In April of 1912, the RMS Titanic set sail
on its way to New York City, and it was one
of the biggest ocean liners of its time.
It hit an iceberg, and unfortunately, there
were only 20 lifeboats on its maiden voyage,
which was not enough to save everyone on board.
More than 1,500 people died, and the survivors
witnessed the boat sink.
More than 100 years later, people are still
fascinated by the tragedy, and it inspired
what is now considered to be one of the most
tragic romance movies of all-time.
Just like every major tragedy talked about
around the world, people begin to speculate
that there my be more to the story – some
secret reasons why the ship really sank, as
if a massive iceberg isn’t enough.
Here are 10 conspiracy theories about the
Titanic.
10.
Closed Watertight Doors
When the White Star Line created the Titanic
and its sister ships Britannic and Olympic,
they were all designed by ship builders Harland
& Wolff from Belfast.
In their designs, the ships were created so
that 16 separate watertight compartments could
flood with ocean water and still remain afloat.
According to some theorists, they believe
that these watertight doors did more harm
than good.
Some people believe that if it were not for
the doors, the ship may have filled up with
water evenly underneath the entire ship, instead
of just one side.
The idea is that it may have bought the passengers
enough extra time to escape.
Keep in mind that these doors are the reason
why the front of the boat dipped into the
water after it hit the iceberg.
These same people claim that if the water
was more evenly distributed, it may have bought
the passengers an additional 30 minutes of
time to escape.
However, the Discovery Channel tested this
theory with a simulation in a documentary
in 1998 called Titanic: Secrets Revealed.
They concluded that if it were not for the
watertight doors, the ship would have sank
much sooner.
Historian Parks Stephenson explains that in
a wooden boat, evenly distributing the water
would make sense.
But, since Titanic was a steel ship, the watertight
doors did, in fact, keep it afloat for at
least 30 minutes longer than it would have
otherwise.
9.
Fire in Coal Bunker
Some theorists believe that a fire was burning
near the hull of the Titanic for as long as
three weeks before its maiden voyage.
A documentary by Channel 4 in the United Kingdom
called Titanic: The New Evidence digs into
the theory that the boat sank because of fire,
rather than ice.
The fire would have weakened the steel of
the ship, and made it easy for an iceberg
to tear through the side.
This theory comes from photographs of the
ship before it set sail, where black marks
can be seen.
Some people theorize that this is a burn mark
of a fire that would have been invisible to
the passengers.
This theory originated in an article from
the New York Tribune, which claimed that the
fire began while the boat was docked in Southampton,
England.
However, just after the boat sank, people
were going wild with their own conspiracy
theories.
While the documentary uses the evidence that
has been around for years, there really has
not been any new discovery that would support
this theory.
It’s entirely possible, but most would agree
that regardless of whether the fire was going
or not, the iceberg would have still done
its damage.
8.
Expansion Joints Theory
This is yet another theory that tries to put
the blame on the designers of the Titanic.
There were expansion joints at the bottom
of the ship, which some theorists believe
would have broken the Titanic during any rough
storm, and it wouldn’t have taken something
like a massive iceberg to take it down.
A researcher for the History Channel named
Rushmore DeNooyer believes that the bottom
of the ship did not flood at all – that
the snapping expansion joints are what caused
the boat to break apart.
The only proof that DeNooyer has about this
idea is that one of the White Star Liners
that was built later – the HMHS Britannic
– had more expansion joints installed as
a safety precaution.
However, considering just how many boats belonging
to White Star Liner were destroyed, it would
be even more shocking if they didn’t make
any improvements to the designs.
To top it off, the Britannic sank as well,
in 1914.
7.
Underwater UFO
If you thought you were going to get through
a conspiracy theory list without hearing about
aliens, think again!
According to a tabloid called Weekly World
News, they have so-called evidence that a
UFO shot lasers at the Titanic.
A scientists named Dr. Josef Hostettler claims
that they discovered three large holes underneath
the ship, which they conclude could have only
come from an attack by an underwater alien
spacecraft.
They also claim that nearby ships lost radio
contact with the Titanic, which is why more
rescue boats were not able to show up to help
rescue the survivors.
Of course, there is very little evidence to
back up this theory, but as with most alien
theorists, it all comes down to what you believe
exists, and what you don’t.
6.
Time Travelers Sank the Titanic
Yet another supernatural theory claims that
time travelers sank the Titanic.
During an interview with a podcast called
StarTalk, Neil deGrasse Tyson said, “It
has been rumored that the reason why the Titanic
sank was because in the future, they invented
a time machine.
They wanted to see the iceberg, but it overloaded
the Titanic, and it sank.”
Of course, he was joking, but there are people
out there who truly do believe in this theory.
A website called Stranger Dimensions took
this theory a bit further with their own spin
on the idea, saying that the time travelers
weren’t tourists, but spies paid by J.P.
Morgan to sabotage the ship to collide with
the iceberg, in order to claim the insurance
money.
5.
The Federal Reserve Scheme
Financier J.P. Morgan was the owner of White
Star Line, and he had invested a significant
amount of money into the Titanic.
