The current condition of the RMS Lusitania on the seafloor, 100 years after its sinking on 7 May 1915, is revealed in greater detail than ever before. The imagery provides a sense of the scale and ...
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 ...
This lesson is designed to help students investigate the sinking of the RMS Lusitania on May 7, 1915, by a German submarine while en route from the United States to England. Students will take ...
The sinking was a major factor that brought the United States in to the war in 1917It was one of four that drove RMS Lusitania across the Atlantic. Lusitania and her sister-ship Mauretania were ...
The cache of ammunition the team found when they descended 93-metres to the wreck of the ill-fated RMS Lusitania Dick Vaughan surfacing from a 75 meter build up trimix dive during the year ...
The davit currently stands in Annalong Marine Park but will be moved to the Lusitania museum in Kinsale The official transfer of a davit that held lifeboats in place onboard the Lusitania has ...
Geograph/Arthur C Harris A memorial at Holyhead Maritime Museum commemorating those lost at sea, including the RMS Leinster "Just as the sinking of The Lusitania in 1915 had been a propaganda ...
RMS Lusitania was a Cunard transatlantic liner built on the Clyde,Scotland.She was 787ft long,87ft wide and weighed 31,550 tons. Her maiden vogage between Liverpool and New York was on 7 Sep 1907 ...