How Did The Titanic Sink

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Maddie Schnell
Minerich
Period 7
4/15/2018
Factors the Caused the Titanic to Sink
The Titanic hit an iceberg on April 14th at 11:40pm. While the officers tried to avoid it, the iceberg cause a lot damage to the ship ("Titanic."). The Titanic, ironically known as the “unsinkable ship”, hit an iceberg and sunk on its maiden voyage from Southampton to New York City. The ship was a luxurious cruise liner with three classes of tickets, the first class passengers being some of the wealthiest people in the world. The Titanic's sinkage was surprising to many at the time but looking back, it could have been easily prevented. The Titanic's outer construction, bulkhead and unexpected fire allowed the ship to sink.
The first factors that allowed the Titanic …show more content…

Due to the uneven distribution of water, the ship sunk in a very dangerous way, “Then suddenly the ship seemed to shoot up out of the water and stand there perpendicularly. It seemed to us that it stood upright in the water for four full minutes. Then it began to slide gently downwards. Its speed increased as it went down head first, so that the stern shot down with a rush.” (“Titanic”). The ship split apart when it sank. This means the water was unevenly displaced throughout the ship causing the front to be pulled down quickly. If the water was evenly dispersed throughout the bottom of the ship the Titanic could had stayed afloat for a much longer period of time. This would allow more passengers to be rescued. Another issue with the compartments below the Titanic is that they was made to solve only few problems very well. The Titanic could continue to sail with "four compartments flooded" but the iceberg had compromised five, Thomas Andres, chief architect of the Titanic, knew the ship would sink. ("Titanic."). The Titanic was built to be very strong in certain situations. The architects sacrificed the ship’s overall safety for a ship that would be really strong if it was hit in the expected places. The iceberg caused more damage than the architects could have imagined. Their plan to make the ship seem untouched in small collisions backfired because the ship couldn’t survive larger ones such as the