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St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, June 30, 1901
A collection of old photographs, historic newspaper clippings and assorted excerpts highlighting the parallels of past and present. Featuring weird, funny and baffling headlines, articles and advertisements! Visit www.yesterdays-print.comĀ
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, June 30, 1901
Brooklyn Life, New York, April 27, 1912
Alfred Nourney, 20, who went by the pseudonym Baron Alfred von Drachstedt, was a young man from Cologne, Germany, born in the Netherlands, who survived the sinking of the Titanic.
Alfred purchased a fancy new wardrobe in Paris, including numerous suits, ties, shoes, dress shirts, an elaborate walking stick, and jewelry, among other items, to establish himself among his high-class fellow travelers.
After boarding in Cherbourg, France, Alfred, was unimpressed with his second-class room. He persuaded the purser, stressing that he was a Baron, to transfer him to first-class (for a fee). Alfred wrote a postcard home to his mother on April 11th, from Queenstown, Ireland, the last port before the Atlantic crossing, expressing his excitement at being a first-class passenger, telling her:
Dear Mother, I’m so happy being first class! I already know some nice people! A Diamondking! Mister Astor, one of the wealthiest Americans, is on board!
Thousand Kisses, Alfred
On the night of the sinking, Alfred sat playing bridge in the first-class smoking room with Henry Blank and William Greenfield. All three made it into lifeboat 7, the first to be launched, which carried only 26 passengers though it’s capacity was 65. Once the lifeboat was lowered, and the other men helped paddle away from the sinking ship, Alfred sat back and chain smoked, occasionally taking a break to shoot off his pistol, which he told other passengers he’d purchased for protection in the wild west.
When the lifeboat was rescued by the Carpathia, Alfred found a pile of blankets, meant to be shared between all those rescued, and promptly lay down upon the whole lot. The story goes that one young lady, finding him thus, pulled the top blanket from under him, sending him spinning to the floor, causing everyone around to applaud.
In interviews, once he was on land, Alfred became known for the stories he told of the sartorial losses he sustained. The real von Drachstedt’s claimed to have no knowledge of Nourney.
There are numerous stories on German websites claiming that Nourney’s family was rich, that they’d disowned him for impregnating a maid, that he was running away from Paris because of his fraudulent gambling. I have no idea how much is true, but he certainly wasn’t a Baron.
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The Behaviour Book: A Manual for Ladies, 1853
According to Wikipedia, the real story behind Lady Erskine is much sadder:
In 1818 he married for the second time. His bride was a former apprentice bonnet-maker, Sarah Buck, with whom he had already had two children. The couple traveled to Gretna Green for the marriage, with an angry adult son in hot pursuit. It was a tempestuous relationship, and the marriage ended in separation a few years later.
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His widow survived him by over thirty years. She, as reports in the Times revealed, was reduced to poverty and had to rely on a small charitable allowance to survive. Even these meagre payments were withheld by Erskine’s executors when she tried to prevent them sending her son Hampden away to school, and she had to appeal to the lord mayor of London.
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Baron Nathaniel De Rothschild: Domplatz in Trient, 1895
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Desmond Prittie (centre, later 6th Baron Dunalley of Kilboy) comes of age, Kilboy, Tipperary, Ireland, 1933