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What Life Was Like Aboard the Titanic

Updated: Apr. 21, 2024

The RMS Titanic may have met its untimely demise in the most tragic of ways but people are still intrigued by the glitz and glamour the luxury liner boasted before hitting an iceberg on that fateful evening of April 14, 1912.

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Dine in style

First class passengers on the Titanic were in the lap of luxury aboard the 883-foot ship. According to Ultimate Titanic, their dining room was an impressive 114-foot room and filled the width of the ship—it had to be lavish to seat a capacity of 532 passengers at one sitting. Menus that survived the wreckage showed dinners consisted of ten courses.

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See and be seen

The first-class restaurant’s grandiose reception room was a place where people could gather before convening for their evening meal, the perfect place for the social elite. Other public areas included a lounge, reading and writing room, smoking room, veranda cafes, palm courts, and a Parisian-style cafe. Check out these things you didn’t know about the Titanic.

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titanic cabin
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Cabin fever

If you take a commercial cruise today, you’re likely to find even the priciest of cabins are on the small side. That wasn’t the case on the Titanic, which boasted 39 private suites on the top decks of the ship, according to the BBC. The furniture and wood-paneled walls were ornate, carved with intricate detail and made from oak, mahogany, and sycamore.

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British coins on white backgrounds, British coins.
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No expense spared

Considering the Titanic cost $7.5 million to build way back in 1912 (that’s about $180 million today), a first-class ticket aboard the ship set passengers back a pretty penny (lots of them). Money.com reports these tickets cost $2,560 at the time, the modern equivalent of which would exceed $61,000. What did these expensive cabins include? Two bedrooms, a sitting room, two wardrobe rooms, and a bathroom.

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Bunking in third class

As to be expected, the Titanic’s third-class passengers weren’t treated nearly as well as those traveling on the first-class decks. Their small cabins, which often consisted of bunk beds and simple washbasins, were expected to hold up to ten passengers. Much of the third-class level consisted of immigrants making their way to the United States, including families. The children would play games on the poop deck.

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Opened Oysters on stone slate plate with lemon
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Decadent meals

Back on the first class deck, the meals were full of rich foods. According to menus, passengers feasted on oysters, salmon, chicken, lamb, duck, and squab. For steak lovers, there were filet mignon and sirloin options. Typically the evening didn’t end with dinner. The men generally took to the smoking room (women weren’t allowed there), while the wives headed to the lounge for a chat.

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Second-class passengers

They may not have been treated to all of the same luxuries as those traveling on the top decks, but second-class passengers did enjoy many amenities. They, too, had entertainment in the form of a live band, and their meals were similar to those served on the first-class deck, according to the National Museums NI website. Of the second class passengers, Michel and Edmond Navratil (shown) who became known as the “Titanic Orphans” were likely the most famous. Don’t miss these history lessons your teacher lied about.

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titanic boy playing
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Playtime onboard

There were only five children on the first class deck of the Titanic, according to the Irish Examiner. They were allowed to use the gym space but it’s believed that they also took over one of the deck’s veranda cafes and turned it into a playroom of sorts. The kids in second-class (there were 22) didn’t have the same dedicated space to run around, but were permitted to check out what was going on along the corridors and elsewhere on deck. Here’s why we are still so fascinated by the Titanic.

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Vintage old piano, close up
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The band played on

Live entertainment was a major luxury on board. “One thing I have come to realize was the importance of the band during the voyage,” says Don Lynch, historian for the Titanic Historical Society. “People didn’t have radios, iPods, or any way of playing music during the day. Even in their own homes they either had to make their own music or repeatedly crank the Victrola. Having access to a small orchestra that would play requests was quite special. Third class, of course, still had to make its own.” They did have their own piano on which to do so, according to the BBC.

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Drain water in the white sink in the bathtub
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Third class troubles

One wouldn’t expect much by way of amenities in third class on the Titanic, but packing ten people into each cabin wasn’t even the least of their troubles. If you can believe it, the 700 passengers on the bottom deck had to share just two bathtubs, according to Nat Geo Kids. Learn more with these interesting facts on just about everything.

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Playing cards near wineglass of whiskey and cigar
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Communal space

While third class didn’t have the same riches as the upper decks, according to Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition, White Star Line’s accommodations in steerage were still better than on most ships at the time. Third class passengers socialized in a general room and also had access to a nursery and lounge. Food, though basic, was plentiful, a novelty of third class travel back in the day.

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Cozy dog sleeping by fireplace on bamboo hardwood flooring, curled up sleeping.
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Animals aboard

There were passengers who brought their pets along for the journey. Ann Elizabeth Isham, one of only four female first-class passengers who perished in the sinking, died because she refused to abandon her Great Dane as the ship went down. Check out these famous animals that changed history.

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Close up of a cork wine with different variation of wine color
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It’s five o’clock somewhere

There was no shortage of alcohol on board the Titanic. According to the website TitanicFacts, the ship set sail stocked with 15,000 bottles of beer, 1,000 bottles of wine, and 850 bottles of liquor. And for the men who enjoyed lounging in the smoking room, there were reportedly 8,000 cigars. Now, check out these famous moments in history that didn’t actually happen.