1912 TITANIC Newspaper Daily Mirror Antique Photos London New York Old Vintage

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Seller: Top-Rated Seller lasvegasormonaco ✉️ (3,187) 99.7%, Location: Manchester, Take a look at my other items, GB, Ships to: WORLDWIDE, Item: 266417882366 1912 TITANIC Newspaper Daily Mirror Antique Photos London New York Old Vintage. , Federico Fellini. We were with Iraqi war victim Ali Abbas as he had two prosthetic arms fitted on October 13 of this year. Arabella — Captain Blood with Errol Flynn, 1935. Albatross — The Sea Hawk with Errol Flynn, 1940.

RMS TITANIC Daily Mirror This is a Reproduction Replica of the Newspaper The Daily Mirror from Tuesday April 16th 1912 Reporting on the full extent of the horror that began on April 14th 1912 With Pictures and Reports about the disaster A3 Size with 8 Pages Would make an Excellent Gift or Collectable Keepsake to a A Great Ship that sunk 100 years ago
The paper will be folded and sent to you.  If you would rather it be sent in a tube this will cost £2 extra inside the UK and £5 outside the UK please contact me after the auction ends with instructions In Excellent Condition A Beautiful and Magnificent Keepsake Souvenir to Remember this iconic ship Click Here to Check out my other Titanic Items!      Bid with Confidence - Check My 100% Positive Feedback from over 600 Satisfied Customers
I have over 10 years of Ebay Selling Experience - So Why Not Treat Yourself? I have got married recently and need to raise funds to meet the costs also we are planning to move into a house together I always combined postage on multiple items    All Payment Methods in All Major Currencies Accepted All Items Sent out within 24 hours of Receiving Payment. 

