Crump, Ian. “The Real-life Story of Lost Love on the Sinking Titanic.” Daily Echo, February 12, 2026. https://www.dailyecho.co.uk/news/25841515.real-life-story-lost-love-sinking-titanic/.

Image Credit: Disasters and Shipwrecks, August 2, 2020.
One true story of lost love was of a local shopkeeper called Henry Morley and his young assistant, Kate Phillips. Henry was 40 and married, Kate just 19, and they were running away to America to set up home together, travelling under the assumed names of Mr and Mrs Marshall. Henry had given Kate a necklace of sapphires surrounded by diamonds on the morning of their voyage – widely considered to have been an inspiration for the “Heart of the Ocean” from the 1997 film. Their love affair ended in the pandemonium of the sinking when Henry put Kate into Lifeboat 11, whereupon he hugged her, holding on as the boat was lowered until he could hold on no more and was forced to step back.
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Edwards, Daisy. “One of the Biggest Mysteries About the Titanic Revolves Around Luxury Car That Would Be Worth Millions Today.” Supercar Blondie, February 11, 2026. https://supercarblondie.com/one-of-biggest-mysteries-about-titanic-luxury-car/.

Image: Volo Museum
The Titanic was full of mysteries, but did you know that one of the biggest involves a missing car that, if found, could be worth a h ig sum of money? The ship carried a single automobile on its maiden voyage, a 1912 Renault Type CB Coupe de Ville owned by American first-class passenger William Carter. It sank with the liner in April 1912 and has never been confirmed as found in modern dives. More than a century later, the question is not just where it is, but what could possibly be left of it.
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McClutchy, Sarah. “This Day in RI History: February 11, 1907 – New England’S Titanic.” What’s up Newp. Last modified February 11, 2026. https://whatsupnewp.com/2026/02/this-day-in-ri-history-february-11-1907-new-englands-titanic/.
On this day in 1907, the steamship Larchmont collided with the coal schooner Harry Knowlton in the worst maritime disaster in Rhode Island’s history. Between 150 and 200 lives were lost according to newspaper reports at the time. The exact number of deaths has been the subject of much speculation as the passenger list was lost with the ship. Only 17 survived, including the captain and other members of the crew.

U.S. Library of Congress
Public Domain
In Other News
Preston, Cheryl. “The Titanic and the Titan Had Much in Common.” History. Last modified February 11, 2026. https://vocal.media/history/the-titanic-and-the-titan-had-much-in-common.
It’s regrettable that 5 lives were lost on the Titan submersible that now lies at the bottom of the ocean near the Titanic. Not only are these two vessels in the same ocean but they have other similarities. Stockton Rush the captain of the sub made a statement that was eerily identical to what . Edward John Smith said about the 1912 luxury liner. Smith has been quoted as saying “Not even God can sink the Titanic” and during a 2017 interview with Chris Reid of CBS Rush said his vessel was unstoppable.
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Event Complex Aberdeen, “Rare Titanic Artefacts to Make Scottish Debut at Aberdeen Exhibition,” Press release, P&J Live, last modified February 10, 2026, https://www.pandjlive.com/news/rare-titanic-artefacts-to-make-scottish-debut-at-aberdeen-exhibition/.
This Spring, a major exhibition of original artefacts from the RMS Titanic will be presented in Aberdeen, as White Star Heritage brings its acclaimed collection to P&J Live from 26 March to 12 April 2026. The exhibition places rare and often deeply personal objects at the centre of the Titanic story, offering visitors a direct physical connection to the ship, its passengers, and its final voyage.
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———. “Titanic Museum in Branson Unveils Iconic Movie Props in New Exhibit.” Yahoo Entertainment, February 4, 2026. https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/movies/articles/titanic-museum-branson-unveils-iconic-192700903.html.
From props to original costume pieces, visitors can relive the most iconic moments from the film. The museum also has real artifacts from the wreckage and recreations of the ship’s interior. Ozarks First stopped by the grand opening of the gallery on Tuesday, Feb. 3, to see the pieces that people are most excited for. The main attraction of the exhibit is the iconic “door” that saved the character Rose in the film.
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Ratliff, Laura. “An Immersive Titanic Exhibit Opens Near Miami: Tickets, Dates, Details and More.” Time Out Miami, February 4, 2026. https://www.timeout.com/miami/news/this-immersive-titanic-exhibit-just-opened-right-outside-of-miami-020326.
“Titanic: An Immersive Voyage” has opened in Boynton Beach (less than an hour from Miami), turning one of history’s most over-familiar tragedies into a walk-through experience that’s part museum, part time machine. The show focuses on the details that typically get lost between Hollywood romance and the headline everyone knows. You’ll revisit the ship’s glamour and the catastrophe, but the exhibit also widens the frame to include the bigger cast around the sinking: Titanic’s sister ships, Olympic and Britannic; the rescue ship Carpathia; and the Californian, the vessel that famously remained nearby as the crisis unfolded. It even gives the iceberg its own origin story, tracing its journey from its “birth” in the polar region to its dissolution in the Atlantic after the disaster.
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Tripathi, Arin. “What Happened to the Olympic Ship? Titanic’s Sister Fought Fate for Decades.” OtakuKart, January 31, 2026. https://otakukart.com/what-happened-to-the-olympic-ship-titanics-sister-fought-fate-for-decades/.

