An indignant letter written by a Titanic survivor to a friend in New York sold at auction this week for $11,875, according to RR Auction in Boston.
The remarks were written
on Lady Lucy Duff-Gordon's personal letterhead and dated May 27, 1912
-- six weeks after HMS Titanic struck an iceberg and sank on its maiden
voyage -- and seem to indicate that she and her husband, Sir Cosmo
Duff-Gordon, didn't receive such a warm welcome home after their rescue.
"According to the way we've been
treated by England on our return we didn't seem to have done the right
thing in being saved at all!!!! Isn't it disgraceful?" Lady Duff-Gordon
wrote.
The prominent London fashion
designer and her husband, a Scottish baronet, escaped by boarding
Lifeboat 1, which transported 12 passengers despite having capacity for
40.
Fewer than one-third of the more
than 2,200 people aboard Titanic survived, hundreds fewer than could
have lived if all of the lifeboats had been deployed and filled.
The
couple were the only two passengers asked to testify during the British
Wreck Commissioner's inquiry into the sinking. Their testimony, along
with allegations that Cosmo had bribed the crew to row away faster
rather than try to rescue others, made them popular fodder for tabloids.
Lifeboat 1 became known as the "Money Boat."
Rumors
that the Duff-Gordons tried to deter the crew from making other rescues
were never corroborated, but Lady Duff-Gordon later said her husband
was "brokenhearted over the negative coverage for the rest of his life,"
according to a news release from RR Auction.
"We remain fascinated by the Titanic tragedy and will for years to come," RR Auction's Bobby Livingston said.
A cup and saucer from the Titanic sold for $13,750.
Also
auctioned was a letter Grateful Dead front man Jerry Garcia sent to a
former Vogue cover model he met at a New York party in 1980.
The undated letter was postmarked June 22, 1982.
In
the letter, which sold for $32,500, Garcia asks the woman, "Pardon my
handwriting, this is the first letter I've written in years."
He
includes a sketch with the words, "Grateful Dead just played our first
outdoor show of the year at a place called the Greek Theatre."
The historic Berkeley, California, music venue would become a home base for the band. Garcia died in 1995.
The
auction item that pulled in the most was a signed 1965 Mosrite Ventures
Guitar that belonged to Johnny Ramone. It sold for $71,875.
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