114 years ago today, the RMS Titanic sank in the North Atlantic, and on board that night was its youngest passenger, a baby just nine weeks old named Millvina Dean.
Apparently her family wasn’t even supposed to be on that ship. They had originally booked passage on another vessel, but had to change plans last minute when that voyage was cancelled, which led to them being reassigned to the Titanic.
She was traveling with her parents, Bertram and Eva Dean, and her two-year-old brother, Vere, the family was staying in steerage, the most affordable way to cross the Atlantic at the time. After the iceberg situation, word began to spread through the ship and people were being directed up toward the lifeboats. Her mother got into one with both children, and Millvina, who was so small, was placed into a canvas bag and lowered down into the boat. There was no room for her father, Bertram Dean, who had to stay back and did not survive.
It didn't help his fate that where you were on the ship that night mattered, with passengers in steerage having a harder time reaching the lifeboats. Later in life, Millvina said she believed her father might have had a better chance if their situation on board had been different.
All three were later picked up by the RMS Carpathia and taken to New York. From there, they eventually returned to England on another ship, the RMS Adriatic. By then, word had spread, and when they arrived, people were waiting just to see her, lining up to hold the baby who had been on the Titanic, with officials stepping in to keep things moving.
Interesingly enough Millvina later said she didn’t even know she was on the Titanic until she was about eight years old, when her mother finally told her what had happened.
Millvina Dean lived to be 97 years old, becoming the last surviving passenger from the Titanic before her passing in 2009, and although she had no memory of that night, her story stayed connected to it for the rest of her life.
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