Saturday, 18 April 2026

Antoinette Flegenheim: A First Class Passenger in Titanic’s First Lifeboat

Antoinette Flegenheim: A First Class Passenger in Titanic’s First Lifeboat



I have been finding out about some of the people who were on board the Titanic. So today I want to tell you about Antoinette “Tony” Flegenheim. She was born Berta Antonia Maria Wendt on the 11th of May 1863 in Prussia. In 1890, she moved to New York and married Alfred Flegenheim. After his death in 1907, she lived as a wealthy widow, dividing her time between Berlin and Manhattan.

In April 1912, she boarded the RMS Titanic at Cherbourg, travelling in first class. Like many on board, she would have expected a comfortable crossing. Instead, on the 14th April 1912, Titanic hit an iceberg. From that point on everything changed. In the early hours of the 15th of April, she was fortunate to be able to board Lifeboat No. 7, the first one to be lowered. The lifeboat began to take on water, and passengers were said to have stuffed clothing into the opening to slow the leak. It must have been a frightening moment, drifting in darkness, unsure whether help would ever come.

After hours floating at sea, she was rescued along with the other survivors, by the RMS Carpathia. Just two months later, she remarried. She died in Frankfurt in 1943 at the age of 79.

After surviving such uncertainty, do you think experiences like this changed how survivors viewed security and home?

Hector of Troy: The Medieval Ideal of Duty, Honour, and Sacrifice

Hector of Troy: The Medieval Ideal of Duty, Honour, and Sacrifice

I have recently written about the Nine Worthies and I wanted to delve a little deeper into Hector of Troy, who was counted among them. Unlike many conquerors, Hector was seen not for seeking glory, but for defending his home. From a medieval perspective, in an age shaped by loyalty, honour, and duty, Hector seemed to embody the ideal knight long before knighthood even began in the ninth and tenth centuries.

The story begins during the legendary Trojan War. Hector was the legendary prince of Troy, a son, a husband, and a father before he was a warrior. Medieval writers often focused on this side of him. They saw him not as a distant legend, but as a man with responsibilities. He fought because he felt he had to, not because he wanted to conquer. That sense of duty may well have resonated with medieval audiences who lived in societies that were built around protecting the land, the lord, and the family.

As the war dragged on, Hector became Troy’s shield. He led armies, encouraged frightened defenders, and faced enemies who seemed to be unstoppable. He knew the stakes were everything. If he failed, Troy would fall. The people of the Middle Ages would almost certainly be familiar with sieges and constant warfare. They likely saw in Hector the courage that they admired, a man standing firm even when hope was disappearing. His bravery was shaped by love for his people and fear for what might happen to them.

Hectors farewell to his wife Andromache and their young son hit home to many in the Medieval era. Medieval writers loved it. It showed a man that was torn between his family and his duty, and was aware that he may not return, but still chooses to fight. That decision was shaped by honour and responsibility and it is what made him an ideal figure for medieval chivalry. He was not invincible. He was vulnerable, emotional, and still determined.

In the end, Hector falls in battle, and Troy’s fate is sealed. But for medieval audiences, his death did not diminish him. Instead, it elevated him. He became a symbol of loyalty, courage, and sacrifice. Not a conqueror, but a defender. Not a king seeking power, but a man shaped by obligation and love.


When medieval people looked at the legend of Hector, I think that they may well have seen not just a hero from a story, but the kind of person that they hoped they might be.
Do you think Hector was remembered as a hero more for his courage in battle, or for the humanity he showed before facing it?

Image info:
Title: Hector of Troy
Date: 1870 - 1900
Collection: Musea Brugge

Ruth M. Gardiner: The Flight Nurse Who Gave Her Life Saving Others

Ruth M. Gardiner: The Flight Nurse Who Gave Her Life Saving Others

I have been learning about the people who served during the Wars, and I want to tell you about Ruth M. Gardiner.



She was born on the 20th of May 1914 in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. She was drawn to care for others, so she trained as a nurse at a sanatorium in White Haven, Pennsylvania, where she graduated in 1934. She worked as a civilian nurse before joining the United States Army Nurse Corps in 1941.

She trained for a new and dangerous role as a flight nurse. She was assigned to Bowman Field in Kentucky and went on to serve in Alaska with a medical air evacuation unit. Flight nurses travelled with wounded soldiers, tending to them in the air, often in harsh weather and over long distances. It must have required huge courage, she would have known that the conditions could change very quickly.

On the 27th of July 1943, while on a medical evacuation mission near Naknek, Alaska, her aircraft crashed. She was only twenty-nine years old and became the first Army Nurse Corps flight nurse killed during the war.

In 1944, an Army hospital in Chicago was named in her honour, the first named after a woman or a nurse, a wonderful way to ensure that her service would not be forgotten.

Friday, 17 April 2026

Washington A. Roebling II: The Racing Pioneer Lost on Titanic at Just 31

Washington A. Roebling II: The Racing Pioneer Lost on Titanic at Just 31

I have been learning about some of the people who were on board the Titanic, and I came across Washington Augustus Roebling II. He was born on the 25th of March 1881 in Trenton, New Jersey, into a family known for engineering and industry. His grandfather, John A. Roebling, had a connection to one of America’s most famous bridges, the Brooklyn Bridge.

