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94 points Thevet | 2 comments | | HN request time: 1.012s | source
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carlosjobim ◴[] No.44567822[source]
> Every schoolchild knows the story of the Titanic, the luxury ocean liner that hit an iceberg and sank in 1912. So why did the Empress tragedy, which claimed even more passenger lives a little over two years later, fail to embed itself in our collective national consciousness?

Because the Titanic was the biggest ship ever, it sunk on its maiden voyage, although it was said to be unsinkable. It's probably one of few stories from our time which will be remembered in a thousand years.

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1. bombcar ◴[] No.44570085[source]
And popular media grabbed the story. Fame for shipwrecks is hugely dependent on that - if it’s going to live past its time.

Gordon Lightfoot ensured that people a hundred years from now will know the Edmund Fitzgerald but the thousands of other wrecks in those lakes will be known to locals and researchers only.

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2. jolt42 ◴[] No.44571996[source]
I understand 30,000 have died on the Great Lakes as a result of shipwrecks.