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The Daily Mirror (informally The Mirror) is a British national daily tabloid newspaper which was founded in 1903. From 1985 to 1987, and from 1997 to 2002, the title on its masthead was simply The Mirror. It had an average daily circulation of 1,083,938 in March 2012.[1] Its Sunday sister paper is the Sunday Mirror. The Mirror has had a number of owners. It was founded by Alfred Harmsworth, who sold it to his brother Harold Harmsworth (from 1914 Lord Rothermere) in 1913. In 1963 a restructuring of the media interests of the Harmsworth family led to the Mirror becoming a part of International Publishing Corporation. The Mirror was owned by Robert Maxwell between 1984 and 1991. The paper went through a protracted period of crisis after his death before merging with the regional newspaper group Trinity in 1999 to form Trinity Mirror. Type    Daily newspaper Format    Tabloid Owner    Trinity Mirror Editor    Lloyd Embley Founded    2 November 1903 Political alignment    Labour Headquarters    One Canada Square, London, United Kingdom Circulation    1,083,938 (March 2012)[1] OCLC number    223228477 Famous features Cartoon strips "Jane" (1932–1959), "Garth" (1943–1997, reprints 2011), "Just Jake" (1938–1952), "Andy Capp" (1957–), and "The Perishers" (1955–2006 and later reprints). "The Old Codgers", a fictional pair who commented on the letters page from 1935 to 1990.[37] Chalky White, who would wander around various British seaside resorts waiting to be recognised by Mirror readers (an obscured photo of him having been published in that day's paper). Anyone who recognised him would have to repeat some phrase along the lines of "To my delight, it's Chalky White" to win £5. The name continues to be used on the cartoons page, as Andy Capp's best friend. "Shock issues" intended to highlight a particular news story. The columnist Cassandra (1935–1967). "Dear Marje", a problem page by agony aunt Marjorie Proops. Investigative reporting by Paul Foot and John Pilger (notably the latter's exposé of the atrocities of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia). "The Shopping Basket". Starting in the mid-1970s, the paper monitored the cost of a £5 basket of shopping to see how it increased in price over the years. Notable issues Front page of the Daily Mirror after publishing faked photographs. On 2 April 1996, the Daily Mirror was printed entirely on blue paper. This was done as a marketing exercise with Pepsi-Cola, who on the same day had decided to relaunch their cans with a blue design instead of the traditional red and white logo. In May 2004, the Daily Mirror published what it claimed were photos of British soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners at an unspecified location in Iraq. The decision to publish the photos, subsequently shown to be hoaxes, led to Morgan's sacking as editor on 14 May 2004. The Daily Mirror then stated that it was the subject of a "calculated and malicious hoax".[38] The newspaper issued a statement apologising for the printing of the pictures. The paper's deputy editor, Des Kelly, took over as acting editor during the crisis. The tabloid's rival, The Sun, offered a £50,000 reward for the arrest and conviction of those accused of faking the Mirror photographs. In February 2008 both the Daily and the Sunday Mirror implied that TV presenter Kate Garraway was having an affair. She sued for libel, receiving an apology and compensation payment in April 2008.[39] On 18 September 2008, David Anderson, a British sports journalist writing for the Mirror, repeated a claim deriving from vandalism on Wikipedia's entry for Cypriot football team AC Omonia, which asserted that their fans were called "The Zany Ones" and liked to wear hats made from discarded shoes. The claim was part of Anderson's match preview ahead of AC Omonia's game with Manchester City, which appeared in the web and print versions of the Mirror, with the nickname also quoted in subsequent editions on 19 September.[40][41] The episode was featured in Private Eye. On 12 May 2011, the High Court of England and Wales granted the Attorney General permission to bring a case for contempt against The Sun and the Daily Mirror for the way they had reported on the arrest of a person of interest in the Murder of Joanna Yeates.[42][43] On 29 July, the Court ruled that both newspapers had been in contempt of court, fining the Daily Mirror £50,000 and The Sun £18,000.[44] On 19 July 2011 The Mirror published an article labelling comedian Frankie Boyle as a racist. He later sued for defamation and libel, winning £54,650 in damages and a further £4,250 for a claim about his departure from Mock the Week. The Mirror had argued he was "forced to quit" but this was found to be libellious by the court.[45][46] Notable people Editors 1903 to 1904: Mary Howarth 1904 to 1907: Hamilton Fyfe 1907 to 1915: Alexander Kenealy 1915 to 1916: Ed Flynn 1916 to 1931: Alexander Campbell 1931 to 1934: Leigh Brownlee 1934 to 1948: Cecil Thomas 1948 to 1953: Silvester Bolam 1953 to 1961: Jack Nener 1961 to 1971: Lee Howard 1971 to 1974: Tony Miles 1974 to 1975: Michael Christiansen 1975 to 1985: Mike Molloy 1985 to 1990: Richard Stott 1990 to 1991: Roy Greenslade 1991 to 1992: Richard Stott 1992 to 1994: David Banks 1994 to 1995: Colin Myler 1995 to 2004: Piers Morgan 2004 to 2012: Richard Wallace 2012 to date: Lloyd Embley Source: Tabloid Nation[12] Notable columnists Notable former and current columnists of the Daily Mirror include: The 3AM Girls (gossip columnists); William Connor (opinion under the pseudonym Cassandra (1935–1967)); Richard Hammond (motoring and Saturday columnist); Oliver Holt (sports columnist); Kevin Maguire (UK politics); Tony Parsons (Monday columnist); Penman & Greenwood (investigators); Fiona Phillips (Saturday columnist); Brian Reade (Thursday columnist; also does a sports column on Saturdays); and Keith Waterhouse (largely humorous (1993–2009)). Awards The Daily Mirror won "Newspaper of the Year" in 2002 at the British Press Awards. It won "Scoop of the Year" in 2003 ("3am", 'Sven and Ulrika'), 2004 (Ryan Parry, 'Intruder at the Palace'), 2006 and 2007 (both Stephen Moyes).[47] The Mirror won "Team of the Year" in 2001 ('Railtrack'), 2002 ('War on the World: World against Terrorism'), 2003 ('Soham'), and 2006 ('London bombings'); and "Front Page of the Year" in 2007.[47] The Mirror also won the "Cudlipp Award" in 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2010 Editors of the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror and Sunday Pictorial Daily Mirror    1903: Mary Howarth 1904: Hamilton Fyfe 1907: Alexander Kenealy 1915: Ed Flynn 1916: Alexander Campbell 1931: Leigh Brownlee 1934: Cecil Thomas 1948: Silvester Bolam 1953: Jack Nener 1961: Lee Howard 1971: Tony Miles 1974: Michael Christiansen 1975: Mike Molloy 1985: Richard Stott 1990: Roy Greenslade 1991: Richard Stott 1992: David Banks 1994: Colin Myler 1995: Piers Morgan 2004: Richard Wallace 2012: Lloyd Embley Sunday Pictorial    1915: F. R. Sanderson 1921: William McWhirter 1924: David Grant 1928: William McWhirter 1929: David Grant 1938: Hugh Cudlipp 1940: Stuart Campbell 1946: Hugh Cudlipp 1949: Phil Zec 1952: Hugh Cudlipp 1953: Colin Valdar 1959: Lee Howard 1961: Reg Payne Sunday Mirror    1963: Michael Christiansen 1972: Bob Edwards 1984: Peter Thompson 1986: Mike Molloy 1988: Eve Pollard 1991: Bridget Rowe 1992: Colin Myler 1994: Paul Connew 1995: Tessa Hilton 1996: Amanda Platell 1997: Bridget Rowe 1998: Brendon Parsons 1998: Colin Myler 2001: Tina Weaver 2012: Lloyd Embley   Links to related articles  v t e Trinity Mirror National newspapers    Daily Mirror Sunday Mirror The People Daily Record (Sunday Mail) Western Mail Regional newspapers    Birmingham Mail Birmingham Post Sunday Mercury Coventry Telegraph Loughborough Echo Stafford Post Evening Chronicle The Journal Sunday Sun Chronicle Extra Evening Gazette Herald & Post Liverpool Echo Liverpool Daily Post Wirral News Southport Visiter Formby Times Chester 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Film Institute Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee Department for Culture, Media and Sport Ofcom Press Complaints Commission S4C Authority UK Film Council Industry and trades bodies    British Academy of Film and Television Arts British Phonographic Industry Broadcasting, Entertainment, Cinematograph and Theatre Union Clearcast Digital TV Group Digital UK Equity Federation Against Copyright Theft National Union of Journalists The Publishers Association Royal Television Society United Kingdom Independent Broadcasting Other    BBC Academy National Film and Television School National Media Museum   Regional and student media Regional media    Media in England Media in Birmingham Media in London Media in Manchester  Media in Northern Ireland Media in Scotland Media in Aberdeen Media in Dundee Media in Glasgow  Media in Wales Media in Cardiff Student media    Student television 100 GREATEST DAILY MIRROR MOMENTS. For the last 100 years, the Daily Mirror has led the way with the greatest scoops, ground-breaking campaigns, and the most talked-about stunts. The Mirror was the first newspaper to carry a photograph on the front page, the first to reveal the true nature of King Edward's relationship with Wallis Simpson, and first to hold a wedding in its offices. Over the years we have also proved pigs can fly, hired racing drivers to get the story first, and discovered the Rolling Stones. Here are the hundred greatest moments from the Daily Mirror's illustrious history. SCOOPS 1. We whipped up the first Royal tabloid scandal by publishing a front page photograph of the late King Edward VII on his death-bed on May 10, 1910. The Mirror was accused of stealing the picture and of insensitivity towards the Royal Family. In fact Queen Alexandra had asked for the photograph to be given to the Mirror because it was her favourite newspaper. 2. In 1936 we were the only newspaper gutsy enough to reveal the true relationship between King Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson. Other newspapers colluded with a government cover-up, denying ordinary people knowledge of the crisis facing their monarchy. The Daily Mirror, however, broke the most sensational royal stories of the century - publishing a front page picture of Mrs Simpson. It also backed the King against the government and church. Ads by Google   Free Unlimited Audiobooks    Download wonderful Audio Books & eBooks now - for Free! www.AllYouCanBooks.com Why Men Pull Away    10 Ugly Mistakes Women Make That Ruins Any Chances Of A Relationship CatchHimAndKeepHim.com 4. Only one newspaper had a photo of a tearful Margaret Thatcher leaving Downing Street for the last time as Prime Minister. The photographers lining the street put down their cameras and applauded as she drove past. Only the Mirror's Ken Lennox kept working to secure a historic shot, published on November 29, 1990. 7. On November 19, 1999, we revealed how Cherie Blair was expecting her fourth child at the age of 45. 8. After a riot broke out at Dartmoor Prison in October, 1932, we hired an aeroplane to get exclusive aerial and internal shots. The Mirror's coverage of the riot, which ended when wardens opened fire on inmates and injured between 60 and 70 prisoners, was one of the earliest examples of the paper's hungry determination always to be first with the story. 10. We were with Iraqi war victim Ali Abbas as he had two prosthetic arms fitted on October 13 of this year. The brave 12-year-old lost his arms in a missile struck his home near Baghdad, which killed 16 members of his family. 11. On June 27, 1955, The Mirror ran a shock issue on The Robot Revolution which explained how a new industrial revolution was coming which would change life at home, in the office and in the factory. Every forecast came true - except that everyone would have much more leisure time and machines did all the work. 12. A Mirror photographer descended 650ft into Mount Vesuvius to get the first ever pictures taken from inside a volcano in June, 1912. 14. We became the first British paper to print pictures of a failed assassination attempt on King Alfonso of Spain and his new bride in Madrid in 1906. Our snapper hired a French racing driver to drive non-stop through Spain and France to Calais, where a boat was waiting to rush the pictures to England. 16. Our serialisation of Paul Burrell's book, A Royal Duty, was the most talked-about scoop of this year. The former Royal butler revealed last month how Princess Diana predicted she would die in a car crash just 10 months before it happened. He also told how her brother, Earl Spencer, accused her of being mentally ill. 17. We revealed Ulrika Jonsson's astonishing affair with England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson on April 19, 2002. 18. Following the 1911 proclamation of King George V as Emperor of India, pictures of the event were driven overland from India, and developed on the way to Calais before we printed them. 19. Despite being under house arrest by the Israelis, PLO leader Yasser Arafat invited the Mirror's Alex Williams into his bunker for an exclusive interview in which he called for the world to bring peace to the region in February, 2002. 20. On October 1, 1990, The Mirror introduced readers to three politicians we described as "Labour's Young Guns". Their names: Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and Jack Straw. The writer? Alastair Campbell, who became Mr Blair's Downing Street spokesman. 21. In 1912 we ran a series of exclusive reports from Captain Robert Falcon Scott as he and his team battled to reach the South Pole. Unfortunately, we ran a "thrilling and exclusive narrative" in April 1912 not knowing that four days earlier Scott and his four companions had perished in the snow. It was 13 months before their deaths were discovered. 22. On October 3, 1994, we revealed how Royal love rat James Hewitt had written a book - Princess In Love - to cash in on his relationship with Princess Diana. 23. When a major earthquake struck Japan, the Mirror's Far East Correspondent, who was in Shanghai, flew 750 miles to Japan to photograph the disaster. The pictures were then shipped to Vancouver from where they were flown through Seattle and Chicago to Cleveland. Here the plane developed engine trouble and the pictures were transferred to an express train heading for New York where they were collected by a Mirror reporter. He caught a liner to France from where he flew to London, all in September, 1923. 24. The horror of unexploded mines was revealed in our report on the tragic death of 10-year-old Qwadrat in an Afghan hospital. He died shortly after picking up a mine near his home in February, 2002. 27. We were the first newspaper to show a photograph of a "tank", on November 23, 1917. The paper paid pounds 1,000 to the Canadian Record Office for the photos - almost pounds 70,000 in today's money. The cash went to war charities. 28. Mirror photographer Tom Grant may have just abandoned a sinking ship, but that didn't stop him taking some astonishing pictures. Grant was aboard the SS Sontay when it was torpedoed in May 1917, and after leaping into the water, he took 14 shots of the listing craft. He then wrapped his photographic plates in oilskin to keep them dry. 29. On August 7, 1999, we printed an exclusive interview with Doreen Lawrence, whose 18-year-old son, Stephen, was stabbed to death in London six years before. 30. On July 18, 2002, we revealed how a four-year-old girl was left to die outside a mosque in Uttar Pradesh, India, because she was handicapped. 31. We secured an exclusive interview with bodyguard Trevor Rees-Jones, the only survivor of the Paris car crash which killed Princess Diana and her lover Dodi Fayed. He broke his silence in March, 1998, to speak of his guilt at surviving the accident that killed her. 32. We broke a world record by hiring a pilot to fly photographs to London of the Belgrade wedding of King Alexander of Yugoslavia and Princess Marie of Romania. A photo of the wedding appeared on the front page in June 1922 under the headline: Pictures Brought 1,150 miles by Air Across Europe through Thunderstorms and Fog". 33. Four days after 9/11, we revealed that New York firefighter, Mike Kehoe, who was poignantly captured on camera fearlessly heading into the burningWorld Trade Center, was still alive. 34. We were the only English newspaper to reveal that the British Army were being accused of `massacre' on Bloody Sunday after a demonstration in Northern Ireland erupted into violence in 1972. 