Thursday, 26 March 2026

A Survivor of Titanic: The Controversial Legacy of Sir Cosmo Duff-Gordon


A Survivor of Titanic: The Controversial Legacy of Sir Cosmo Duff-Gordon

I have been searching for the stories of the people who were on the Titanic. One such story is that of Sir Cosmo Duff-Gordon. It is a story that shows to me is how a single moment can completely change the rest of a person’s life, no matter what was before it.

Duff-Gordon was born on the 22nd of July 1862 in London into a well known and privileged family. He attended Eton and he moved comfortably within elite circles. He later inherited his baronetcy in 1896. He built a strong reputation not just as a landowner, but as a skilled sportsman. He had a passion for fencing and represented Britain, even winning a silver medal at the 1906 Olympic Games. 
In 1900, he married Lucy, a celebrated fashion designer known to many as “Lucile.” Their marriage attracted quite a bit of attention, partly because she was divorced, something that was still frowned upon in that era. Even so, they seem to have a good marriage, choosing to face the criticism together. Their lives were full, they travelled and attended society events, they boarded the Titanic in April 1912.

But everything changed on the night of the disaster, when the ship hit the iceberg. Sir Cosmo, Lucy, and her secretary eventually found their way to Lifeboat No. 1, one that left the ship with far fewer people than it could have possible held.

Afterwards, the fact Sir Cosmo had survived on a lifeboat, brought scrutiny. he was accused of offering money to the lifeboat crew to avoid returning in an attempt to save others. He insisted it was a gesture to help men who had lost everything, and official inquiries did clear him, but the damage was already done. Public opinion had turned sharply. 

He continued his life in Britain, but his reputation never really recovered. He died on the 20th of April 1931 at the age of 68, and although he had been officially cleared, the shadow of that night remained.

It really makes me think about how history remembers people. Do you think Sir Cosmo Duff-Gordon was judged fairly, or was it more perception than truth?


Date:1896 
Source: The Daily Sketch, 24th of April 1912

The First Plague Pandemic: When Fear Became a Way of Life in the Early Medieval World

The First Plague Pandemic: When Fear Became a Way of Life in the Early Medieval World

What would have been most frightening time in history to have lived through? And automatically I thought of the Black Death and the plague , but also the first plague. So I have been thinking about and trying to find out more about something that must have felt even more frightening to the people who lived through it, the first great plague pandemic of the early medieval world.

It seems to have begun around the year 541, with reports placing its origins to the south of Egypt, possibly in regions such as Nubia or Ethiopia. From there, it moved along trade routes, carried unknowingly by ships, goods, and rats, until it reached the busy port of Pelusium in the Nile Delta. You can almost imagine the fear as the sickness began to spread, slowly at first, then at a terrifying speed. From Egypt it reached Alexandria, and soon after hit the heart of the Byzantine Empire.

When the plague struck Constantinople during the reign of Emperor Justinian I, it must have been overwhelming. Contemporary writers describe people falling ill all of a sudden and developing painful swellings, the afflicted often died within just a few days. Families were torn apart, and many must have felt helpless, unsure of what it was that they were facing and with no idea of how they could escape it. Without modern scientific understanding, it is not surprising that many believed that this suffering was a form of divine punishment.

The outbreak did not go away after this first wave. Instead, it returned over and over again for the next two centuries, with at least fifteen major recurrences recorded. It spread across the Mediterranean world, reaching places like Italy, Gaul, and even parts of Britain and Ireland. In towns and cities, people turned to prayer, processions, and even fasting in the hopes of finding some meaning or better still some relief. In places like Marseille and Rome, the arrival of ships was sometimes blamed, it was people trying to make sense of what they were witnessing. 

By the late 6th and 7th centuries, the plague had become a recurring shadow. Entire communities could be struck down a merciless speed. Even as far as the Near East and possibly beyond, the disease continued its devastating spread.

There are also suggestions that climate may have played a role, with cooler and drier conditions affecting food supplies and increasing their vulnerability. For those living through it, however, these larger forces would have been invisible. What they experienced was loss and fear.

By around the mid-8th century, the pandemic began to wane. But its true impact still remains debated. Some believe that it helped to reshape societies, while others argue that its effects were more limited than they once thought.
What I keep coming thinking about is how people must have coped with this repeated fear, generation after generation, never knowing when it would return.

Do you think the emotional impact of living with such recurring outbreaks would have changed how people viewed life, faith, and the future?

Image info:
Artist: Josse Lieferinxe
Collection: Walters Art Museum 
St Sebastian pleading for the life of a gravedigger afflicted with plague during the 7th-century Plague of Pavia.

