Wednesday, 1 April 2026

The Titanic Survivor Who Pretended to Be a Baron and Caused Controversy

The Titanic Survivor Who Pretended to Be a Baron and Caused Controversy

I have been looking into the people who were on board the Titanic, and one story stood out. It was the story of Alfred Nourney, a young man whose actions still raise questions today.

He was born on the 26th of February 1892 in Nijmegen in the Netherlands, but he grew up in Germany. By 1912, at the age of just twenty years old, he seemed to want to be seen as something more. He travelled under the false title of “Baron Alfred von Drachstedt.”  In April of 1912, he boarded the Titanic at Cherbourg, he was initially a second-class passenger. He effectively upgraded himself after boarding, using his assumed identity.

On the night of the 14th of April 1912, he was playing cards in the first-class smoking room. When the ship hit the iceburg, he briefly checked what was going on but he returned to his game, perhaps not  grasping the danger that was ahead. Soon after, he boarded Lifeboat 7 with very little issue. While others rowed the lifeboat away from Titanic, he reportedly stayed seated, smoking and even firing a pistol. It makes you wonder what he was feeling, was it shock, detachment, or something else entirely.

After he was rescued, his behaviour continued to attract attention, and he decided to slip away from the spotlight, and he returned to Europe. He later married and raising a family.

Do you think he surviving the only way he knew how, or does his behavour reveal something about human nature in moments of crisis?


The Battle of Actium was the Moment that Sealed Rome’s Fate

The Battle of Actium was the Moment that Sealed Rome’s Fate 

I have been learning more about the time surrounding Cleopatra, I want to today to find out more about the final struggle between Octavian and Mark Antony, the Battle of Actium. It was one of those moments where everything hanged in the balance, where the future of Rome could have gone in a completely different direction.

After the assassination of Julius Caesar on the 15th of March 44BC, the power in Rome had become fragile and uncertain. An alliance known as the Second Triumvirate was formed and lasted for a while, but by the early 30s BC, it had broken down. Octavian and Mark Antony were no longer allies. Antony had aligned himself closely with Cleopatra of Egypt and this relationship was used by Octavian to turn Roman opinion against him. Saying he had abandoned Rome. 

By 31 BC, tensions had reached a breaking point. Octavian’s forces, led by his general Agrippa, began to gain control of key positions in Greece. Antony and Cleopatra gathered their fleet near Actium, on the western coast. Antony’s forces were strong, but they were also stretched and facing supply problems. 

On the 2nd of September 31 BC, the battle finally arrived. It was fought at sea, with large warships manoeuvring in tight, dangerous waters. Agrippa’s more flexible ships were able to outmanoeuvre Antony’s heavier fleet. 

At a critical moment, Cleopatra’s ships suddenly broke away and sailed out of the battle. Whether this was planned or a reaction to situation, it changed everything. Antony, seeing her leave, made the decision to follow. 
Octavian emerged as the uncontested leader of the Roman world. Antony and Cleopatra fled to Egypt. Within a year, both Cleopatra and Anthony would be dead, and the Roman Republic would soon give way to the Roman Empire under Octavian, who would become Augustus. 

Do you think Antony’s decision to follow Cleopatra was inevitable, or was this the moment that cost him everything?

image info:
Artist: Laureys a Castro 
Title: The Battle of Actium, 
Date: 1672
Collection: National Maritime Museum

Shot, paralysed, but never broken-Smokey Gordon’s war story

Shot, paralysed, but never broken-Smokey Gordon’s war story

I have been learning more about the men of Easy Company from Band of Brothers, and I want learn more about Walter Scott “Smokey” Gordon Jr.
He was born on the 15th of April 1920 in Jackson, Mississippi, and grew up in the southern United States. As a young man, he attended Millsaps College for a time, but like many of his generation, the war soon shaped the direction of his life. Although he was rejected by both the Navy and the Marines due to colour blindness and flat feet, he was determined to serve. He enlisted in the US Army in 1942, he even managed to pass the eye test despite his condition.

Gordon became part of Easy Company, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division, training at Camp Toccoa. Known by the nickname “Smokey,” he served as a machine gunner and quickly became part of the tight-knit group that would later become so well known.