35. We exposed the true story behind the extraordinary saga of American drama student Joyce McKinney in 1977. She kidnapped ex-boyfriend Kirk Anderson, chained him to a bad and, he claimed, forced him to have sex. We went after Joyce, who pretended to be demure and chaste, and revealed she was a former prostitute. 36. Pictures of a burka-clad woman being executed in an Afghanistan football stadium shocked the world, yet nobody knew her identity. On June 19, 2002, we exclusively revealed the woman was Zarmina, a 35-year-old who was killed after being accused of killing her husband. 37. Crooked Tory MP Jonathan Aitken grew to fear us after we revealed he had lied to his own family to cover his shady business dealings on November 2, 1994. The Treasury Chief Secretary was later jailed for perjury. 38. On December 24, 1997, we revealed how Jack Straw `s son, Will, had sold cannabis to a Mirror reporter. 39. We exposed the real horror of ethnic cleansing when we discovered the Tunnel of Death in Serbia in March 1997. It was the final resting place for more than 500 unidentified people, stacked on top of each other in a hastily-arranged morgue  STUNTS 40. On January 1, 1973, Britain became a member of the Common Market and the Mirror was edited from Paris for the day. 41. We sent then PM John Major into such a fury that he kidney-punched Mirror reporter Graham Brough - despite the presence of TV cameras. We'd been taunting him with a plug - after his entire Budget was leaked to the Mirror in November 1996. 42. In 1905 we launched Captain Frass, the Mirror's mystery man. He wandered around the country and anyone who spotted him was awarded pounds 50. 43. On July 27, 1999, we reunited Posh and Becks with the18th century thrones on which they sat during their wedding day. We bought the antique chairs and asked the readers what to do with them. Over 70 per cent said they should be handed back to the Beckhams. 44. To mark the Queen's Silver Jubilee celebrations in 1977, we chartered Concorde for a day for readers . The world-famous aircraft carried 80 readers and a group of staff to Washington DC and back the same day. The first, and only, supersonic away day. One of the passengers on board was Richard Branson. 45. Mirror in Alberta, Canada was named after us in 1911 by British emigres who went across the Atlantic in search of work. The Canadian Government advertised in the Daily Mirror for workers to go to Canada to help work on the railroads. 47. In 1977 we arranging for the Loch Ness monster to make an appearance to coincide with the Queen's Silver Jubilee. 48. Reporter Alastair Campbell, who later become press chief at Downing Street, persuaded a Devon family to live without television for a week to see how it affected their lives in 1984. 49. We embarassed the spotlight-seeking celebrities who will turn up for anything by inviting them to the hoax opening of London restaurant, "The Paper Bag" on September 13, 1996. MILESTONES 50. We capped an astonishing year by winning four major gongs at the British Press Awards in March 2003. We walked off with Reporter of the Year, Scoop of the Year and Reporting Team of the Year honours and the Hugh Cudlipp award for excellence in tabloid journalism. And all that on top of four other honours won at the What The Papers' Say Awards. 51. Our front page showing a First World War soldier lying asleep in the snow praised our forces. The headline for the picture, published on December 7, 1914, is "WHAT CHRISTMAS MEANS TO OUR BRAVE TROOPS AT THE FRONT". 52. When Charles married Diana, the Archbishop of Canterbury started his sermon with the words: "This is the stuff of which fairy tales are made" - exactly what the Mirror said in its editorial on that morning of July 29, 1981. 53. A cartoon on the government's decision to raise the price of petrol showed a torpedoed sailor with an oil-smeared face lying on a raft. The message was "Don't waste petrol. It costs lives." Prime Minister Winston Churchill believed the 1942 sketch suggested that the sailor's life had been put at stake to enhance the profits of the and considered closing us down. 54. On December 22, 2001, we won Newspaper of the Year in the biggest year for news of modern times. 55. We told Soviet President Nikita Kruschev: `DON'T BE SO BLOODY RUDE!' in a front-page headline after he launched a vicious verbal assault on US President Dwight Eisenhower on May 17, 1960. 56. In 1944, the indomitable Cassandra returned to the paper after the writer came back from service in the Second World War. The opening line was "As I was saying before I was so rudely interrupted..." 58. We launched the Mirror's 3am girls - the most successful showbiz column ever - on July 3, 2000. 59. We moved the Mirror's headquarters to Paris to mark the importance of the Cold War summit meeting in the French capital in May 1960. Editor Jack Nener wrote: "The Daily Mirror believes in the Summit. That is why I have come to Paris to edit the paper from the city that is today the world's capital." 60. Andy Capp was introduced to the world on August 5, 1957. To begin with, the comic strip only appeared in our Northern editions but proved such a hit was distributed throughout the country. Created by former postal worker Reg Smythe, the comic strip was soon syndicated all over the world. 61. We spoke for the entire nation when we urged the Queen to address the nation after the death of Diana. After we ran the front-page headline "YOUR PEOPLE ARE SUFFERING - SPEAK TO US MA'AM", on September 4, 1997, the Queen addressed the country on a TV broadcast and announced the Buckingham Palace Union Flag would be lowered to half mast. 62. An historic blow for Press freedom was struck when lying supermodel Naomi Campbell lost her Appeal Court privacy action against the Daily Mirror in October last year. The 31-year-old was left with a pounds 750,000 legal bill after three judges overturned the pounds 3,500 damages previously awarded to her. Her complaint followed a Mirror story in February last year which revealed she was a drug addict and had been lying in press and TV interviews about her problem. 63. In December, 1960, Mirror TV critic Jack Bell watched the first episode of Coronation Street and forecast: "I find it hard to believe that viewers will want to put up with continuous slice-of-life domestic drudgery two evenings a week." 64. The Reporting Team of the Year trophy went to us at the Press Gazette Awards in March, 1999. We scooped the gong for our coverage of the Omagh bombing the previous August. 66. On November 21, 2001, we ran a full interview with Richard Madeley and Judy Finnegan with the cuts they had demanded highlighted. Their ludicrous demands sparked a Mirror ban on giving copy approval to stars and changed the way the paper dealt with celebrities. 67. Prime Minister Harold Wilson fled to Washington in 1965 carrying a Mirror front page which attacked the "barbarous mess" of the Vietnam war, which he showed to President Johnson. 68. Last year we changed our name back from The Mirror to The Daily Mirror. We also dropped the red-top masthead to recapture the near-century old spirit that has made the newspaper so great. FIRSTS 69. The Daily Mirror was launched as the first ever daily newspaper for gentlewomen in Edward VII's Britain on November 2, 1903. The fledgling Daily Mirror also had the first-ever British female newspaper editor, Mary Howarth. 71. The Daily Mirror was the first national newspaper to register its newsroom as a licensed marriage venue in 2003. On Valentine's Day, Clare Voysey and Mike Turner, the winners of the Marry At The Mirror competition, tied the knot at the newspaper's HQ at Canary Wharf, East London. 73. A photograph of the funeral procession of the Duke of Cambridge was the first to be carried on the front page of a newspaper, on March 23, 1904, cementing the reputation of the newly-named Daily Illustrated Mirror as the pioneer of photo-journalism. 74. An unemployment scheme offering to pay out-of-work men 3s 6d (17 1/2p) a day for sweeping the streets was launched by the Mirror in 1905. Local councils rushed to become involved in the scheme to help ease Britain's chronic unemployment problems, and pounds 2,600 was raised and spent in wages and 15,000 unemployed men given brooms. 75. Mirror photographers were the first to be assigned to cover the the King on trips in this country and abroad, in 1906. 76. Always at the forefront of technology, in 1906 the Mirror installed an Electrophone at its London headquarters to report directly the words of Prime Minister Campbell-Bannerman as he called a General Election. 77. The first newspaper photograph to be cabled from Paris to London was sent by the Mirror on November 8, 1907. 78. The Mirror sent seven photographers to cover the Balkans war in October 1912 - the first time a newspaper had sent photographers to cover a war. It had to set up a team of relay stations across Europe to get their pictures back to London. 79. A reporter wired a message from a car on Wandsworth Common to receiving equipment on the roof of the Mirror offices in Bouverie Street, Central London in 1913. It was the first time this has been done in England, and the Mirror had invented the technology. 80. The Mirror gave the full tabloid treatment to the royal wedding of the future King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, mother to Queen Elizabeth II, in April 1923. It was the first time that page upon page of photographs, reports, comment and debate on every aspect of the marriage. It was a rare moment of colour to brighten up the gloom of the post-war years. 82. In 1964, the Mirror topped 5,000,000 circulation and became the biggest- selling newspaper on earth. 83. Showbiz reporter Patrick Donovan was the first journalist to write about a new band he saw in the Station Hotel, Richmond, Surrey, on May 19, 1964. It was The Rolling Stones. 84. Maudie Barrett became the first newspaper bingo millionaire in 1984 when she scooped our Who Dares Wins game. CAMPAIGNS 85. The Mirror proved itself ahead of its time by backing the suffragettes' movement on April 27, 1906. 86. The only newspaper to demand an inquiry into the sinking of the Titanic in 1912 was the Mirror. On April 19, the paper ran the headline: "WHY WERE THERE ONLY TWENTY LIFEBOATS FOR 2,207 PEOPLE ON BOARD THE ILL-FATED TITANIC". It ran a vociferous campaign into the issue which dominated the Board of Trade inquiry into the disaster. 87. Standing alone, the Mirror supported Churchill's demands for a tougher line to be taken against Hitler and his Nazi regime from 1936 onwards. It continually called for Prime Minister Baldwin to be replaced by Churchill. 88. Taking up the cause of the ordinary soldier after being inspired by a letter from Mrs C Gardiner of Ilford in Essex about her hopes for the future following her husband's return from war in 1944. Her letter ended with the promise - I shall vote for him. With so many men abroad, The Mirror took up the theme and turned to women voters: "you know what the fighting man wants. You know which party is likely to give him what he wants. You know the only way to make his future safe. Go then and do your duty. Vote for him." 89. Philip Zec's famous VE Day cartoon of a bloodied and bandaged soldier thrusting a victory laurel wreath forward and exclaiming: "Here you are! Don't lose it again!" was republished on election day 1945. Two days later, the Mirror adopted a new slogan beneath its masthead - "FORWARD WITH THE PEOPLE". 90. Speaking out against the cruelty of executing a woman before Ruth Ellis was hanged in 1955 for shooting her racing driver husband, the Mirror ran an impassioned front page, entitled, "THE WOMAN WHO HANGS THIS MORNING", written by Cassandra. 92. The Mirror spearheaded the "Don't Drink and Drive" Christmas campaign with a front page picture of a skeleton at the wheel of a car on December 19, 1960. The headline read: "To every wife, mother and sweetheart the Mirror today urges: See that the man in your life is there to carve the turkey on Sunday." 93. In June 1961, we launched a successful campaign in favour of Britain joining a Common Market. 94. The Mirror helped set up the World Wildlife Fund by running a shock issue on October 9, 1961, warning of the threat to hundreds of species of animals and birds. Over eight pages, the paper placed the blame for the threat to animals such as the rhino on "the thoughtless foolishness, greed and neglect of the most superior animal on earth - Man himself." 95. One iconic photograph published on March 26, 1968 forced the the Canadian government to stop killing seal pups. Kent Gavin's world-famous picture of a seal hunter clubbing a baby pup to death was published on the front page, above the headline "THE PRICE OF A SEALSKIN COAT". 96. Cecil King, chairman of the Mirror, used the paper to start a coup against Prime Minister Harold Wilson with a front-paged editorial headlined: "Enough Is Enough." on May 10, 1968. Wilson survived, King was sacked. 97. Marje Proops' no-holds-barred attack on sexual ignorance, The Mirror Guide to Sexual Knowledge was the first ever "no-nonsense guide to sex", published by the Mirror on August 12, 1975 in a bid to combat some of the 600,000 unwanted babies conceived every year. 98. In August 1975, the Mirror welcomed the introduction of equal pay laws with a front-page pin-up of a man and the headline: Girls, It's Your Turn Now. 99. After the Dunblane massacre in 1996, in which 16 children and their teacher died, the Mirror took a 50,000 signature petition to Downing Street calling on the Government to ban handguns. MPs voted for a ban soon after. 3. Princess Diana's butler Paul Burrell chose the Mirror to tell his story after the collapse of his theft trial. Burrell lifted the lid on her troubled marriage to Prince Charles and accused the Spencers of cashing in on her death. The series, which started on November 5 last year, also revealed the Queen warned him of "dark forces" at work in the country. 6. The Mirror helped to catch one of Britain's most notorious killers, the chilling Dr Crippen after the headless body of his wife was found in the coal cellar at their home. The Mirror scooped its rivals by publishing only known photograph of Crippen's lover, Ethel Le Neve, in August, 1910. It led to tip-offs from the public and eventually the pair's capture. 9. Our sensational pictures of the Duchess of York's toes being sucked by her "financial advisor" John Bryan was one of the greatest Royal scoops of all time. The Mirror sold an extra 1.9 million copies in four days in 1992. 13. A shock edition on July 2, 1974, asked: Is Britain Really Going Broke? as the nation was plagued by strikes and economic chaos. 15. We got the first-ever interview with Monica Lewinsky. Bill Clinton's mistress spoke exclusively to the Mirror about her affair with the US President in a story that ran on March 4, 1999. 46. We proved pigs could fly in 1909 when the paper persuaded aviator Colonel Moore-Brabazon to take a porker for a short trip in his flying machine. 57. We had the guts to say what the entire British public was thinking as Princess Margaret agonised on how to choose between the divorced Group Captain Peter Townshend or follow the church's urging and put duty before love. Our 1955 headline read: "COME ON MARGARET! Please make up your mind!" She decided to choose duty. 65. In 1963, the first Mirror dinghies went on display at the Boat Show. The radical design was dreamt up by BBC DIY expert Barry Bucknell with help from our publicity department to make sailing accessible to the masses. 70. The first Pride of Britain Awards were held in 1999, recognising the remarkable achievements of ordinary people across Britain and redefining the Mirror's role as a caring newspaper. 72. The Mirror was the first British newspaper to put a picture on the front page on January 28, 1904 - a drawing of the infamous financier Whitaker Wright lighting the cigar with which he had poisoned himself after being found guilty of fraud. 81. Jane, the nation's first pin-up girl, was introduced in 1932. he daily cartoon strip, originally called The Diary of a Bright Young Thing, was so popular that Jane became the morale booster of Second World War troops and was painted on to planes, tanks and jeeps. In the war years, she was described as Britain's secret weapon. "Worth two armoured divisions to us," commented some wit. "Three if she lost her bra or pants." 91. A shock issue with the NSPCC to fight cruelty against children in British homes and expose the appalling neglect of some of Britain's youngsters on March 14, 1960.  