American paratrooper Albert Blithe who served in World War II and Korean War

American paratrooper Albert Blithe who served in World War II and Korean War

I have been finding out about the people who served in the wars. I recently re-watched The Band of Brothers and I wanted to find out more about these remarkable men. So let me introduce to you Albert Blithe. I find his story quite powerful. He was not one of the most famous names to come out of Easy Company, but his life shows us the long and often complicated journey of a soldier who carried his experiences beyond the battlefields of the Second World War.

Albert Blithe was born on the 25th of June 1923 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Before finishing high school, he made the decision to enlist in the U.S. Army on the 18th of August 1942. 

He trained as a paratrooper at Camp Toccoa, Georgia. By 1944, he was part of one of the most ambitious operations of the war. On D-Day, he parachuted into Normandy, but like many others, he landed far away from the intended drop zone. In the confusion and darkness, he found himself isolated before he was eventually able to regroup with his fellow paratroopers and rejoining his unit.

The fighting that followed was intense, particularly during the struggle for Carentan. It was here that Blithe experienced a temporary loss of sight that was brought on by extreme stress. But he recovered and even returned to duty, this is stark reminder of the mental as well as physical toll war has. Not long after this, whilst he was investigating a farmhouse, he was shot in the shoulder by a sniper. On his 21st birthday, he received the Purple Heart for his wounds. Due to his injuries, he was sent back to the United States in October 1944 and did not return to the European front. For a time, even his former unit believed he had died from his wounds, a misunderstanding that lasted for years.

After recovering, Blithe continued his service. During the Korean War, he served with the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team. In one particularly dangerous operation, he parachuted behind enemy lines and found himself surrounded by a Chinese battalion. For his bravery, he was awarded both the Silver Star and the Bronze Star. Over the course of his career, he would receive three Bronze Stars and three Purple Hearts, alongside the Army Commendation Medal and the Good Conduct Medal. His campaign and service medals included those for the American campaign, the European-African-Middle Eastern theatre, the Second World War victory, occupation duty in Germany, national defence, and service in Korea under both United Nations and Korean recognition. He also earned the Combat Infantryman Badge with a second award, the Master Parachutist Badge with two combat jump stars, and unit citations from both U.S. and Korean forces.

Blithe stayed in the Army for many years, eventually gaining the rank of Master Sergeant and serving in roles such as military advisory work in Taiwan. 

In December 1967, while still on active duty in Germany, he became seriously ill following a visit to Bastogne, somewhere that is closely tied to the history he had lived through. He died on the 17th of December after complications from surgery. He was buried with full military honours at Arlington National Cemetery.


Image info:
Albert Blithe at Camp Toccoa in Georgia Date: 1942

The Titanic Survivor Who Faced a Lifetime Beyond Survival and Silence

The Titanic Survivor Who Faced a Lifetime Beyond Survival and Silence



We have been trying to find out more about the people on board Titanic, I want to know more about them than just their name. So in my search I have found out about Robert Williams Daniel. He is often only remembered as an American Titanic survivor, but he was much more than that. He was a person and when we look more closely into his life, we can see a man that was privileged but also influenced by pressure, war, loss, and perhaps even by memories that he could never truly escaped.

Robert Williams Daniel was born on the 11th of September 1884 in Richmond, Virginia and came from a prominent Virginian family with both political and legal roots. He was well educated and attended local schools before he graduated from the University of Virginia in 1903. He began building a career in business, first working with the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad, before moving into insurance, and then into banking. He was clearly an ambitious man and very capable, and was used to moving in wealthy and influential circles. By 1911 he was living in Philadelphia and was working as a banker, with business interests that required him to travel to Europe.

In April 1912, whilst her returning home from London, Daniel boarded the RMS Titanic as a first-class passenger. He was only twenty-seven years old and was used to travelling in comfort, he even brought his prized French bulldog, Gamin de Pycombe. He would have probably seen the crossing as just more than another routine journey. But that was not to be, tragically Titanic hit an iceberg.

Daniel survived the sinking, although the exact details of how he escaped remain unclear. That uncertainty shows just how chaotic that night really was. Whether he reached a boat or was pulled from the water later, he survived one of the most traumatic disasters of the time. His dog though was tragically lost. 

While aboard the rescue ship Carpathia, he met another survivor, Eloise Hughes Smith. She had sadly lost her husband in the disaster. They married in 1914, probably drawn together by an experience that only very few others could understand. 

During the First Word War, Daniel served in the United States Army from 1917 to 1919 and reached the rank of Major.

After the war, Daniel returned to banking becoming a senior bank executive. Sadly his marriage to Eloise ended in divorce in 1923. He married Margery Durant later that same year, and they had a daughter, but that marriage also ended. In 1929 he married Charlotte Bemiss Christian, they had a son together. He owned Brandon, a historic Virginia estate and restored it and farmed there, and became known as a gentleman farmer. 

