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Years of the Lusitania Museum and Old Head Signal Tower’ celebrates a decade since the Old Head Signal Tower restoration has ...
Archaeologist Karl Brady discusses Lough Corrib’s ancient log boats at the Galway City Museum on June 25. Entry is free.
This week’s story, “ The Queen of Bad Influences ,” opens in 1913, in the English county of Gloucestershire, and is about a young woman called Constance who has recently left an all-girls’ school and ...
When the German U-boats targeted the Lusitania with a torpedo, the ship sank more quickly than expected. Here's why that happened according to modern reports.
As wrecks go, the Lusitania is second only to the Titanic in terms of fame and tragedy. Submerged some 92 metres deep around 18kms off Cork’s Kinsale coast, 1,197 of its passengers died when it ...
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History's Most Tragic Shipwreck Wasn't The TitanicThe wreck of the Lusitania sits at a shallow depth of only 93 meters and is easily reachable. This contrasts that of the Titanic wreck, which sits at a depth of over 3,700 meters.
RMS Lusitania, circa 1910. Getty Images A telegraph machine from the RMS Lusitania shipwreck, off the coast of Co Cork, was raised 102 years after it was banished to the depths of the ocean.
Many of you know the story of the Lusitania, the passenger ship sunk by a German U-boat on May, 7, 1915. The loss of life was enormous. What you may not know is among the passengers were 12 people ...
Artefacts from the shipwreck of the Lusitania, including famous masterpieces by Monet, Rembrandt and Rubens, risk being lost forever because of the deteriorating condition of the vessel, according ...
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