RMS Titanic was a passenger liner that struck an iceberg on her maiden voyage from Southampton, England, to New York City, and sank on 15 April 1912, resulting in the deaths of 1,517 people in one of the deadliest peacetime maritime disasters in history.

The largest passenger steamship in the world at the time, the Olympic-class RMS Titanic was owned by the White Star Line and constructed at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, Ireland, UK. After setting sail for New York City on 10 April 1912 with 2,223 people on board, she hit the iceberg four days into the crossing, at 11:40 pm on 14 April 1912, and sank at 2:20 am the following morning. The high casualty rate resulting from the sinking was due in part to the fact that, although complying with the regulations of the time, the ship carried lifeboats for only 1,178 people. A disproportionate number of men died due to the "women and children first" protocol that was enforced by the ship's crew.

Titanic was designed by experienced engineers, using some of the most advanced technologies and extensive safety features of the time. The sinking of a passenger liner on her maiden voyage, the high loss of life and media frenzy over Titanic's famous victims, the legends about the sinking, the resulting changes in maritime law, and the discovery of the wreck have all contributed to the enduring interest in Titanic.

icro Machines: The Original Scale Miniatures (called either "Micro Machines" or simply "Micros") were a line of toys originally made by Galoob (now part of Hasbro) in the mid 1980s and throughout the 1990s. Galoob licensed the idea behind Micro Machines from Clem Heeden, a toy inventor from Wisconsin. Micro Machines were tiny scale component style "playsets" and vehicles that were slightly larger than N scale. Although Micro Machines have not been sold in the United States in some years, newer models are available in the UK, Europe and the outlets in the US now also once again sell Micro Machines.

Early Micro Machines television commercials were famous for featuring actor John Moschitta, Jr., who was (at the time) listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's fastest talker.

Many different styles of Micros were made including all the popular cars and trucks of the times, trains, emergency vehicles, tanks, boats, airplanes, helicopters, and motorcycles. The Tuff Trax series contained many of the popular TNT Motorsports Monster Trucks, including the influential Grave Digger truck. Star Trek and Star Wars models were also made, as were models from other science fiction franchises including Babylon 5, Power Rangers and MIB. They even immortalized James Bond and Indiana Jones in micro scale. After the Hasbro buyout, they came out with Winner's Circle NASCAR and G.I. Joe themed cars and playsets.

While the Micro Machines collection was known primarily for sizing down automobiles, it also featured several playsets including 1991's fold-out Super Van City. Licensed character products would often be fold-open heads including miniature characters and vehicles interactive with their playset environment. Micro Machines also utilized several diverse features such as color-changing cars and "Private Eyes" vehicles that even allowed one to peek inside and view an illustration of the contents.

One of the many Micro Machines product lines was the Insiders series. Incredibly popular in the late 80s and early 90s, the Insiders series featured a small vehicle inside the standard size Micro Machine. The body and chassis of the larger vehicle connected via a hinge. Opening the larger revealed the smaller, which was a different model of car.

For 3 to 4 years Micro Machines was the largest selling toy car line in the US with total dollar sales exceeding the combined sales of the next top selling lines: Hot Wheels, Matchbox and Majorette.

Micro Machines had a well-known advertising campaign in the 1980s involving fast-talker John Moschitta, Jr.. The commercials featured pitches in his trademark speedy style and ended with the slogan "[i]f it doesn't say Micro Machines, it's not the real thing"[1].

In the 1990s, transforming playsets were released. Some could transform from one playset to another, such as a factory to a test track. Others could transform from giant vehicles to playsets, such as a 6x6 to a jungle. Earlier ones included one that could transform from a toolbox to a city. Another innovative release was a line of special boats in the 1990s. While past boats had merely sunk and were not intended for water use, these new sets could actually float.

When sold to Hasbro, the basic line was largely discontinued, and new packaging of the toys didn't catch on as well as hoped, though some imitators continue to be sold in toy stores. In 2006, the brand name was visible only in the detail panel of the Star Wars and Transformers Titanium series die cast vehicles and figures.

Ocean liners with four funnels

SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse (1897) · SS Deutschland (1900) · SS Kronprinz Wilhelm (1901) · SS Kaiser Wilhelm II (1902) · RMS Lusitania (1906) · RMS Mauretania (1906) · SS Kronprinzessin Cecilie (1906) · SS France (1910) · RMS Olympic (1910) · RMS Titanic (1911) · RMS Aquitania (1913) · HMHS Britannic (1914) · RMS Windsor Castle (1922) · RMS Arundel Castle (1921)

Timeline of the world's largest passenger ships

Syracusia (240 BCE) · Thalamegos (200 BCE) · The Caravel (1400s) · SS Royal William (1831) · SS Great Western (1837) · SS British Queen (1839) · SS President (1840) · SS Great Britain (1845) · SS Atrato (1854) · SS Great Eastern (1858) · RMS Celtic (1901) · RMS Baltic (1903) · RMS Empress of Scotland (1906) · RMS Lusitania (1907) · RMS Mauretania (1907) · RMS Olympic (1911) · RMS Titanic (1912 ) · SS Imperator (1913) · SS Leviathan (1913) · RMS Majestic (1922) · SS Normandie (1935) · RMS Queen Elizabeth (1940) · MS Carnival Destiny (1996) · MS Grand Princess (1997) · MS Voyager of the Seas (1999) · MS Explorer of the Seas (2000) · MS Navigator of the Seas (2002) · RMS Queen Mary 2 (2004) · MS Freedom of the Seas / MS Liberty of the Seas / MS Independence of the Seas (2006) · MS Oasis of the Seas (2009) · MS Allure of the Seas (2010)

Olympic-class ocean liners

RMS Olympic (1910) · RMS Titanic (1911) · HMHS Britannic (1914)

Deck officers on the RMS Titanic

Edward J. Smith, Captain · Henry T. Wilde, Chief Officer · William M. Murdoch, First Officer · Charles H. Lightoller, Second Officer · Herbert J. Pitman, Third Officer · Joseph G. Boxhall, Fourth Officer · Harold G. Lowe, Fifth Officer · James P. Moody, Sixth Officer

RMS Titanic on film and TV

Saved from the Titanic (1912) · In Nacht und Eis (1912) · Atlantic (1929) · Titanic (1943) · Titanic (1953) · A Night to Remember (1958) · S.O.S. Titanic (1979) · Raise the Titanic (1980) · Titanic (TV miniseries) (1996) · No Greater Love (1996) · Titanic (1997) · The Legend of the Titanic (1999) · Titanic: The Legend Goes On (2001) · Ghosts of the Abyss (2003) · Titanic II (2010) · Titanic: Blood & Steel (2012)

Memorials to the sinking of the RMS Titanic

United Kingdom

Memorial to the Engine Room Heroes of the Titanic, Liverpool

Titanic Musicians' Memorial Southampton

Titanic Engineers' Memorial, Southampton

Titanic Memorial, Belfast

Titanic Orchestra's Memorial, Liverpool

United States

Straus Park, New York City

Titanic Memorial, New York City

Titanic Memorial, Washington, D.C.

Other

Titanic Memorial Bandstand, Ballarat, Australia

Titanic Memorial, Broken Hill, Australia

Ships that were lost on their maiden voyage

Naval ships

Vasa (1628) · Georgiana (1863) · Flach (1866) · Bismarck (1941)1 · Dinsdale (1942)1

Passenger ships

and cargo liners

Amazon (1851) · Tayleur (1854) · Titanic (1912) · Georges Philippar (1932) · Magdalena (1949) · Hans Hedtoft (1959) · Zenobia (1980)

Cargo ships

Batavia (1629) · Fortuyn (1723) · Amsterdam (1749) · Carrier Pigeon (1852) · Irex (1890) · Hastier (1919) · Adolf Vinnen (1923) · Michael E (1941)1 · Alexander Macomb (1942)1 · Empire Clough (1942)1 · Empire Drum (1942)1, 2 · Empire Dryden (1942)1, 2 · George Calvert (1942)1 · John Morgan (1943)1 · Ranga (1982)

Racing yachts

Mohawk (1876)

1 = Due to enemy action. 2 = Maiden revenue-earning voyage.