Source: U.S. Library of Commerce/Wikimedia Commons
Public Domain
Picture this: a massive ocean liner, built to wow the world with luxury crossings between Southampton and New York, somehow powers through world wars, collisions, and economic crashes. That’s the story of RMS Olympic, the first of the famous trio from White Star Line sisters to the infamous Titanic and the short-lived Britannic. Launched in 1910, she hit the waves in 1911 as the biggest ship afloat, packed with grand staircases, lavish dining rooms, and enough space for over 2,000 passengers chasing comfort over speed. Fans flocked to her maiden voyage, but early bumps set the tone for a bumpy ride ahead.
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Harris, Margaret. “Saving the Titanic: The Science of Icebergs and Unsinkable Ships.” Physics World. Last modified January 30, 2026. https://physicsworld.com/a/saving-the-titanic-the-science-of-icebergs-and-unsinkable-ships/.
When the Titanic was built, her owners famously described her as “unsinkable”. A few days into her maiden voyage, an iceberg in the North Atlantic famously proved them wrong. But what if we could make ships that really are unsinkable? And what if we could predict exactly how long a hazardous iceberg will last before it melts? These are the premises of two separate papers published independently this week by Chunlei Guo and colleagues at the University of Rochester, and by Daisuke Noto and Hugo N Ulloa of the University of Pennsylvania, both in the US. The Rochester group’s paper, which appears in Advanced Functional Materials, describes how applying a superhydrophobic coating to an open-ended metallic tube can make it literally unsinkable – a claim supported by extensive tests in a water tank. Noto and Ulloa’s research, which they describe in Science Advances, likewise involved a water tank. Theirs, however, was equipped with cameras, lasers and thermochromic liquid crystals that enabled them to track a freely floating miniature iceberg as it melted.
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Suggested Reading
Behe, G. (2012). On board RMS Titanic: Memories of the Maiden Voyage. The History Press.
Ballard, Robert D. Exploring the Titanic. Reprint. Madison Press Books, 2014.
Ballard, Robert D., and Rick Archbold. The Discovery of the Titanic. New York, N.Y.?: Warner Books, 1987.
Ballard, Robert D., Lost Liners: From the Titanic to the Andrea Doria the Ocean Floor Reveals Its Greatest Lost Ships(Hyperion, 1998).
Brewster, H. (2013). Gilded Lives, Fatal Voyage: The Titanic’s First-Class Passengers and Their World. National Geographic Books.



