In the early morning hours of April 15, 1912. the White Star ocean liner RMS Titanic struck an iceberg en route to New York City and sank in the Atlantic Ocean. Survivors were rescued by the Cunard liner Carpathia and brought to their berth at Pier 54 on the rainy evening of April 18.
On that very spot today, a fanciful waterfront development juts out into the Hudson River, a place called Little Island which opened in 2021. This recreational oasis will draw thousands of people, New Yorkers and tourists alike, this spring and summer.
But on the southern side of Little Island, peering out of the water, are dozens of wooden posts – these are the remains of the former Pier 54.
And it was on this pier, on April 18, 1912, that survivors of the Titanic disembarked and touched land.
This is the story of the places that figured into the aftermath and the story of how New York memorialized those lost to the tragedy.
And in the end we return to Little Island and to the ghost of Pier 54, the place where this disaster became reality for most people. Where survivors were greeted with joy and where many hundreds of people faced the reality that their loved ones were never coming home.
Visit our website for images and more information.
FURTHER READING:
A short history of New York City’s various Titanic memorials
The doctor, the heiress and the accidental nanny: New York women who survived the Titanic
A haunting look inside the Lusitania
FURTHER LISTENING:
Chelsea Piers: New York City in the Age of the Ocean Liner
The Complicated History of the Waldorf-Astoria
How Chelsea Became A Neighborhood
Support the Bowery Boys Podcast on Patreon
#345 LaGuardia's War on Pushcarts: The Creation of Essex Street Market
Rewind: On The Radio: A History of the Airwaves
#344 Ghostbusters (Bowery Boys Movie Club)
#343 Literary Horrors of New York City
#342 Ghost Stories of Old New York (ALIVE at Joe's Pub)
#341 The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Rewind: The Mystery of the Central Park Obelisk
#340 The Real Life Adventures of Tom Thumb
Rewind: The Revolutionary Tavern of Samuel Fraunces
#339 James H. Williams and the Red Caps of Grand Central Terminal
Rewind: The American Museum of Natural History
#338 A New Deal for the Arts: Murals, Music and Theatrical Mayhem
#337 Robert Moses and the Art of the New Deal
Rewind: TESLA -- The Inventor in Old New York
#336 The War on Newspaper Row
#335 Pulitzer vs Hearst: The Rise of Yellow Journalism
Rewind: The Land of the Lenape
#334 Midnight Cowboy (Bowery Boys Movie Club)
Rewind: The Secret Origin of Comic Books
#333 Tearing Down King George: The Monumental Summer of 1776
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Southern Mysteries Podcast
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
The Rest Is History
Revolutions