White Star Line ships

Surviving Ships

Nomadic (1911)

Planned

Oceanic (Never completed)

Former Ships

Red Jacket (1853) · Blue Jacket (1854) · Tayleur (1854) · Oceanic (1870) · Atlantic (1871) · Baltic (1871) · Tropic (1871) · Asiatic (1871) · Republic (1872) · Adriatic (1872) · Celtic (1872) · Traffic (1872) · Belgic (1872) · Gaelic (1873) · Britannic (1874) · Germanic (1875) · Arabic (1881) · Coptic (1881) · Ionic (1883) · Doric (1883) · Belgic (1885) · Gaelic (1885) · Cufic (1885) · Runic (1889) · Teutonic (1889) · Majestic (1890) · Tauric (1891) · Magnetic (1891) · Nomadic (1891) · Naronic (1892) · Bovic (1892) · Gothic (1893) · Cevic (1894) · Pontic (1894) · Georgic (1895) · Delphic (1897) · Cymric (1898) · Afric (1899) · Medic (1899) · Persic (1899) · Oceanic · Runic (1900) · Suevic (1901) · Celtic (1901) · Athenic (1902) · Corinthic (1902) · Ionic (1903) · Cedric (1903) · Victorian (1903) · Armenian (1903) · Arabic (1903) · Romanic (1903) · Cretic (1903) · Republic (1903) · Canopic (1904) · Cufic (1904) · Baltic (1904) · Tropic (1904) · Gallic (1907) · Adriatic (1907) · Laurentic (1909) · Megantic (1909) · Zeeland (1910) · Traffic (1911) · Olympic (1911) · Belgic (1911) · Zealandic (1911) · Titanic (1912) · Ceramic (1912) · Lapland (1914) · Britannic (1914) · Belgic (1917) · Justicia (1918) · Vedic (1918) · Bardic (1919) · Gallic (1920) · Mobile (1920) · Arabic (1920) · Homeric (1920) · Haverford (1921) · Poland (1922) · Majestic (1922) · Pittsburgh (1922) · Doric (1923) · Delphic (1925) · Regina (1925) · Albertic (1927) · Calgaric (1927) · Laurentic (1927) · Britannic (1930) · Georgic (1932)

List of fictional ships

Anime and manga

Blue 6, Shang 9 — Blue Submarine No. 6

Going Merry — One Piece

Thousand Sunny — One Piece

JDS Mirai — Zipang

Over the Rainbow, (a renamed USS Harry S. Truman) — Neon Genesis Evangelion

Pascal Magi — Tactical Roar

Ghost Ship — Blue Submarine No. 6

Super 99 — Submarine Super 99

Thundersub — Thundersub

Tuatha de Danaan — Full Metal Panic!

Zuko's Fire Nation ship

Yamato Takeru - super battleship, Kyokujitsu no Kantai.

Takemikazuchi - aircraft carrier, Konpeki no Kantai

I-3000 - supersubmarine, Konpeki no Kantai

Yashiromaru — Case Closed: Strategy Above the Depths

St. Aphrodite — Case Closed: Strategy Above the Depths

Blue - Blue Drop

Space Battleship Yamato - Space Battleship Yamato

Super Dimension Fortress One (SDF-1) Macross - Robotech

Comics

Aurora — trawler in The Adventures of Tintin story The Shooting Star and also from The Sign of Four from Sherlock Holmes

The Black Freighter — a metafictional pirate ship that is referenced throughout the Watchmen comic series

Cithara — alleged source distress signal in The Adventures of Tintin story The Shooting Star

HMS Cutlass - the name given to four ships of the Royal Navy - the first a battleship present at the Battle of the Nile; the second an ironclad sunk in World War I; the third a World War II destroyer, and the most recent ship a Cold War-era destroyer. All four ships appear in the Commando Comics story Bright Blade of Courage

Eagle's Shadow — Sir Nicholas Fury's ship in Marvel 1602

Grossadler - Kriegsmarine destroyer, from the Commando Comics story Bright Blade of Courage

Hawksub — Blackhawk

Karaboudjan — cargo ship in The Adventures of Tintin story The Crab with the Golden Claws

SS Ramona — tramp steamer in The Adventures of Tintin story The Red Sea Sharks

Sea Queen/The Gertrude — Lex Luthor's yacht in Superman Returns

Sirius — expedition ship in The Adventures of Tintin story Red Rackham's Treasure

Sirius — ship in The Adventures of Tintin story The Shooting Star

The Unicorn — 17th. century wooden sailing warship in The Adventures of Tintin stories The Secret of the Unicorn and Red Rackham's Treasure

HMS Viper - British destroyer, from the Commando Comics story Bright Blade of Courage

Vulkan - Kriegsmarine cruiser, from the Commando Comics story Flak Fever

Film

903 - Iranian Kilo class submarine in Steel Sharks, 1996

USS Abraham Lincoln — frigate in Disney's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, 1954

Academic Vladislav Volkov — Russian research ship in Virus, 1999

Acheron — French Napoleonic frigate in Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, 2003

African Queen — The African Queen, 1951 with Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn

Albatross — The Sea Hawk with Errol Flynn, 1940

Amindra — with shanghaied sailor from the Glencairn, torpedoed and sank in The Long Voyage Home, 1940

SS Andes — cruise ship in Let's Go Native, 1930

SS Antonia Graza — derelict Italian luxury ocean liner in Ghost Ship

Aquanaut 3 - experimental submarine, 30,000 Leagues Under the Sea, 2007

Arabella — Captain Blood with Errol Flynn, 1935

Argo — galley Jason and the Argonauts (1963 film), Jason and the Argonauts (TV miniseries)

Argonautica — cruise ship Deep Rising

USS Aspen — Full Fathom Five

HMS Avenger — Billy Budd 1962

Batavia Queen — steamship Krakatoa, East of Java 1969

HMS Bedford — British Type 23 frigate in Tomorrow Never Dies 1997

USS Bedford (DLG-113) — The Bedford Incident (also in book version)

Belafonte — oceanographic research vessel, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou

USS Belinda (APA-22) — Away All Boats, 1956 (Also appears in original novel)

Benthic Explorer — offshore support ship — The Abyss 1989

Black Hawk — The Pirate of the Black Hawk (Il Pirata dello sparviero nero) 1958

Black Pearl (formerly HMS Wicked Wench) — slaver turned pirate ship Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl

Black Swan — The Black Swan 1942

Brandenburg — World War II German battleship in We Dive at Dawn 1943

SS Britannic — cruise ship in Juggernaut

USS Caine — The Caine Mutiny (Also appears in written version)

USS Charleston - On the Beach, 2000

HMS Chester — British Type 23 frigate in Tomorrow Never Dies 1997

SSN Davies (SSN-???) - Los Angeles Class SSN in Crash Dive, 1996

HMS Devonshire — British Type 23 frigate sunk in Tomorrow Never Dies

SS Chiku Shan — ferryboat — Blood Alley (1955)

SS Claridon — ocean liner in The Last Voyage 1960

HMS Compass Rose — Second World War corvette in The Cruel Sea, 1953

USS Copperfin — World War II sub Destination Tokyo, 1943 w/ Cary Grant

HMS Dauntless — Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl

HMS Defiant — frigate in HMS Defiant, 1962

Disco Volante — motor yacht/hydrofoil in Thunderball 1965

USS Dragonfish — U.S. Submarine in Battle of the Coral Sea 1959

Dulcibella — The Riddle of the Sands 1979

USS Echo — sailing ship from The Wackiest Ship in the Army, 1959

Edinburgh Trader — Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest

Elizabeth Dane — The Fog

Elsinore — The Mutiny of the Elsinore 1937

Empress — Chinese junk — Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End

HMS Endeavour — Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End

MS Ergenstrasse — The Sea Chase (1955) with John Wayne and Lana Turner, and Patriot Games (1992) with Harrison Ford.

Esther — sailing merchantman, Old Ironsides 1926

Flying Dutchman — Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest

Geronimo — America's Cup racing yacht, Wind 1992

Ghost — sealing schooner, The Sea Wolf 1941

Glencairn — freighter — The Long Voyage Home

Gloria N — E la nave va..., Federico Fellini

SS Goliath — ocean liner — Goliath Awaits — TV film 1981

Hahnchen Maru — cargo vessel modified to command ship — Contact, 1997

Hai Peng — Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End

SS Happy Wanderer — cruise liner — Carry On Cruising

USS Haynes (DE-181) — destroyer escort, The Enemy Below

The Henrietta - paddle steamer - Around the World in 80 Days (1956 film)

Immer Essen ("Always eating") — cruise ship, Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid

The Inferno — The Goonies

HMS Interceptor — Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl

USS Intrepid — cruise ship in the film Intrepid

JDS Isokaze — Aegis (Bôkoku no îgisu) 2005

Jenny — Forrest Gump

Jolly Mon — Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Wizard King

USS Kornblatt — Don't Give Up The Ship, 1959, starred Jerry Lewis

USS Lansing (SSN-795) - Los Angeles Class SSN (Depicted as an SSBN) in Danger Beneath The Sea, 2001

Liparus — Karl Stromberg's submarine swallowing supertanker The Spy Who Loved Me 1977

SS Lorelei — An ocean liner in Ghost Ship

HMS Lydia — Captain Horatio Hornblower 1951

Mary Deare — The Wreck of the Mary Deare, starring Gary Cooper and Charlton Heston, 1959

USS Mako - Fast Attack Submarine in Danger Beneath The Sea, 2001

USS Montana — The Abyss, The Fifth Missile

Morning Star —Cutthroat Island 1995

Nathan Ross — whaling ship, All the Brothers Were Valiant 1953

Nautilus — Captain Nemo's 1860s submarine — 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea 1954, Captain Nemo and the Underwater City 1969, Mysterious Island, The Return of Captain Nemo 1978, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen 2003

