pay”

You Don't Have To Be Rich To Have An Extravagant Disney World Vacation!

Read more here >>




Click Here To
Return from Maritime Museum Halifax to the Travel Canada Articles