As you know I have been trying to find out more about the people who travelled on the Titanic. It got me thinking about what life was like on-board. When we think about the Titanic today, we often imagine the grand staircases, the elegant dining rooms, and the wealth of the first-class passengers. But the majority of the people on board were not wealthy at all. Many were just ordinary families, labourers, and young men and women who were chasing the promise of a new life across the Atlantic.
For many steerage passengers, the journey to the ship had already been long. Some had travelled across Europe, carrying a small number of possessions. Many were saying their goodbyes as they left for good. When they arrived at the port in Southampton, they joined the crowds of other people who were waiting to board. Before they could enter the ship, steerage passengers were required to go through medical inspections. Officials checked their eyes, their skin, and their general health, looking for signs of infectious disease. This was done because American immigration authorities were strict, and shipping companies could be fined or forced to return passengers if they arrived unfit to enter the United States. For many emigrants, this must have been a tense moment. After such a long journey, the thought of being turned away would have been frightening.
Once they were cleared, they walked up the gangways and onto what must have seemed like an enormous ship. For many of them, the Titanic was far larger and more modern than anything they had ever seen before. Even though they were travelling in steerage, the ship still represented something hopeful. Compared with many earlier emigrant ships of the nineteenth century, the Titanic’s third-class accommodation was actually considered quite advanced.
The cost of a steerage ticket varied depending on the passenger and the arrangement of the cabin, but many paid roughly £7 to £9 for the voyage, this equals roughly £800–£1,000+ today. That was a significant amount of money for working families, and some may have saved for years or relied on relatives already living in America to send the fare. But compared with the hundreds of pounds paid by wealthy first-class passengers, it shows how different the experiences on the ship were.
Steerage accommodation on Titanic was basic but cleaner and more organised than on many earlier ships. In older vessels, steerage passengers had often been crowded into large dormitory-style rooms with rows of bunks and little privacy. On Titanic, however, many were placed in small cabins that held two to six people. These rooms were simple, they had iron bunk beds, mattresses, blankets, and a small washbasin. They were not luxurious, but for many passengers they may have felt surprisingly comfortable.
Families were usually kept together where possible, and single men and single women were housed in separate areas of the ship. Regulations required this separation, and it also reflected the social attitudes of the time. Corridors and stairways connected the steerage areas to dining rooms and open deck spaces where passengers could gather.
Meals in steerage were also an improvement over what many emigrants had previously experienced. On older ships, passengers sometimes had to bring their own food or cook for themselves in crowded conditions. On Titanic, however, meals were provided. The third-class dining room served simple but filling food such as soup, bread, roast meat, potatoes, stews, porridge, and tea or coffee. Fresh bread was also baked daily. The meals were not elaborate, but they were warm and regular, which must have been reassuring for travellers who had faced uncertainty for much of their journey.
Passengers created their own forms of entertainment. In the evenings, groups gathered to talk, sing songs, or play music. Many emigrants came from Ireland, Scandinavia, and Eastern Europe, and they brought their traditions with them. It is believed that fiddles, pipes, and other instruments were played in the steerage spaces, and there may have been dancing as well. For a moment, the worries of leaving home may have been replaced by laughter.
Even so, there were clear differences between the classes on the ship. First-class passengers enjoyed grand cabins, luxurious lounges, and elaborate multi-course meals served by stewards. Second-class travellers had comfortable cabins and dining rooms that resembled respectable hotels. Steerage passengers, by contrast, had much simpler surroundings and were generally restricted to their own areas of the ship. The separation reflected the social hierarchy of the early twentieth century, where class divisions were still strongly upheld.
For many in steerage, the ship was not simply a vessel. It was a bridge between the life they were leaving behind and the one they hoped to build in America. They were farmers, labourers, young couples, and children who dreamed of opportunity and a better future.
Knowing what happened later makes their journey feel even more poignant. When they first stepped on board, they could not possibly have imagined the tragedy.
When you think about those steerage passengers standing on the decks, looking out across the ocean and dreaming of a new beginning, do you think the Titanic represented more hope than luxury for most of the people who sailed on her?
Typical 3rd-class cabin on the Titanic
Date: 1st ofApril 1912
Image info: Postcard of third Class dining saloon on Olympic and Titanic. Date: 1910-1971 Author: White Star Line