HMS Nereid - Royal Navy submarine, Virus, 1980

USS Oakland (SSN-798) - Los Angeles Class SSN in Steel Sharks, 1996

Olive Branch — sailing merchantman, Captain Caution, 1940

Orca — Quint's fishing boat, Jaws, 1975

Patna — tramp steamer in Lord Jim 1965

Pequod — whaleship, Moby Dick 1956, 1978, 1998

USS Pequod - American submarine, 2010: Moby Dick, 2010

Poseidon — ocean liner/cruise ship, The Poseidon Adventure 1972, Beyond the Poseidon Adventure 1979, The Poseidon Adventure 2005, Poseidon 2006

USS Poseidon — USS Poseidon: Phantom Below 2005

The Princess — Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl

Q Boat — Q's 'fishing boat' The World Is Not Enough 1999

"Proteus" - nuclear mini submarine from the 1966 film "Fantastic Voyage." [1]

Rachel — Moby-Dick, 1956, 1998

Rasputin - Ex-Soviet Submarine in Rapid Assault, 1997

The Reaper- Dog's ship in Cutthroat Island, 1995

The Red Witch — Wake of the Red Witch with John Wayne, 1948

USS Reluctant (AK-601) — World War II cargo ship in Mister Roberts (1955) and the 1984 television film (also appears in novel, play and TV series versions)

U-571 appears in U-571 (film), coincidently same number as German submarine U-571

Rights-of-Man — Billy Budd, 1962

Rob Roy — commercial freighter, Windbag the Sailor, 1936

USS San Pablo — The Sand Pebbles, 1966

HMS Saltash Castle — Second World War frigate in The Cruel Sea, 1953

Saracen — yacht, Dead Calm

USS Sarasota - Aircraft Carrier, Crash Dive, 1996 & Rapid Assault, 1997

USS Sawfish — On the Beach, 1959

USS Scotia - submarine, 30,000 Leagues Under the Sea, 2007

Sea Star — tug in Virus, 1999

HMS Sea Tiger — Second World War submarine, We Dive at Dawn, 1943

USS Sea Tiger — World War II submarine, Operation Petticoat 1977

SS Sea Witch — Action in the North Atlantic 1943

SSNR Seaview — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 1961 with Walter Pidgeon

HMS Shag at Sea - yacht, Austin Powers in Goldmember 2002

HMS Sherwood - British cruiser, Carry on Admiral 1957

HMS Solent - British destroyer, Sink the Bismarck! 1960

IJN Shinaru — Japanese aircraft carrier, Torpedo Run 1958

Stealth Ship — media mogul Elliot Carver's secret news creator in Tomorrow Never Dies. Is based on the real life Sea Shadow (IX-529) 1997

St. Georges — British spy ship trawler For Your Eyes Only 1981

USS Starfish — Hellcats of the Navy

USS Stingray - Down Periscope, 1996 with Kelsey Grammer no relation to the Salmon-class SS-186 USS Stingray

USS Thunderfish — Operation Pacific, 1954 with John Wayne

USS Tiger Shark — The Atomic Submarine

SS Titanic II — cruise liner, Titanic II, 2010

HMS Torrin — In Which We Serve, 1942

Ulysses — submarine, Atlantis: The Lost Empire

SSN Ulysses (SSN-???) - Los Angeles Class in Crash Dive, 1996

USS Valhalla (SSN-905) - Los Angeles Class SSN in Rapid Assault, 1997

SS Venture — King Kong, 1933, 2005

HMS Venus — British frigate — Carry On Jack, 1962

HMS Victoria — British WWI ironclad, Britannic, 2000

The Wanderer - Captain Ron, 1992 with Martin Short and Kurt Russell

We're Here — Captains Courageous, 1937 with Spencer Tracy

Wonkatania — Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (also appears in 2005 adaptation), based on the Cunard Line tradition of ending ships with an -ania (i.e., RMS Lusitania and RMS Aquitania)

Yellow Submarine — The Beatles' psychedelic submarine

Literature

Single works

USS Abraham Lincoln — frigate in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne, 1868

Adventure — Oceangoing Salvage Tug — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972

African Queen — The African Queen by C. S. Forester

HMS Amirante — Destroyer — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

Antarctica — Whaling Factory Ship — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962

HMS Antigone — Leander class cruiser commissioned 1938 in "The Cruiser" by Warren Tute, 1955

SNS Antilla- Spanish battleship in Trafalgar by Arturo Perez-Reverte, 2004

Antonov — Soviet bulk freighter — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Arabella — Captain Blood by Raphael Sabatini, 1924

HMS Aries — Leander Class frigate — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Argo — Jason and the Argonauts

Artemis — Voyager by Diana Gabaldon

HMS Artemis — The Ship, by C. S. Forester, 1943

Astrea — Roman galley ship — Ben-Hur by Genl Lew Wallace, 1880

Aurora — Armed whale catcher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962

Auxoil — Oil-rig tender — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

USS Avenger - Trident Class SSBN - Inoculate! by Neil Bayne, 1979

Baalbek — Libyan Freighter — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

Bachir — Libyan Auxiliary Cruiser — The Unripe Gold, by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1983

USS Belinda (APA-22) — Away All Boats by Kenneth M. Dodson, 1954 (also appears in film version)

Bellatrix — Motor yacht — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

HMS Bellipotent — Billy Budd by Herman Melville

Beryte — Libyan Auxiliary Cruiser — The Unripe Gold, by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1983

Bird of Dawning — Bird of Dawning novel by John Masefield

USS Bradford — Frigate — The Krone Experiment by J. Craig Wheeler 1986

Black Swan - Pirate ship - "The Black Swan" by Rafael Sabatini 1932 (prototype for Pirates of the Caribbean films)

Byblos — Freighter — The Soukour Deadline by Anthony Trew, 1976

USS Caine — The Caine Mutiny (also appears in film version)

HMS Calypso — frigate — The Captain from Connecticut by C. S. Forester

USS Candlefish (SS-284) — Ghostboat by George E. Simpson and Neal R. Burger 1976. World War II Gato Class submarine

USS Carl Jackson — Nimitz Class aircraft carrier — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

Caspar's Folly — Ocean racing trimaran — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

Chimay — Whale Cacher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962

SS Claridon — The Last Voyage

HMS Compass Rose — The Cruel Sea by Nicholas Monsarrat, 1951

Covenant — brig, Kidnapped by Robert Louis Stevenson, 1886

Crozet — Whale Catcher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962

HMS Cyclades — Leander Class frigate — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Dawn Treader - Voyage of the Dawn Treader by C.S. Lewis

USS Delaware — frigate — The Captain from Connecticut by C. S. Forester

Demeter — Russian schooner in Dracula by Bram Stoker

HMS Deterrent — Polaris missile-carrying SSBN- Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963

HMS Devastation — UK Submarine — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

USS Dolphin — Ice Station Zebra by Alistair MacLean 1963

Doneska - Russian Submarine - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979

Dostoiny — Krivak class destroyer — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Dulcibella — The Riddle of the Sands by Erskine Childers, 1903

Duncan — ocean yacht, In Search of the Castaways by Jules Verne, 1867

HMS Eagle — Invincible Class aircraft carrier — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

Erebus — Alaska

Esmeralda - Racing Yawl - Her Name Will Be Faith by Max Marlow, 1988

ESO - Experimental nuclear powered stealth minisub - The Tiger Cruise by Richard Thompson, 1999

Evening Star — Alaska

Explorer 1 - Bathyscape - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979

Falkland — Whale Catcher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962

Fin of God — Omnian ship, Small Gods

The Fuwalda — Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs, 1914. The ship which took Tarzan's parents to Africa.

USS Galveston - Aircraft Carrier - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979

USS Garcia — Eyes of the Hammer by Bob Mayer, 1991

Ghost — sealing schooner, The Sea Wolf by Jack London 1904

The Gloria Scott — from the earliest Sherlock Holmes story, by Arthur Conan Doyle

Grande Rapide — Ocean racing catamaran — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

Gratulana — Liberian oil tanker — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

Grenouille Frenetique (Frantic Frog) — pirate ship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser

The Hesperus — from the poem The Wreck of the Hesperus by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

HISPANIOLA (capitalized throughout the story) — Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson

Huntress — British survey ship — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Ilya Podogin - Soviet SSN - Icebound by Dean Koontz, 1995

USS Imperator - Submarine Amphibious Assault Ship - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987

Incroyable — Opium smuggling Clipper — The Watering Place of Good Peace by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1960

USS Independence, a fictional Wasp class amphibious assault ship where a large part of the plot from The Swarm by Frank Schätzing takes place.

HMS Indomitable — Billy Budd by Herman Melville

Jeroboam — Moby-Dick or The Whale by Herman Melville

Jolly Roger — Captain Hook's pirate ship — Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie

John Henry D — Fishing boat — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Joun — Fishing boat — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

HMS Jupiter — Leander Class frigate — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979\

K-387 - Russian nuclear submarine - The Tiger Cruise by Richard Thompson, 1999

Karamagee — Ocean racing trimaran — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

USS Keeling — The Good Shepherd by CS Forester

Kerguelen — Whale Catcher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962

Kharkov - Moscow Class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988

HMS Kittiwake — Bird class patrol boat — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Korund — Tango Class submarine — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

USS Langley — a Forrestal-class aircraft carrier — The Sixth Battle by Barrett Tillman

Laughing Sandbag — pirate ship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser

Leif Ericson — The Illuminatus! Trilogy by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson 1975

Leros — Greek Freighter — The Soukour Deadline by Anthony Trew, 1976

Leopard - Akula class submarine - The Tiger Cruise by Richard Thompson, 1999

USS Liberty - Trident Class SSBN - Inoculate! by Neil Bayne, 1979

Lobitos — Panamanian freighter — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

HMS Loch Torridon — Cruiser — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

HMS Loch Vennachar — Cruiser — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

The Magic Oat Boat — The Magic Oat Boat, (a Children's Story), 1992

HMAS Magpie — Mine-sweeper — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972

