The original manuscript of about 40 pages written by Helen Churchill Candee, left, is seen displayed next to an advertising White Star Line brochure, at the Paris Museum of Letters and Manuscripts on Tuesday. Helen Churchill Candee, a journalist who survived the April 14, 1912 Titanic shipwreck, recounted the last hours she spent on the ship in a manuscript that has been kept private by Churchill Candee's family until last year. It has inspired James Cameron's movie "Titanic". <br><small><B>Associated Press </B></small> <br> <hr width="250">
PARIS - A warm bath at the ready. The ship's engines whirring rhythmically. "Then the shock came."
So reads a survivor's handwritten account of the 1912 sinking of the Titanic, a manuscript that goes on view Wednesday for the first time at a private Paris museum. Reporters were given a preview Tuesday.
The 36-page description of the disaster by American passenger Helen Churchill Candee was sold at a British auction for $85,000 last year.
Gerard Lheritier, the museum's founder, said the manuscript inspired filmmaker James Cameron for the role of Rose, played by Kate Winslet, in his blockbuster 1997 film.
The text describes how she gave her locket to Edward Kent, a friend on board the ship, for safekeeping after the ship hit the iceberg that destroyed it. The locket was later found in the drowned man's jacket pocket.
Lheritier said the character was a bit "romanticized": Candee, a divorced journalist, was in her 50s. She hopped quickly onto the Titanic while rushing home from a trip to Europe after learning that her son had been killed - in one of the earliest crashes in aviation history.
In the manuscript, replete with crossed-out words and running-ink blots, Candee describes how the Titanic rammed into an iceberg on April 15, 1912, and was saved after climbing into lifeboat No. 6 as the ship sank.
She said she had been preparing for a "stinging hot bath." Among other details, she described how the lifeboats were reserved for women and children, and how one elderly woman said, "I'm staying with my husband" on board the ship.
Much of the account described personal anecdotes and the setting-sail of the voyage. The collision takes place on page 17, when she describes a feeling of being on top of a mountain in the sea and eerie silence right afterward.
After her return home, Candee published a magazine article about the disaster and wrote a more raw account - the manuscript that was never published. Her descendants had kept the handwritten account until last year, when it was auctioned by Henry Aldridge and Son house in western England with the Paris museum as the buyer.
The museum display also features condolence letters, on-board documents and a telegram in mid-voyage announcing that the Titanic was smoothly crossing the Atlantic with all passengers "safe and sound" - before disaster struck.
The exhibit "Titanic, au coeur de l'ocean" ("Titanic, in the Heart of the Ocean") runs through Oct. 28 at the Museum of Letters and Manuscripts.
On the Net:
Posted in Visual on Wednesday, May 23, 2007 12:00 am Updated: 8:36 pm.
© Copyright 2009, North County Times - Californian, Escondido, CA | Terms of Service and Privacy Policy