Titanic Passengers

British fashion designer Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon (1863 - 1935), one of the surviviors of the Titanic disaster of 14th April 1912, circa 1920. (Photo by Lasalle/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)


What is amazing about Titanic is the array of passengers who travelled on her. She was a floating town, carrying passenger representatives from each strictly divided class along with valets, maids, nannies, kitchen staff, stewards, engine crew and officers.
 

Passenger Classes on the Titanic

It is hard for us to imagine these rigid barriers between the classes which existed in late Edwardian times and the early reign of George V and Queen Mary.  Society has changed and blended so much within the past hundred years. Two world wars, the Great Depression and a more humanitarian attitude to life have wiped out the belief that people stayed within the limits of the life into which they were born. The standard of travel today is based on the ability to pay rather than the socio-economic background which affected the Titanic passengers.

Please visit titanic survivors page for Passengers survived.
 

Watch the Titanic Millionaires Video

Shipping Routes

Titanic was built to plough the North Atlantic route from Southampton to New York, a lucrative route for any shipping line because of the volume of passengers involved. She made two stops en route.

The first was at the French port of Cherbourg where many American first class passengers were taken on board to travel home after their grand tour of Europe. 

The last stop before heading out into the Atlantic and the fate we now know awaited her was at Queenstown, now called Cobh in County Cork, Ireland. Here, hundreds of steerage (third) class passengers boarded Titanic, many having sold everything they owned in order to buy a ticket for a new start. 
 

Diverse Passengers

The Titanic passenger list ranged from the richest people in the world to the poorest, setting out to make a new life in America. It is perhaps the range of people on board with a wide range of reasons for travel which makes the ship’s story so fascinating.  The class system which existed at the time ensured that these different social classes never met nor mixed while on board, except perhaps during the very last minutes of Titanic’s life.

Lists of Titanic's passengers and crew can be viewed on Encyclopedia Titanica.

Watch our video on Titanic Passengers

 

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User Comments 175

My husband's family never knew they had an ancestor in the ship's crew, William McQuillen. He was a fireman which meant he was one of the men who shovelled coal into the fires for the boilers. Would love to find out more on his family.
dianne mcquillen 10 June 2011
Is there an existing passenger list? My great aunt Elsie Bennett was on the ship as a nanny. I was wondering if any record exists.
shirley anderson 10 June 2011
My hubby's grandma's aunty was a survivor from Mayo in Ireland. She went on to live a happy life in New Jersey.
Tracey 09 June 2011
I love the Titanic! It's ever so fascinating, we are currently learning about it at school and I'm so interested.
Kaddy 06 June 2011
My mother said Grandfather survived.
painfid 04 June 2011
I saw a message on April 30, 2011 from Ashley Fuller. I was born Linda Fuller and have always been interested in Titanic.
linda 03 June 2011
This comment Is for Katherine M. Bradley who talked about her mother's first cousin, Bridget O'Driscoll. I was very surprised and happy to see that last name and even more happier to know that she resided In the county of Cork, Ireland. My family came from Ireland, same county of Cork, and used to spell their name O'Driscoll before they settled in America. If you could please contact me that would be great. My email address is darrendriskill@yahoo.com. Thank you very much.
Darrell Darren Driskill 02 June 2011
A member of our family, Henry James Evans, was senior pilot for White Star Line. He had a free ride from Southampton and got off at Queenstown. Lucky man.

He died in 1935 and is buried in Prestatyn cemetery.

I have a newspaper photograph of him standing on the Titanic as it arrived in Queenstown in 1912.
PETER BROWN 01 June 2011
The story in our family: my grandmother worked in New York City as a maid for a wealthy woman named Lillian who was on the Titantic (we do not know if she survived). My grandmother married and moved with my grandfather to Columbus, Ohio. Their daughter (my mother) was named Lillian after the wealthy lady.
Betty Orr 01 June 2011
I have always been fascinated with the Titanic and its story. The class system and the rich people. What did it matter in the end, they were all human beings and they all were in the same boat, if you can pardon the pun. Its story teaches lessons, both moral and about man's urges to build bigger and better, and to go further, faster and higher! So many lives lost in the bid for progress - was it all really worth it?

Titanic will always continue to fascinate and I must say that I would love to be able to see her at her location (impossible for me, a claustrophobic). May God bless her and all who bravely sailed in her!!!
Valerie 31 May 2011
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