The economic shocks of the Great Depression changed his path once again. He retired from finance and turned more fully toward public life in Virginia. In 1935 he was elected to the Virginia Senate, and served as a Conservative Democrat, remaining in office until he died. 

Some accounts suggest he battled alcoholism, maybe caused by the emotional aftermath of the Titanic, and the stigma that was attached to being one of the men who survived. He died in Richmond on the 20th of December 1940 from cirrhosis of the liver, aged just fifty-six. For a man who had survived one of history’s most famous maritime disasters and had also lived through the First World War, it is sad that greatest battles of his life may have been one that no one could see.

I think Robert Williams Daniel’s story reminds us that survival is not always the end of the struggle. Do you think men like Daniel, who outwardly rebuilt their lives after great tragedy, were ever really able to leave those events behind?


Wednesday, 25 March 2026

The Mongol Conquests: How a Nomadic People Shook the World

The Mongol Conquests: How a Nomadic People Shook the World



I have been thinking about how, at certain moments in history, a single force seems to rise almost out of nowhere and completely reshape the world. The Mongol conquests of the 13th century seem just like that. What started as just scattered tribes would, within a few decades, grow into the largest land empire in history. 

The story begins with the man that we now know as Genghis Khan. He was born Temujin around 1162. After his father was poisoned, his family was abandoned by their tribe, leaving them to struggle for survival. This must have made him learn quickly that trust was not something that was constant. He learned that strength was everything. This may well have made Temujin into a determined and ruthless leader.

By 1206, after years of alliances, betrayals, and battles, Temujin united the Mongol tribes and he was declared Genghis Khan, which means “universal ruler.” For the first time, the nomadic groups of the steppe were brought together and with unity came strength, and with strength came ambition.

The first major campaigns were directed against the Western Xia and then the Jin Dynasty in northern China. They had fortified cities, large armies, and established systems of power which made them a challenge to defeat. But the Mongols were highly mobile, disciplined, and organised in ways that allowed them to adapt quickly. They used speed, surprise, and psychological warfare, which often caused fear way before they even arrived. Can you imagine the anxiety of hearing that the Mongols were headed your way. Resistance against them could mean complete destruction.

By the 1210s and 1220s, Genghis Khan turned his attention towards the Khwarazmian Empire. This was triggered after Mongol envoys had been killed. Genghis Khan had seen this as a grave insult. Cities across Central Asia were attacked and, in many cases completely destroyed. Populations were massacred, and entire regions were left in ruins. It is difficult to understand the full scale of this violence, but it is clear that fear was one of the Mongols’ most powerful weapons. Some cities surrendered immediately in order to avoid the same fate.
When Genghis Khan died in 1227, his empire already stretched across vast parts of Asia. But instead of collapsing, the empire continued to expand under his successors. His sons and grandsons carried on his methods, combining military skill and strict organisation.

Mongol forces pushed further into Europe and the Middle East. Under leaders like Batu Khan and Subutai, they invaded Eastern Europe in the 1230s and 1240s. They defeated armies in places like modern-day Russia, Poland, and Hungary. They were an army that seemed unstoppable.

In the Middle East, the capture of Baghdad in 1258 under Hulagu Khan was a complete turning point. Baghdad had long been a centre of culture, learning, and power. Its fall was not just a military defeat but it was an end to centuries of influence. The destruction of the city and the loss of life were absolutely immense.

Meanwhile, Kublai Khan, another of Genghis Khan’s grandsons, focused on finishing the conquest of China. By 1279, he had managed to defeat the Southern Song Dynasty and then established the Yuan Dynasty. The Mongols were no longer just conquerors they were rulers. Kublai Khan was forced to adapt, trying to balance Mongol traditions with the administrative systems of China. 

Mongol Empire at its height, stretched from the Pacific Ocean to Eastern Europe and then to the Middle East. It connected places that had rarely interacted before then, this allowed trade, new ideas, and technologies to move across entire continents. The Silk Road flourished under Mongol protection, creating opportunities for exchange that shaped the medieval world.

But this did not remain united forever. By the late 13th and early 14th centuries, it had begun to divide into separate khanates. The distance, internal rivalries, and the challenges of governing such a large territory began to make unity difficult to maintain. Over time, these divisions began to weaken Mongol control, and local powers began to reassert themselves.

What do you think had the greater impact of the Mongol conquests-the destruction they caused, or the connections they created across the world?


