Cost to build: $7.5 million ($200 million with inflation)

Who paid to build the Titanic?

With so many workers to pay (Harland and Wolff had more than 15,000 workers), and almost 7.5 million dollars being spent to build and furnish the Titanic, the cost of the Titanic was adding up quick. Harland and Wolff’s answer to this problem was simple: pay the workers less and make them work more.

What was the hardest job on the Titanic?

John Priest was one of more than 150 ‘firemen’, or stokers, whose job it was to keep Titanic’s 29 colossal boilers at steam, day and night, for the entire journey.

How many workers worked on the Titanic?

Titanic was the largest man-made object ever to have taken to the seas. Harland and Wolff employed thousands of men, with over 15,000 working on Titanic.

How many workers died building Titanic?

Eight people died during the ship’s construction. Eight men died during the construction of the ship, but only five of the names are known: Samuel Scott, John Kelly, William Clarke, James Dobbin, and Robert Murphy.

Did anyone from the boiler room survived Titanic?

Titanic was celebrated as the biggest, safest, most advanced ship of its age, but it was a lowly stoker in its boiler room who truly deserved the name ‘unsinkable’. John Priest survived no fewer than four ships that went to the bottom, including Titanic and its sister ship Britannic.

Who shot himself on the Titanic?

Lieutenant William McMaster Murdoch
William McMaster Murdoch

Lieutenant William McMaster Murdoch RNR
An undated photo of Murdoch, later published in accounts of the sinking of the Titanic.
Born28 February 1873 Dalbeattie, Scotland
Died15 April 1912 (aged 39) Atlantic Ocean
Other namesWill Murdoch

How did the Riveters get paid on the Titanic?

The opportunity to do the work was a very haphazard affair, with the foreman making random choices in hiring the men for the day. The pay for doing the job of riveting was based on the number of rivets that were hammered in.

Why was there a shortage of rivets on the Titanic?

Acting as the glue that holds the ship together, the archives also state that there was a shortage of riveters and the necessary materials to produce high quality rivets. The archives also uncovered that there was indeed a lack of skilled riveters that were needed to complete the project.

Where did the riveting take place on the Titanic?

One of the most basic components’ of the Titanic construction was the process of riveting, that took place in the Harland & Woolf shipyard in Belfast. The opportunity to do the work was a very haphazard affair, with the foreman making random choices in hiring the men for the day.

What did furnace boy do with rivets on Titanic?

The furnace boy would put five or six rivets in the fire from his bag of rivets; he would when the rivet had reached the right temperature throw the hot rivet to the holder-on who, on picking it up put it through the hole, ramming it through with a back-hammer.