He attended the Hill School in Pennsylvania, where he was good at athletics, before joining the family wire-rope business. But he did not stay there. He was attracted to the excitement of the new and rapidly developing world of automotives. By 1909, he helped reorganise the struggling Walter Automobile Company, which became the Mercer Automobile Company. As general manager, he worked with French designer Étienne Planche and personally tested cars, even racing them.

In early 1912, he travelled through Europe with friends, driving across Italy and France. When the time came to return home, they boarded Titanic as first-class passengers. During the disaster, he was seen helping women from the Bonnell and Wick families into a lifeboat, calmly reassuring them they would soon be reunited.
He sadly did not survive, and his body was never recovered. His family briefly hoped he had been saved. He was only thirty-one, a man of ambition and energy, caught at the height of his life.

I wonder, in those final moments, was he still believing everything would be alright, or did he simply choose calm for the sake of others?

When Maps Showed Monsters: How Medieval Cartographers Imagined the Seas

When Maps Showed Monsters: How Medieval Cartographers Imagined the Seas
Today I want to talk about about the strange sea creatures that appear on medieval maps. Early medieval mapmakers were not just drawing geography, they were trying in some way to make sense of the world. On maps like the Hereford Mappa Mundi, seas are filled with serpents, giant fish, and beasts. These were not just for decoration. They were reflections of stories told by sailors, classical texts, and religious ideas about the unknown edges of creation. To someone who had never seen open sea, it must have seemed endless and full of the unknown. As we know when there is unknown, the imagination fills the gap. Monsters were created to explain the unknown.

As travel began to increase, these images began to evolve. Mariners began to push further out from the coastlines, and their experiences are what influenced what appeared on maps. Some of the  creatures may well have been inspired by real animals that had been seen briefly and  misunderstood a dangerous: whales breaching, walruses, or a giant squid. Cartographers were influenced by these travellers’ tales that may well have also been embellished, but they also included their own imagination. They were trying to create a  balance between what was known and was meant to be a warning. A monster in the margin might have meant danger, rough seas, or that “beyond here, we do not know.”

By the 16th century, maps like the Carta Marina by Olaus Magnus show sea monsters in wonderful  detail, some attacking ships. They suggest that there was an element of awe as much as fear. The sea was no longer entirely mythical, but it still felt alive and scary. Mapmakers were expanding their knowledge if the world but with that knowledge came anxiety about what was still to discover.
As navigation was improved and the coastlines became more accurate, the monsters began to disappear. Knowledge replaced the imagination. 
Do you think these sea monsters were meant as real warnings, or just a way of admitting how much medieval people felt they did not yet know?
Image info: 
For all mages
Date: 1539
Author: Olaus Magnus
The Carta marina

Renée Lemaire: The Nurse Who Chose Others During the Siege of Bastogne

Renée Lemaire: The Nurse Who Chose Others During the Siege of Bastogne

I have been learning about people who served during the world wars. I wanted to share a little about Renée Lemaire. She was born on the 10th of April 1914 in Bastogne, Belgium, and her family owned a hardware store.  She  trained as a nurse in Brussels.
By December 1944, she returned to Bastogne to visit her parents. She became trapped when the German offensive surrounded the town. Even though she was facing danger, she did not leave. Along with Augusta Chiwy, she volunteered at an American aid station, working with wounded soldiers who were cold, exhausted, and frightened. She dressed wounds, handed out medication, fed men who could not feed themselves, and she offered something more- reassurance. She seemed to lift morale. 

On Christmas Eve 1944, the building housing the aid station was bombed. Through the fire and the chaos, she helped evacuate wounded men. She managed to save six, but she sadly died while attempting to rescue another. She was a nurse who chose others, even in unimaginable danger.

She inspired a character in the television series Band of Brothers, where she is shown working with medics like Eugene Roe. But the real story shows even more bravery. 

When faced with this same fear, would we find the same courage to stay and help others?


Thursday, 16 April 2026

He Put His Wife in the Lifeboat - Henry B. Harris Stayed Behind

He Put His Wife in the Lifeboat - Henry B. Harris Stayed Behind

I have been learning about some of the people who was on board the Titanic. So today I want to tell you a little bit about Henry B. Harris.
He was born on the 1st of December 1866 in St. Louis, Missouri, into a family that was already connected to the theatre. Henry grew up surrounded by performance, audiences, and opportunity. As a young man, he began, selling songbooks in theatre lobbies. It was a small beginning. Over time, he moved into management and production, learning the risks and rewards of the industry.

By 1901, he was producing plays on his own. His career gathered pace as he worked with established actors and began managing theatres. In 1906, he became owner of the Hackett Theatre in New York, later renamed in honour of his father. He also leased and managed other venues and, in 1911, opened the Folies Bergère Theatre. It was an ambitious venture inspired by Paris, but it failed and cost him heavily. But that did not stop him. By early 1912, he was in London arranging more productions.
He travelled with his wife, Renee. They boarded the RMS Titanic in April 1912. During the voyage, Renee injured her arm, but she was still reluctant to leave his side. On the night of the 14th of April when the ship hit the iceberg, the couple were forced apart. Renee was placed into a lifeboat, while Henry remained behind.
Renee survived and waited for news, even hoping he had been rescued by another ship. But Henry B. Harris was sadly among those who never returned, his body was lost to the Atlantic. 
Do you think people like Henry, make the tragedy of Titanic feel even more personal?


Antoinette Flegenheim: A First Class Passenger in Titanic’s First Lifeboat

Antoinette Flegenheim: A First Class Passenger in Titanic’s First Lifeboat I have been finding out about some of the people wh...