The Soldier Who Chose to Remember: David Kenyon Webster’s Story


The Soldier Who Chose to Remember: David Kenyon Webster’s Story

I have been learning more about the lives of the men who fought in the wars, and have recently watched Band of Brothers- for the millionth time. So I thought I would find out a little bit more about the courageous men featured in this series. So I am going to start with David Kenyon Webster. His story seems a little different from many others, because he was not just a soldier, he was also an observer, someone who tried to understand and record what war felt like.

David Kenyon Webster was born on the 2nd of June 1922 in New York City in the United States. He went to the Taft School in Connecticut, where he enjoyed both sport and academics. He went on to Harvard University in 1940, where he studied English. At that point, his future seemed clear, but like so many of his generation, everything changed with the outbreak of the Second World War.

In 1942, Webster made the decision to leave Harvard and volunteer for the United States Army. He joined the paratroopers and trained with the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, which became part of the 101st Airborne Division. The training was intense and demanding, and it was designed to prepare the men for some of the most dangerous operations of the war. Webster was not someone chasing glory, but he still placed himself in the middle of it all.

On the 6th of June 1944, D-Day, Webster parachuted into Normandy. He landed behind Utah Beach and was wounded slightly by shrapnel. Even at this stage, he would have experienced the chaos and fear of combat. After the Normandy campaign, he transferred into Easy Company, wanting to be closer to the front line and more directly involved with the men who were fighting.

In September 1944, he took part in Operation Market Garden in the Netherlands, another major airborne operation. The fighting there was intense and uncertain, and during the battle in an area known as “the Island,” Webster was hit in the leg. He shouted out in shock, something he was said to be embarrassed about. 

His wound meant a long period away from the front, and when he finally rejoined Easy Company in January 1945 in France, he returned to a very different unit. The Battle of the Bulge had taken a heavy toll, and many of the men he had trained and fought alongside were tragically gone. 

Webster and Easy Company continued their advance. They were also present during the liberation of the Kaufering concentration camp complex, an experience that must have left a lasting impression. It was a moment that revealed the full horror of what the war had been about, and why it had to be fought.
Webster was a writer at heart, someone who watched and reflected. After the war ended in 1945, Webster returned home to follow his passion for writing. He worked as a journalist for major newspapers. He was also interested in the sea and wrote about sharks.

Tragically, on the 9th of September 1961, Webster disappeared while sailing off the coast of California. His boat was later found, but he was never recovered. 

Years after his death, his memoir was published, it offered a raw account of war. 

Image info:
David Webster in Eindhoven
Date: 17th of September 1944
Source: US Army

Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Edward Cobb Outlaw: From Ace in a Day to Cold War Naval Leader

Edward Cobb Outlaw: From Ace in a Day to Cold War Naval Leader

I have been learning about some of the remarkable people who served during the wars and Edward Cobb Outlaw is someone whose career really stood out to me. 

Edward Cobb Outlaw was born on the 29th of September 1914 in Greenville, North Carolina. After finishing school, he joined the United States Naval Academy and graduated in 1935, the youngest in his class. He began his naval career on board the USS Indianapolis before training as a pilot and qualifying as a naval aviator in 1938. In the years before the Second World War, he served with scouting squadrons aboard the USS Enterprise and later worked as a flight officer.

Following the outbreak of the Second World War, Outlaw quickly moved into more active roles. He served with escort squadrons during the Guadalcanal campaign before he took command of Fighting Squadron 32 on board the USS Langley. He took part in operations across the Pacific, including the Marshall Islands, New Guinea, and the Mariana campaign. In April 1944, he led a daring mission against Japanese aircraft, managing to shoot down five enemy planes in just a single sortie and becoming an “ace in a day.” For this action, he was awarded the Navy Cross, along with the Distinguished Flying Cross and multiple Air Medals.

After the war, he stayed in the military and rose through the ranks, he commanded air groups and later captained ships such as the USS Intrepid. He also played a role in early naval nuclear aviation programmes. During the Vietnam War, he served as a rear admiral, leading carrier divisions and directing major strike operations.

In the later Cold War years, he held senior NATO and anti-submarine warfare commands, helping counter the growing Soviet submarine threat. Over his long career, he received numerous honours, including the Navy Cross, Legion of Merit, Distinguished Flying Cross, Air Medal, Navy Commendation Medal, Presidential Unit Citation, Navy Unit Commendation, American Defense Service Medal, American Campaign Medal, Asiatic–Pacific Campaign Medal, World War II Victory Medal, Navy Occupation Service Medal, National Defense Service Medal, and the Philippine Liberation Medal. A truly accomplished and amazing individual.



A Survivor of Titanic: The Controversial Legacy of Sir Cosmo Duff-Gordon

A Survivor of Titanic: The Controversial Legacy of Sir Cosmo Duff-Gordon I have been searching for the stories of the people who were on the...