Before setting sail, he was working on a plan
to create the American Federal Reserve to
regulate the banking system.
There were some outspoken critics of Morgan’s
ideas, and all of them had originally booked
a trips on the ship.
Their names were Benjamin Guggenheim, Isa
Strauss, and David Astor.
Morgan and some of his closest friends canceled
their trip on the Titanic at the last minute,
and survived.
His opponents were all on board the Titanic…
and perished during the sinking of the ship.
The Federal Reserve was created the very next
year, in 1913.
All of that is true.
But is it a coincidence, or something much
darker?
There is so much more to this theory, it could
be its own article.
It involves the Rothschild family, and even
the Illuminati.
However, if we sum it all up, the idea is
that evil bankers wanted control over the
U.S. economy so badly they were willing to
stage a wreck killing more than a thousand
people in order to take out a handful of men.
If this is true, many members of the crew,
including the captain, would have had to be
involved.
They would have had to be okay with the plan,
and willing to give their lives toward the
cause.
4.
Attacked by A German U-Boat
In 1915, just three years after the sinking
of the Titanic, the RMS Lusitania was attacked
by a German submarine and sank.
Considering that both boats were made by the
same company, and they were comparable sizes
and built with similar materials, conspiracy
theorists have argued that the Titanic may
have been hit by a German submarine as well.
A conspiracy theorist named Dr. Franklin Ruehl
talked about this idea on a TV series called
Mysteries From Beyond The Other Dominion,
and again for the Huffington Post.
Apparently, survivors heard sounds of explosions
on the ship.
There were also lights from a ship seen in
the distance, which survivors attributed to
a ship called the Californian.
However, as Dr. Ruehl claims, the Californian
saw lights in the distance as well.
This has caused a theory that a third ship
– in this case, a German U-boat – would
have been there, and slipped underneath the
water, never to be seen again.
However, World War I did not begin until 1914.
The Titanic sank in 1912, so there would be
no reason for Germany to attack the ship at
that time.
In his article, the only sources Dr. Ruehl
links to this theory are his own videos, as
well as psychic premonitions people had before
the crash.
3.
The Curse of the Pharaoh
In 1889, the British Museum acquired an egyptian
artifact known as “The Unlucky Mummy,”
due to the fact that its previous owners had
some serious bad luck.
While this is all true, the conspiracy begins
when some believe that the new owner of the
mummy was trying to board the Titanic in 1912.
The same curse that brought misfortune to
all of the other owners is to blame for the
Titanic sinking.
Of course, this theory has several holes in
it.
For one, you would have to believe in the
mummy’s curse.
Secondly, there is no evidence ever showing
that the mummy was actually on board the ship.
And if it truly was on the ship, the likelihood
that someone would have prioritized an artifact
to take up space on a lifeboat in place of
other human beings is also pretty ridiculous.
The mummy is still on display at the British
Museum today, if you wanted to visit it someday.
2.
The “No Pope” curse
A publication from 1987 claimed that on the
hull of the Titanic, there were the numbers
3909 04.
When seen in a mirror, the numbers appear
to be the words “No Pope.”
The construction of the White Star Liner ships
were completed in Belfast.
As the story goes, many of the shipyard workers
were Catholic, and they saw this as a bad
omen that God would not be protecting this
ship, and it was truly doomed to sink.
Snopes investigated this story, and discovered
that the number on Titanic’s hull was actually
131,428.
Not only is the number wrong, but the vast
majority of shipyard workers were actually
Protestant, not Catholic.
Even if the story had been true, one would
have to believe in the supernatural for this
conspiracy theory to hold any weight.
1.
The Olympic Insurance Claim
The oldest and the most well-known and widespread
conspiracy Titanic conspiracy of them all
is that the White Star Line switched out the
Titanic for its sister-ship, the Olympic.
The RMS Olympic was the first of the massive
ocean liners, but unfortunately, it collided
with another ship, and became very damaged.
Edward Smith, the captain of the Olympic was
to blame for the accident, and White Star
Liner did not get any money from their insurance
to pay for the repairs.
Smith became the captain of the Titanic as
well, and he went down with the ship.
Some theorists believe that the Olympic was
quickly repaired with parts from the Titanic,
and set sail in the Titanic’s place.
Considering that the two ships look almost
identical (that’s the Olympic above, by
the way), people believe this must have been
an easy switch.
When it sank again, White Star Liner was able
to take back millions of dollars from the
insurance claim.
However, in a documentary done by Sky, it
was revealed that dives from the wreckage
of the Titanic found steel parts stamped with
number “401,” which were all original
Titanic parts.
If it were actually the Olympic, as this theory
claims, there would be at least some remnants
of parts labeled with its serial number “400,”
and yet there are none.
This proves that the ship that sank was, in
fact, the Titanic.
Not only that, but there were roughly 15,000
Irish men working on these ships.
The sheer number of people means that the
likelihood all of them could have kept the
White Star Liner’s secret is slim to none…
especially after having a few pints in 
the pub.
