Lewis Nixon (1861 – 1940), a naval architect of battleships and a popular New York politician, maintained throughout this entire article that the full array of 1912 technology was ignored in the planning of Titanic‘s first (and last) voyage:

“We have in our battle-ships devices to show when water enters compartments, and by simple and economical devices it would be possible to have the depth to which water has risen indicated on the bridge, and on merchantmen as well as on our men-of-war searchlights should be carried.”

Pictured below is Thomas Andrews, architect of Titanic.

Read <em>Titanic</em> Didn’t Have to Sink <br>(The North American Review, 1912) for Free

WHITE STAR LINE ignorance of Naval technologyThomas Andrews Architect of TITANIC1912 naval technology and the TITANIC sinking1912 naval architecture articleold magazine article about naval architectureTITANIC design flawsfaults in the TITANIC design
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