Titanic: The Build

From the National Museums Northern Ireland Collection


The keel of Olympic was laid just before Christmas 1908 and that of Titanic in late March, 1909. The sister ships sat side by side on the stocks and as they gradually took shape inside an enclosure of gantries, cranes and scaffolding, they rose towards the sky and dwarfed increasingly the thousands of men who worked to bring ships into being.


The Build of the Titanic

The Irish writer, Filson Young likened the scene to the construction of half-a-dozen cathedrals.  There are well-known Titanic build photographs that confirm Young’s impressions of the almost nightmarish scale of operations. It was necessary and efficient to build the ships quickly and by October 1910 Olympic was ready for launching.   Titanic was ready for her launch in late May of 1911. Young was staggered that these machines – almost 300 yards (or 274 metres) in length, over 45,000 tons in weight, eleven-storey buildings in height -  could become earth’s largest moving objects. It all required imagination, organisation, efficiency and willpower.

Harland and Wolff Wokers, from the National Museums Northern Ireland CollectionVisit From an Author

A year before Olympic’s keel was laid, the author of Dracula, Bram Stoker, visited the Harland & Wolff shipyard and saw for himself how these huge ships were built.

In “the biggest and finest and best established” shipyard in the world, “there is omnipresent evidence of genius and forethought; of experience and skill; of organisation complete and triumphant”.

High praise indeed!  He reported with near disbelief that all 12,000 men who worked in Harland & Wolff in 1907 were paid their weekly wages on Friday afternoons in ten minutes!  Apart from an educated professional class of engineers and, draughtsmen, there was in Belfast a working-class elite that shipbuilders both created and drew upon, an “aristocracy of labour”, as one commentator put it, made up of expert workers achieving their skill from daytime training and night-time education. Many of the riveters, sheet-metal workers, boilermakers, fitters, turners and other skilled workers lived in the streets which lay in the shadow of the shipyard where they practised their trade.

It is fair to say that the city of Belfast built Titanic.
 

Watch our video on the build of the Titanicclick here for video


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User Comments 69

hi, this is great thanks for the info im currently doing a titanic tribute for the 14th and would appreciate it if people shared my video so everyone can see how hard the workers worked and how it touched us all look for the you tube name gaurdianofsakura on the 14th
robin 10 April 2012
great grandfather wasa riveter on the titanic, are there any records of the workers?

thanks so much
nina 10 April 2012
Please build another state of the art Titanic
Ted Salas 10 April 2012
I Always wanted Or like to have went to Ireland , It is on My Bucket List .... would be nice to se where it was built . And I just loved the Movie " Titanic ' I have watched it several times . still very emotional to watch. . Its sad so many Lives were lost .
Linda Stone 05 April 2012
My Grandad William Sweeney was a riveter on the titanic and when I watched Titanic with Len Goodman it showed just how hard he would`ve worked just for some idiot captain to sink it.
Dave Sweeney 31 March 2012
thomas galway worked on titanic anyone has anyone information on this
thomas galway 29 March 2012
i have always been an avid fan of the titanic and everything about it and when i read the stories it really does touch me.
mrs langdon 12 March 2012
well dhz ship is da most bright ship ever im glad dat yawl showed mhe how ms titanic was born!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



your never ever 4gotten we love you tuh da most amazing ship dat was ever made
keyshia 22 February 2012
hello i really love the titanic thank you for telling me about he titanic your so awsome
kaci 06 February 2012
The Titanic was a good ship
summer 02 December 2011
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