Malange - Freighter - - The Deep Silence by Douglas Reeman, 1967

Marie Celeste — The Relation of J Habakuk Jephson by Arthur Conan Doyle (the real ship was Mary Celeste)

Mary Deare — The Wreck of the Mary Deare by Hammond Innes, 1956

USS Mary Jane - Naval Oceanographic Research Ship - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979

HMS Massive — Polaris missile-carrying SSBN — Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963

Medina — Motor cruiser — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

Mercedes Express Ocean racing trimaran — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

Milka — Jingo (name parodies the Pinta)

HMS Missile - Polaris missile-carrying SSBN — Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963

Moonraker — Liberian tramp freighter — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972

Myfanwy — Coaster — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972

Nancy Bell - The Yarn of the Nancy Bell by W. S. Gilbert

USS Narwhal — SSN — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

USS Nashville — U.S. warship — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

USS Nathan James (DDG-80) — The Last Ship by William Brinkley, 1988

Nautilus — Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and The Mysterious Island

Nellie — Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, 1899

HMS Nemesis — Tai-Pan by James Clavell 1966

Novgorod - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987

Numestra del Oro - Armed Merchantman owned by a Colombian Cartel - Hammerheads by Dale Brown, 1990

Olympus — Supertanker — Collision by Anthony Wall, 1986

Omega 1 - Submersible Barge - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979

Omega Challenger — Ocean racing sloop — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

HMS Orcus - Oberon class submarine - Submarine by John Wingate, 1982

Orel - Akula class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987

Oska Laertes — Danish ferry — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Pacific Klondike - Deep ocean drillship - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979

Penguin — The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket by Edgar Allan Poe

Pequod — Moby-Dick,or The Whale, by Herman Melville, 1851

USS Pequod — Firefox by Craig Thomas 1977. Sturgeon-class SSN which rendezvoused on the Arctic ice to re-fuel the Mig-31 Firefox

HMS Phoenix - SSN - The Deep Silence by Douglas Reeman, 1967

HMS Plover — Bird class patrol boat — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Plymouth Corporation's Revenge — pirate ship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser

HMS Plymouth Sound — sailing Corvette — The Watering Place of Good Peace by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1960

Poltava - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987

Poppy — Opium smuggling schooner — The Watering Place of Good Peace by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1960

SS Poseidon — ocean liner, The Poseidon Adventure by Paul Gallico, 1969

Pushkin — The Last Ship by William Brinkley

USS Pyramus — Polaris missile-carrying SSBN - The Deep Silence by Douglas Reeman, 1967

Queequeg — The Grim Grotto by Lemony Snicket 2004

Rachel — Moby-Dick,or The Whale, in search of the Pequod

USS Raleigh — Eyes of the Hammer by Bob Mayer, 1991

Red Witch — Wake of the Red Witch by Garland Roark

Red October — Soviet submarine, The Hunt for Red October by Tom Clancy 1984

USS Reluctant (AK-601) — World War II cargo ship in Mister Roberts (also appears in play, film and TV series versions)

HMS Retaliate — Polaris missile-carrying SSBN — Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963

USS Retribution - Trident Class SSBN - Inoculate! by Neil Bayne, 1979

Retivy — Krivak class destroyer — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979

Rigel Star — Oil tanker — The Unripe Gold, by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1983

Rights-of-Man — Billy Budd by Herman Melville

USN Rio Grande — Aircraft Carrier — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

USS Robert F. Kennedy — A stealth nuclear powered battle cruiser (BCGN) — North Cape by Joe Poyer

Rocketing Spitfire — sloop — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser

USS Rosemont - Los Angeles Class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988

Ryazan - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987

HMS Sabre — S-Class submarine — Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963

HMS Safari - Swiftsure Class - Submarine by John Wingate, 1982

HMS Saltash — The Cruel Sea (HMS Saltash Castle in the film)

USS San Pablo — The Sand Pebbles by Richard McKenna

Santa Cascara (later HMS Golden Vanity) — Spanish galleon captured by the British — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser

Santa Umbriago — Spanish warship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser

Saracen — Supertanker fitted with reinforced bow. — Collision by Anthony Wall, 1986

Saratov - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987

HMS Saturn - Swiftsure Class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988

Scorpion — Cruising yacht — Collision by Anthony Wall, 1986

USS Scorpion — On the Beach by Nevil Shute 1957

USS Seamount — SSBN — The Krone Experiment by J. Craig Wheeler 1986

The Sea Witch — a yacht in The Wreck of the Mary Deare by Hammond Innes, 1956

USOS Seaview — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea by Theodore Sturgeon 1961

Semittanté — Tramp Freighter — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

Shelif — Fishing boat — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

USS Shenandoah — Aircraft carrier — The Hero Ship by Hank Searls, 1969

USN Shenandoah — US Submarine — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

Shodo — Japanese Whaling Factory Ship — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972

Shodo 4 — Japanese whale catcher — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972

Siren - yacht, A Damsel in Distress by P. G. Wodehouse, 1919

USS Skippack — SSN — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

Smolensk - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987

Southern Sun — Freighter — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972

USN Springfield — Aircraft carrier — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

Splendor Hyaline — The Horse and his boy by C. S. Lewis

USS Starbuck (SSN-989)[citation needed] — Pacific Vortex! by Clive Cussler 1983 (Cover of Sphere edition shows SSN-107 on the fin)

USS Stevens — Oliver Hazard Perry Class frigate — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993

USS Stinson — Spruance class destroyer — The Krone Experiment by J. Craig Wheeler 1986

USS Stormy Beach - Long Beach Class cruiser - Fireplay by William Wingate

Student Prince — Freighter — The Soukour Deadline by Anthony Trew, 1976

Samurai Maru — Japanese Seagoing Tugboat — The Unripe Gold, by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1983

Sunboro Beauty — Ocean racing yacht — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

Sweet Ribena — Multihulled ocean racing yacht — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

USS Swordfish — On the Beach by Nevil Shute 1957

USS Swordfish - Trident Class SSBN - Inoculate! by Neil Bayne, 1979

Tambov - Russian nuclear submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor

HMS Teaser — Aircraft Carrier- Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

HMS Temeraire (S.191) - SSN - The Deep Silence by Douglas Reeman, 1967

Thorshammer — Norwegian Destroyer — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins

USS Thomas Jefferson — Nimitz Class by Patrick Robinson

HMS Thunder Child — The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells

SS Titan — Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan by Morgan Robertson, 1898

Tornado Four — Ocean racing sloop — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

Trident — Survey Ship — Collision by Anthony Wall, 1986

Twelve Apostles — passenger ship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser

HMS Ulysses — HMS Ulysses

USS Urchin — Air Force One by Edwin Corley 1978

SS Valparaiso — Godhead Trilogy by James Morrow

USS Vindicator (NMSS-3) — Nuclear-powered strategic missile battleship, Fire Lance by David Mace, 1986

Vingilot — The Silmarillion by J. R. R. Tolkien

USS Viperfish — Spy Sub

Vitebsk - Victor class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988

Vladimir - Victor class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988

Vologda - Victor class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988

Voronetz - Victor class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988

The Walrus — Flint's pirate ship in Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson

USS Warren Harding — in Robert Clark Young's naval satire One of the Guys

We're Here — Captains Courageous: A Story of the Grand Banks, by Rudyard Kipling, 1896

USN Willowtrack — US Submarine — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966

Wilson's Savoury — Ocean racing yacht — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980

USS Woodbridge (SSN-349) - Los Angeles Class - The Tiger Cruise by Richard Thompson, 1999

Yabba-Dabba-Doo — Sewer, Gas & Electric: The Public Works Trilogy by Matt Ruff 1997

Series

Amanda Lee Garrett series by James Cobb

USS Benton

USS Carondelet — PGAC-03

USS Manassas — PGAC-02

USS Queen of the West — PGAC-01

USS Cunningham — CLA-79 (Cruiser Littoral Attack)

USS Evans F. Carlson — LPD-26 (Landing Platform Dock)

Floater 1 — Mobile Offshore Base (consisting of nine superbarges)

Aubrey–Maturin series by Patrick O'Brian

HM Sloop Sophie

HM Sloop Polychrest

HMS Lively

HMS Surprise

Nutmeg of Consolation

HMS Worcester

HEICS Niobe

Privateer Franklin

HMS Diane

USS Norfolk

Axis of Time trilogy by John Birmingham

USS Hillary Clinton

USS Kandahar

USS Leyte Gulf

USS Amanda Garrett

USS Providence

USS Kennebunkport

HMS Trident

HMS Vanguard

HMS Fearless

HMS Dolphin by L.A. Meyer

HMAS Havoc

HMAS Moreton Bay

HMAS Ipswich Royal Australian Navy Fremantle Class Patrol Boat

JDS Siranui

KRI Nuku

KRI Sutanto

Dessaix

Biggles series by W. E. Johns

SS Alice Clair - British merchant ship

Benegal Star - tramp steamer

Colonia - British merchant ship

Dundee Castle - British merchant ship

HMS Seafret - British destroyer

Queen of Olati - British steamship

Shanodah - British merchant ship

Tasman - Australian merchant ship

Bolitho series by Alexander Kent

HMS Gorgon

HM Cutter Avenger

HMS Destiny

HMS Trojan

HM Sloop Sparrow

HMS Phalarope

HMS Undine

HMS Tempest

HMS Hyperion

HMS Euryalus

HMS Achates

HMS Argonaute

Golden Plover

HMS Unrivalled

HMS Athena

HMS Onward

Nautilus, French frigate

HMS Winger from Corvette Command by Nicholas Monsarrat (based on the real HMS Shearwater)

