Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Lot #446
Titanic: Weikman, August H.

“This note was in my pocket when picked up out of the sea by ‘S.S. Carpathia’ from the wreck of 'S.S. Titanic' April 15th 1912/A.H. Weikman/Palmyra, N.Y.”

This lot has closed

Estimate: $0+
Sell a Similar Item?
Refer Collections and Get Paid
Share:  

Description

“This note was in my pocket when picked up out of the sea by ‘S.S. Carpathia’ from the wreck of 'S.S. Titanic' April 15th 1912/A.H. Weikman/Palmyra, N.Y.”

A United States silver dollar certificate, 7.5 x 3.25, signed and inscribed by S.S. Titanic survivor August H. Weikman, “This note was in my pocket when picked up out of the sea by 'S.S. Carpathia' from the wreck of 'S.S. Titanic' April 15th 1912/A.H. Weikman/Palmyra, N.J.” The fifty-year-old Weikman, a resident of Ivybank, Southampton, England, was one of three barbers on board the S.S. Titanic and the only one to survive the disaster. He provided a gripping first-person account of the tragedy in testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee that investigated the tragedy, in part: “I was sitting in my barber shop on Sunday night, April 14, 1912 at 11:40 p.m. when the collision occurred.... I went to the main deck and saw some ice laying there. Orders were given, ‘All hands to man the lifeboats....’ I helped to launch the boats.... I was proceeding to launch the next boat when the ship sank at the bow and there was a rush of water that washed me overboard and therefore the boat was not launched by human hands.... I was about 15 feet away from the ship when I heard a second explosion. I think the boilers blew up in about the middle of the ship.... The explosion blew me along with a wall of water towards ... a bundle of deck chairs, which I managed to climb on. While on the chairs I heard terrible groans and cries coming from people in the water.” Wakeman was one of few lucky survivors later picked up by the R.M.S. Carpathia. The present item is believed one of only two or three such certificates signed by Weikman in existence. Weikman, who had made the Atlantic crossing with the idea of taking up residence in Philadelphia, died in Palmyra, New Jersey in 1924 and is buried in Morgan Cemetery. Perhaps needless to say, fully documented Titanic artifacts of this nature are of exceeding scarcity. In very good condition, with three vertical folds, scattered light foxing, soiling, a few small chips to edges, a couple small pinpricks to body and a couple small fold separations. R&R COA.

Auction Info

  • Auction Title:
  • Dates: #308 - Ended April 19, 2006