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  3. sailed BACK to the iceberg, I wonder how many people they could have placed on it?

sailed BACK to the iceberg, I wonder how many people they could have placed on it?

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    Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — A Night to Remember


    film-collector — 12 years ago(April 25, 2013 10:52 PM)

    sailed BACK to the iceberg, I wonder how many people they could have placed on it?
    These stupid thoughts enter my mind occasionally!

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      Sphinxara — 12 years ago(April 29, 2013 11:00 AM)

      None, probably. The iceberg was not of a regular shape and no one knows how stable it was, especially after getting rammed. Having people jump from ship to 'berg would not have been safe. Now if there had been some solid, flat pack ice nearby.
      Your name is of no importance and you live in the pipe in the upstairs water closet.

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        movienut710 — 12 years ago(June 17, 2013 05:37 PM)

        Hello Friends, This is a link to Chapter 7 in a librivox free audio version of Surviving 2nd Class Passenger Lawrence Beesley's book "THE LOSS OF THE SS TITANIC"
        http://ia600508.us.archive.org/32/items/loss_titanic_1107_librivox/lossoftitanic_07_beesley.mp3
        At 16 minutes, 24 seconds into this Chapter, Mr. Beesley Remarks that it would have been Quite Feasible to Land Persons from the Lifeboats on the Flatter Portions of the Ice Field, Had they known it was there. I personally find this potential method of Survival Fascinating and am surprised it is not more well known that Beesley felt this was the case. His account is, I believe, considered one of the most Accurate, so You'd think his opinion would Carry Weight. I think Simply because the Idea of Landing People on an Ice field in Mid Ocean, and then attempting to return to the ship (or site of the sinking, by this time) for more Passengers sounds so Far-Fetched that historians Just don't dwell on the fact that it may have actually been possible. Just a Theory, And of course, even with Night Vision, We all Know they Couldn't have gotten to the Ice Field and back with too much time to spare. Still Very Interesting none the less

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          movienut710 — 10 years ago(May 25, 2015 07:15 PM)

          Not to mention it might be tough getting people to volunteer to hop out of a lifeboat and on to an ice floe in mid ocean at night. Still, it may have been possible, according to Beesley

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            sage2112 — 10 years ago(August 30, 2015 10:59 PM)

            I sometimes wonder why (or if) more men weren't scrambling to find pieces of wood to float on - like the one guy who was tying the deck chairs together. I guess in the chaos and panic and short timeframe, the poor souls just didn't have much of a chance. Such a shame.

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              movienut710 — 10 years ago(September 01, 2015 01:10 PM)

              Sage 2112, I had a friend who was a career navy man, and he told me 2 1/2 hours is more than enough time for those in the know to make adequate emergency flotation devices.
              That said, a lot of people Did not understand the seriousness of the situation until things got very bad, and then did not have time.
              Check out this very, very cool youtube video, based 100% on survivor accounts.
              www.youtube.com/watch?v=CsaDyavJo1U
              The first several quotes are all about how no one thought the damage was significant or life-threatening at all. That it was initially thought to be a joke.
              Although a bunch of unsteerable makeshift rafts would be quite the chore to round up the next morning.
              And who knows? As you speculated, there may have been survivors on rafts who drifted off and were not picked up. That fate would really bite the big one

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                eolloe — 10 years ago(October 18, 2015 08:46 PM)

                A ship attempting to rescue anyone an iceberg would have risked damage to itself.

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