He saw action throughout the Second World War, taking part in the D-Day landings in Normandy on the 6th of June 1944. Just days later, during the fighting at Carentan, he was wounded in the arm and shoulder and was awarded the Purple Heart. After recovering, he returned to the front and continued to fight in Operation Market Garden in the Netherlands and later in the Battle of the Bulge in Belgium.
During the brutal winter fighting at Bastogne, he was shot by a sniper on Christmas Eve 1944, a devastating wound that left him temporarily paralysed. He was evacuated and spent months recovering, eventually being discharged with a high level of disability. Despite this, he regained movement, though he lived with lasting pain.

After the war, he built a life in Louisiana as an oil and gas lease broker and helped organise reunions for Easy Company veterans. He died on the 19th of April 1997 at the age of 77.


Tuesday, 31 March 2026

J. Bruce Ismay - The Man Behind Titanic's Most Controversial Survival



J. Bruce Ismay - The Man Behind Titanic's Most Controversial Survival


I have been learning about the story of J. Bruce Ismay, and the more I have looked into his life, the more I realise how complicated and human his story really is.

He was born on the 12th of December 1862 in Crosby, Lancashire, his family was very connected to shipping. His father, Thomas Henry Ismay, had built the White Star Line into a powerful company. He was educated at Harrow and trained in the family business. You can imagine how much he must have felt the need to prove himself worthy of what his father had built.

After time spent working abroad, including in New York, he returned to Britain and, following his father’s death in 1899, took control of the company. After Ismay took control of the White Star Line, it continued to grow, it focused on size and luxury rather than speed. It is this decision that led them to create the great liners, including RMS Titanic. 

In April 1912, Ismay travelled on Titanic’s maiden voyage. What began as a symbol of success quickly became a nightmare. After the ship struck an iceberg, the reality of the situation became clear. In those final hours, Ismay helped passengers into lifeboats before eventually boarding one himself. Later, he admitted he could not bear to watch the ship’s final moments. It is hard not to imagine the shock, the disbelief, and the overwhelming guilt that may have stayed with him.

Although official inquiries found that he had followed protocol and even assisted others, public opinion was far harsher. He was heavily criticised for surviving when so many others did not. The press painted him as a coward, and his reputation was deeply damaged. Whether fair or not, this judgment seemed to weigh heavily on him.

After the sinking of Titanic, he withdrew completely from public life. Though he continued working and contributed to maritime causes, he became a quieter, more isolated figure. Those who knew him later described a man who never truly escaped the shadow of Titanic, someone who carried that night with him for the rest of his life.

He died on the 17th of October 1937 in London, but his story remains one of the most debated connected to the disaster.

I keep thinking about how history remembers people like Ismay. Was he a man who failed in a moment of crisis, or someone who was judged too harshly for simply surviving?


The Second Triumvirate: Saving Rome… or Tearing It Apart?

The Second Triumvirate: Saving Rome… or Tearing It Apart?

I have been learning about Cleopatra and her era. Yesterday we found out more about Mark Antony, and touched on the Second Triumvirate. So today I want to look more into it.

It began in the aftermath of Julius Caesar’s assassination on the 15th of March 44 BC. His death left a huge vacuum. Rome was unsettled, uncertain, and very tense. Those who had killed him believed they were saving the Republic, but instead they had unleashed complete chaos. Three men wanted to fill the void: Octavian, Caesar’s young adopted heir; Mark Antony, his  general; and Lepidus, a powerful but often overlooked figure. Each of them had something to gain, but also something to fear. None of them could secure power alone.

In 43 BC, they formed what became known as the Second Triumvirate, a legally recognised alliance. It gave them authority to restore order, but what happened was anything but calm. One of their first acts was the proscriptions, which were lists of their enemies, were drawn up. People were hunted down and killed. You can only imagine the fear that must have spread through Rome. Cicero, once a towering voice in Roman politics, was also executed. For the triumvirs, this may have felt necessary, but it came at a cost, even if they tried to justify it.

By 42 BC, their focus changed. They faced the forces of Brutus and Cassius, the men who had taken Caesar’s life. At the Battle of Philippi, the conflict reached its height. The victory of the triumvirs brought a sense of closure, maybe even revenge, but it was also the start of the end of any real hope for the Republic. From this point on, power was no longer shared.

After Philippi, the Roman world was divided between them. Octavian took the west, Antony the east, and Lepidus was gradually pushed aside. Tension started to build, especially between Octavian and Antony. What had started as a partnership was slowly turning into a power struggle. Antony’s relationship with Cleopatra caused even further problems, it influenced his decisions and even how he was viewed in Rome. Octavian though was careful and calculating, and used this to his advantage, he shaped the narrative in Rome, saying he had abandoned them and in turn this strengthened his own position.

