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The Titanic Memorial, Belfast. Memorials and monuments to victims of the sinking of the RMS Titanic exist in a number of places around the world associated with Titanic, notably in Belfast, Liverpool and Southampton in the United Kingdom; Halifax, Nova Scotia in Canada; and New York City and Washington, D.C. in the United States.
Titanic Engineers' Memorial; Titanic Kit; Titanic Memorial (New York City) Titanic Memorial (Washington, D.C.) Titanic Memorial, Belfast; Titanic Museum (Pigeon Forge, Tennessee) Titanic Musicians' Memorial; Titanic navigation bridge
The Jack Phillips memorial cloister in Godalming, commemorating the radio operator who remained at his post while Titanic sank Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Titanic Memorial .
The Titanic has gone down in history as the ship that was called unsinkable. [a] However, even though countless news stories after the sinking called Titanic unsinkable, prior to the sinking the White Star Line had used the term "designed to be unsinkable", and other pre-sinking publications described the ship as "virtually unsinkable". [16]
Scottish Opera has also staged many successful productions abroad, including Albert Herring in Florence, [6] Egisto (opera) in Venice, [7] tours in Germany, Austria, Portugal, France, Switzerland, Yugoslavia and Iceland and recent years including Peter Grimes and Tristan und Isolde in Lisbon; Macbeth at the Vienna International Festival and the European premiere of MacMillan's Ines de Castro ...
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Encyclopedia Titanica contains a wide range of information about the ship, her passengers and a variety of related subjects. Each passenger and crew member has a separate page containing at least basic biographical data, and many of these contain detailed biographies, photographs and contemporary news articles.
Within days of the Titanic disaster, suggestions were put forward in Belfast that the local victims should be commemorated with a memorial. Belfast City Council passed a resolution on 1 May 1912 stating that "the City of Belfast recognises with unbounded pride that in the hour of trial the fortitude of her sons failed not; and while she mourns for her dead, she rejoices in having given to the ...