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Titanic survivor's rare letter sells for record £300,000 at UK auction

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A rare and chilling piece of Titanic history has fetched a record-breaking £300,000 at a UK auction. The letter, written by Colonel Archibald Gracie , a high-profile survivor of the 1912 maritime disaster, offers a haunting glimpse into the days before tragedy struck. Gracie's words, penned on Titanic letterhead from his first-class cabin, contain a prophetic note of caution about the ship's fate. The letter, never before offered for sale, smashed its expected price of £60,000 at Henry Aldridge and Son auctioneers in Wiltshire. Experts hailed the letter as a museum-grade artefact of extraordinary historic significance.

What is written in the Prophetic Titanic letter that sold for a record £300,000
Written on April 10, 1912, the day Colonel Gracie boarded the Titanic, the letter conveys both admiration and hesitation. Gracie described the ship as a "fine ship" but added that he would "await my journey’s end before I pass judgment on her." The note, mailed after Titanic’s brief stop in Queenstown, Ireland, was later postmarked in London on April 12. Gracie nostalgically compared the Titanic to the Oceanic, praising the older vessel's yacht-like qualities. Ending on a warm note, he thanked his acquaintance for a kind farewell, wishing them "success and happiness."


A letter steeped in tragedy and survival

Gracie's experience on the Titanic was marked by heroism and heartbreak. On April 14, he spent his day playing squash, swimming, and attending church services aboard the ship. That night, he was jolted awake as the Titanic struck an iceberg. Gracie spent the final moments of the voyage helping women and children into lifeboats and fetching blankets. When the ship finally plunged into the Atlantic, he survived by clambering onto an overturned collapsible lifeboat. His survival story, later chronicled in his book The Truth About the Titanic, remains one of the most detailed firsthand accounts of the disaster.

A historic record broken
Auctioneer Andrew Aldridge described the letter as an exceptional item, calling it the highest price ever achieved for a Titanic letter. The piece was written on a rare Titanic letter card, making it even more valuable to collectors and historians. The seller's great-uncle, an acquaintance of Gracie, originally received the letter at London's Waldorf Hotel. The emotional weight of Gracie's prophetic words and the rarity of survivor correspondence combined to create intense bidding. Ultimately, a private collector from the United States secured this remarkable window into a moment forever frozen in time.


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