But at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC, Octavian’s forces defeated Antony and Cleopatra. With that victory, Octavian became leader.
Were they really trying to save Rome, or simply to survive it? And at what point did survival turn into the desire for absolute power?


Image info:
Artist: Justus van Egmont
Jan van Leefdael 
Title: The Battle of Actium from a set of The Story of Antony and Cleopatra
Date: designed 1650, woven 1650-1677
Collection: Metropolitan Museum of Art

Edward “Babe” Heffron: Easy Company Soldier, Loyalty, Loss, and Lasting Brotherhood in WWII

Edward “Babe” Heffron: Easy Company Soldier, Loyalty, Loss, and Lasting Brotherhood in WWII

As many of you may already know, I have been watching Band of Brothers, not for the first time. It got me wanting to discover more about these amazing men. Today I want to find out about Edward James “Babe” Heffron.
He was born on the 16th of May 1923 in South Philadelphia in the United States, he grew up in a working-class Irish Catholic family during the Great Depression. Like many men of his generation, he left school early to help support his family, taking on work in shipbuilding. Despite having an exemption from military service, and even a painful medical condition affecting his hands, he chose to serve. He enlisted in 1942, determined to serve alongside his friends and his community.

Heffron became part of Easy Company, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division. As a private first class, he fought alongside the rest of Easy Company, in some of the most significant campaigns of the war, including the D-Day landings, the advance through the Netherlands in Operation Market Garden, and the brutal winter fighting of the Battle of the Bulge in Bastogne. He served as a machine gunner and was awarded the Bronze Star Medal and the Purple Heart.

During the fighting in early 1945, his close friend Johnny Julian was killed. Heffron tried repeatedly to reach him under fire but was forced back. This tragic loss stayed with him for years, and it took over a decade before he could bring himself to contact his friend’s family, fulfilling a promise made during training.

As the war was coming to an end, he took part in the liberation of a concentration camp in Germany and was there during the capture of the Eagle’s Nest.

After the war, he returned home to Philadelphia, he kept a close, lifelong friendship with fellow veteran William Guarnere. Later in life, he helped share the story of Easy Company, ensuring that the experiences of those men were never forgotten.


Monday, 30 March 2026

The Railway Visionary Who Never Made It Home

The Railway Visionary Who Never Made It Home

We have been finding out about the many people on board Titanic. Today I am going to tell you about Charles Melville Hays. He was born on the 16th of May 1856 in Rock Island, Illinois. As a child, his family moved to St. Louis, and at just seventeen years old, he entered the railway world as a clerk. The railway industry at that time was fast-moving and competitive, and it seems that Hays not only adapted, but thrived in it.

Over the years, he steadily climbed the ranks. From secretary roles to management, and then to general manager. By the time he became involved with major railway companies, he was known as someone who could take struggling systems and bring them back to life. When he joined the Grand Trunk Railway in Canada, the company was close to failure. But through reorganisation, stronger management, and expansion, he helped turn it around.

Hays believed in the future of railways and in the growth of Canada. He pushed forward an enormous plan to build a second transcontinental railway stretching across the country. It was a bold vision. Success would secure his legacy, but failure would be equally lasting. As construction began, costs began to rise, competition increased, and disagreements started to happen between Hays, the government, and even his own directors. But he pressed on, determined to build something that would shape the future.

His life was not just about business. He was involved in charitable work and helped support hospitals and education. Still, his leadership style could be harsh. Labour disputes and strikes revealed a more difficult side. 

In April 1912, Hays travelled to England to secure financial backing for his railway plans. He was headed home, and he as eager for the opening of a grand hotel and there were some concerns for his family. He boarded the RMS Titanic. On the night of the 14th of April, after the ship struck an iceberg, Hays helped the women in his group into lifeboats. He must have known the danger, But he chose to stay behind. He tragically died when the ship sank in the early hours of the 15th of April 1912.
There is also so sad, the fact that he had reportedly spoken about how the race for faster ships might lead to disaster. It makes you wonder what he thought in those final hours, whether he reflected on his own words, or on the life he had built.

He never saw his great railway vision completed. In the years after his death, the project struggled and ultimately failed. 

Do you think his story is one of vision and courage, or of ambition that pushed too far?


The Titanic Survivor Who Pretended to Be a Baron and Caused Controversy

The Titanic Survivor Who Pretended to Be a Baron and Caused Controversy I have been looking into the people who were on board th...