Edward Mainwaring series by Victor Suthren

HMS Pallas

Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser series by Fritz Leiber

Black Treasurer

Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling

The Durmstrang ship

Flashman series by George MacDonald Fraser

Balliol College — slave-trader

Horatio Hornblower series by CS Forester

HMS Atropos

HMS Clorinda

HMS Hotspur

HMS Justinian

HMS Lydia

HMS Nonsuch

HM Sloop Retribution

HMS Sutherland

HMS Witch of Endor

Mejidieh

Natividad

Inheritance cycle series by Christopher Paolini

The Dragon Wing

Lord Ramage series by Dudley Pope

HM Brig Triton

HMS Calypso

HMS Jocasta

HMS Dido

John Fury series by G. S. Beard

HMS Amazon - British 32

Bedford - merchantman

Earl of Mornington - East India Company

Magicienne - French frigate

Otter - East India Company warship

HMS Wasp - British brigantine

Nathaniel Drinkwater series by Richard Woodman

HM Cutter Kestrel

HM Brig Hellebore

HM Bomb-vessel Virago

HMS Melusine

HMS Antigone former French frigate

HMS Patrician

Vestal paddle-steamer

Para Handy series by Neil Munro

Vital Spark

Paul Gallant series by Victor Suthren

Echo corvette

The Chronicles of Narnia series by C. S. Lewis

Dawn Treader

Splendor Hyaline

Southern Victory Series by Harry Turtledove

USS Chapultepec — aircraft carrier

USS Dakota — Battleship — The Great War: American Front

CSS Fort Sumter — Confederate cruiser — The Great War: American Front

CSS Hot Springs — destroyer escort in the Second Great War

USS Josephus Daniels — destroyer escort in Second Great War

USS Oregon — battleship in Second Great War

USS Pocahantas, Arkansas — troop transport named after one of the rare US victories in the Second Mexican War

USS Punishment — US river monitor operating on the Mississippi — The Great War: Walk in Hell

USS Remembrance

Ripple — U.S. fishing boat — The Great War: American Front

USS Sandwich Islands

CSS Scallop — Confederate submarine — The Great War: American Front

Spray — Fishing trawler — The Great War: American Front

CSS Swamp Fox — Confederate commerce raider — The Great War: American Front

USS Trenton — aircraft carrier

CSS Whelk — Confederate submarine — The Great War: American Front

Travis McGee series by John D. McDonald

Busted Flush — houseboat

John Maynard Keynes

Thorstein Veblen

Dray Prescot series by Kenneth Bulmer (as Alan Burt Akers)

HMS Rockingham

Sherlock Holmes

The Five Orange Pips

Lone Star

The Cardboard Box

May Day (Liverpool and London Line)

Conqueror (Liverpool and London Line)

The Adventure of Black Peter

Sea Unicorn (whaler)

Bloody Jack series by Louis A. Meyer

HMS Dolphin

HMS Hope

HMS Wolverine

Bloodhound

Nancy B. Alsop

Belle of the Golden West

Emerald

HMS Juno

Jack Ryan universe series by Tom Clancy

Red October, a Soviet Typhoon-class submarine

V.K. Konovalov, a Soviet Alfa-class submarine

E.S. Politovsky, a Soviet Alfa-class submarine

Norse mythology

Hringhorni, the ship of Baldr

Naglfar, a ship in Norse mythology made of the fingernails and toenails of the dead

Skíðblaðnir, the ship of Freyr

Radio

Empress of Coconut — Potarneyland cruise liner, The Navy Lark

HMS Makepeace — British destroyer, The Navy Lark

Marie Valette — 18th century ship sunk in the English Channel, The Navy Lark

Poppadum — Potarneyland frigate, The Navy Lark

Saucy Seagull — British fishing trawler, The Navy Lark

HMS Troutbridge — British frigate, The Navy Lark

Stage

Flying Dutchman — in the opera The Flying Dutchman by Richard Wagner and other plays, movies and novels.

HMS Pinafore by Gilbert and Sullivan

Tarantula — The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan

USS Reluctant (AK-601) — Mister Roberts (also appears in novel, films, and TV series versions)

Television

HMAS Ambush — Patrol Boat

HMAS Defiance — Patrol Boat

HMAS Hammersley — Sea Patrol (TV series)

HMS Hero (F42) — Warship

Argonaut — Mike Nelson's boat in Sea Hunt, ' 50s series

Batboat — Batman

SS Bernice — a cargo ship in the Doctor Who serial Carnival of Monsters

Black Pig — Captain Pugwash — UK children's TV cartoon series

SS Claridon — Ocean liner (based on the RMS Queen Mary) in Ghost Whisperer

Golden Lolly — pirate ship, Henry's Cat

Gone Fission — Mr. Burns' yacht — The Simpsons

Greasy Fleece — pirate ship, Henry's Cat

Haunted Star — General Hospital

Horatio Hornblower

HMS Indefatigable — (Edward Pellew, Capt.)

HMS Hotspur —

HMS Justinian —

Papillion — French frigate

Le Rève — French sloop

JAG / NCIS universe

USS Angel Shark (SSGN-559)

USS Benjamin Harrison (CVN-79)

USS Bennington (CVN-78)

USS Bladensburg (LPH-12)

USS Cathedral City (SSN-757)

USS Cayuga (DDG-51)

USS Connolly (CVN-84)

USS Crawford (SSN-806)

USS Daniel Boone (DDG-72)

USS Ellyson (FFG-19)

USS Gainsville

USS Gillcrist (DDG-114)

USS Hartung (DD-998)

USS Hennessey (FFG-65)

USS John Cooper (DDG-99)

USS Manassas (CG-74)

USS Monroe Smith (FFG-63)

USS Montana (CGN-42)

USS Patrick Henry (CVN-74)

USS Reprisal (CV-35)

USS San Michel

USS Seahawk (CVN-65)

USS Skerrett (EDDG-31)

USS Stanley Dace

USS Stockdale (FFG-62)

USS Suribachi (LST-1186)

USS Thomas Jefferson

USS Thomas Lyons

USS Tigershark

USS Vance (DDG-101)

USS Wake Island

USS Watertown (SSN-696)

Vasiliev — Russian destroyer

USS Walter Mondale — laundry ship from The Simpsons, mentioned in the episode Bart vs. Australia

USS Kiwi — The Wackiest Ship in the Army

SS Lady Anne — cruise ship, "Passage on the Lady Anne" episode of The Twilight Zone

HMS Lindana - sloop - Phineas and Ferb

SS Minnow — Gilligan's Island

SS Moldavia - passenger ship, You Rang, M'Lord?

USS Monroe (DD-211) — The Pretender

The Onedin Line series

Anne Onedin — a steamship

Charlotte Rhodes — first ship of James Onedin

Medusa

Pampero

Soren Larsen

Naughty Jane — rowboat, Dad's Army

Persephone — log salvage boat from The Beachcombers

Piper Maru — French ship from The X-Files episode Piper Maru

U.S.S. Ardent — American naval destroyer from The X-Files episode Død Kalm

PT 73 — the PT boat from McHale's Navy

PT-116 — McHale's Navy

USS Reluctant (AK-601) — World War II cargo ship in Mister Roberts (also appears in novel, play and film versions)

SS Tipton — The Suite Life on Deck

USOS Seaview — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea

seaQuest DSV 4600 — seaQuest DSV

USS Sea Spanker — aircraft carrier, from the New Kids on the Blecch episode of The Simpsons

SkyDiver — UFO 1970–1971

Sultana —The Buccaneers 1956

Thunderbird 4 Thunderbirds

Temperance - Bones

Tiki III — schooner in Adventures in Paradise 1960s series by James Michener

Thunder — super speedboat in Thunder in Paradise 1994

Video games

Scinfaxi & Hrimfaxi — Aircraft carrier submarines featured in Ace Combat 5: The Unsung War

Gangplank Galleon — Donkey Kong Country series

Jolly Roger's ship — Super Mario 64

OFS Kestrel — Aircraft Carrier in Ace Combat 5: The Unsung War and Ace Combat Zero: The Belkan War

SS Anne — Ship in Pokémon games

The Antaeus, an "adaptive cruiser" in Hostile Waters: Antaeus Rising

USS Liberty — amphibious assault ship in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas

Luna Lucura — cargo vessel in Jurassic Park: Chaos Island

Maria Doria — Tomb Raider 2

The "Salty Hippo"- Captain Blubber's ship in the [Banjo-Kazooie] series of games.

The S.S. Zelbess (alternately the S.S. Invincible) in Chrono Cross

The Eastern Spirit — decommissioned Russian whaler rebuilt to serve as supply-ship and secondary laboratory in Cold Fear.

Elisabeth Dane — Small cargo ship Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines

The USS Ravenswood — Coastguard ship in Cold Fear.

The GFS Olympus and the GFS Valhalla from Metroid Prime 3: Corruption

The Space Pirate Vessel Orpheon from Metroid Prime

The GFS Tyr from Metroid Prime 2 Echoes

The Borealis — abandoned ship in Half-Life 2 Episode 2

The S.S. Selene — Cargo vessel commanded by Ronnie Olsen in Freedom Wings

The RMS Artanic - Royal Mail Ship commanded by Antares Andrews in Blockland

The Reaver - The name of Reaver's ship, originally going to be named the Narcissus in Fable II

Folklore

HMS Friday, a popular urban legend

Flying Dutchman

Courser or the Tuscarora, Alfred Bulltop Stormalong's clipper ship

RMS Titanic on film and TV

Saved from the Titanic (1912) · In Nacht und Eis (1912) · Atlantic (1929) · Titanic (1943) · Titanic (1953) · A Night to Remember (1958) · S.O.S. Titanic (1979) · Raise the Titanic (1980) · Titanic (TV miniseries) (1996) · No Greater Love (1996) · Titanic (1997) · The Legend of the Titanic (1999) · Titanic: The Legend Goes On (2001) · Ghosts of the Abyss (2003) · Titanic II (2010) · Titanic: Blood & Steel (2012) 1

  • Condition: New
  • Time Period: 1940's
  • Era / Type: 1940s
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United Kingdom
  • Modified Item: No
  • Vintage: Yes

PicClick Insights - 1912 TITANIC Newspaper Daily Mirror Antique Photos London New York Old Vintage PicClick Exclusive

  •  Popularity - 11 watchers, 0.1 new watchers per day, 182 days for sale on eBay. Super high amount watching. 4 sold, 5 available.
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