
Elizabeth Gladys ‘Millvina’ Dean, born Feb. 2, 1912, was two months old when she left on the maiden voyage of the Titanic. She died Sunday on the ninety-eighth anniversary of the launching of the ill-fated vessel that was billed as “practically unsinkable.” The Titanic sank on its maiden voyage, and Millvina never married, eventually becoming an old maid–an outdated term, but relevant here.
The Titanic saga was a ‘mass event’ that reached the awareness of millions at the time and has lived on. As such, it attracted synchronicities. One of the most startling ones was related to a novel called, Futility, by Morgan Robertson that was published in 1898 about the sinking of a supposedly unsinkable ship called The Titan when it struck an iceberg. The fictional story all but mirrors the sinking of the Titanic fourteen years later. Here are some of the most striking similarities:
> The Titanic was the world’s largest luxury liner – 882 feet,displacing 66,000 tons- and was once described as being “practically unsinkable;” the Titan was the largest craft afloat – 800 feet, displacing 75,000 tons – and was considered “indestructible.”
> The Titanic had three propellers and two masts; the Titan was also equipped with three propellers and two masts.
> The Titanic carried only 20 lifeboats, less than half the number required for her passenger capacity of 3000; The Titan carried “as few as the law allowed”, 24 lifeboats, less than half needed for her 3000 capacity.
> While traveling at a high speed of 25 knots, the book details how the vessel crashed into an iceberg in the North Atlantic Ocean on an April night, causing it to sink. Twenty-five hundred passengers aboard the Titan drowned to death as their “voices raised in agonized screams”.
Morgan Robertson said that the idea for his book was inspired by a “vivid trance vision.” And to compound the strangeness of these parallels, a tramp steamer was traveling through the foggy North Atlantic with only a young boy on watch, some months after the Titanic had sunk, when suddenly an ephinous-like thought came into his head that the area that they were traversing at that moment, was the area in which the Titanic had sunk. He became very aware of the fact that the name of the ship he was on was similarly called the Titanian. Terrified and panic-stricken, he sounded a warning and the ship abruptly stopped. As some of the fog began to clear, the passengers on the ship were all relieved to see that they had stopped just in the nick of time, for a huge iceberg ominously loomed before them, directly in their path, and thus were spared.
UPDATE 6/1/09: Here’s the Indy petition related to the post on May 30. Feel free to sign!











