Primary accounts of an
              officer's suicide
      
      The following primary accounts are either taken from a survivor's
      own letters or diaries, or testimony at either the US or British
      Inquiries of 1912. In these cases, there is very little doubt that
      the survivor really said what they are quoted as saying.
      
      Since many survivors gave multiple accounts, some secondary
      accounts may be mixed in with the primary, in an effort to keep a
      person's statements together.
Eugene Patrick Daly,
            3rd Class passenger
      
      Eugene Patrick Daly of Athlone, Ireland, by his own accounts was
      rescued aboard the upturned Collapsible B. His accounts of his
      rescue are partially born out by fellow steerage passenger Edward
      Dorking, who mentioned seeing the "Irishman" struggling to climb
      off of Collapsible B and into one of the lifeboats which were
      taking the men aboard in the morning. By the time Daly reached the
      Carpathia, he had been rendered unconscious by the below-freezing
      sea water which he had been half submerged in all night. After
      being taken aboard the Carpathia, he was carried to the cabin of
      Dr. Frank Blackmarr. Upon awakening, Daly told of his experiences
      aboard the Titanic. As he spoke, Blackmarr wrote down Daly's story
      in his personal scrapbook. Daly said:
      
      "After the accident, we were all held down
        in steerage. Finally, some of the women and children were let
        up, but we had quite a number of hot-headed Italians and other
        peoples who got crazy and made for the stairs. These men tried
        to rush the stairway, pushing and crowding and pulling the women
        down. Some of them with weapons in their hands. I saw two dagos
        shot and some that took punishment from the officers."
      
      He continues: "I finally got up to the top
        deck and made for the front. The water was just covering the
        upper deck at the bridge and it was easy to slide because she
        had such a tip. I reached a collapsible boat that was fastened
        to the deck by two rings. It could not be moved. During that
        brief time that I worked on cutting one of those ropes, the
        collapsible was crowded with people hanging upon the edges. The
        Titanic gave a lurch downward and we were in the water up to our
        hips. She rose again slightly, and I succeeded in cutting the
        second rope which held her stern. Another lurch threw this boat
        and myself off and away from the ship into the water."
      
      Daly refers to no suicide in this letter, and it is unclear as to
      whether the shooting he refers to (the "dagos") occurred down in
      the third class areas, or up on the Boat Deck. Although this
      letter as transcribed by Dr. Blackmarr only mentions the two men
      being shot, and no suicide, apparently Daly did tell Blackmarr
      about the officer killing himself. In an interview given on page 3
      of the April 20, 1912 edition of the Chicago Daily
        Tribune, Blackmarr wrote of this:
      
      "The only panic at the beginning, as I
        understand it, was in the steerage, where there were many
        persons who lacked self-control. There was no shooting, as I
        learn, except that a steerage passenger told me he saw an
        officer trying to control the maddened rush by shooting two
        persons. The same officer shot himself a minute later."
      
      The following is an excerpt from a letter that Daly wrote to his
      younger sister Maggie Daly in Ireland. The letter is undated, but
      was apparently written sometime between April 18-April 21, 1912
      (this account was originally published in The Night Lives
        On by Walter Lord):
      
      "At the first cabin (deck) when a boat was
        being lowered an officer pointed a revolver and said if any man
        tried to getin, he would shoot him on the spot. I saw the
        officer shoot two men dead because they tried to get in the
        boat. Afterwards there was another shot, and I saw the officer
        himself lying on the deck. They told me he shot himself, but I
        did not see him. I was up to my knees in the water at the time.
        Everyone was rushing around, and there were no more boats. I
        then dived overboard." (Daly's letter would later be
      published in the papers of his hometown Athlone, as well as the
      May 4, 1912 issues of the London Daily Telegraph
      and The Daily Sketch. A very similar account was
      told to Mayor Gaynor of New York when Daly visited his home for
      the mayor's relief fund, and was printed in the April 22, 1912
      edition of the Washington Post)
      
      Daly's letter to his sister contains details not mentioned in his
      April 15th account - namely, the officer shooting two men dead,
      before shooting himself. However, he apparently did mention these
      to Blackmarr, as evidenced by the doctor's press interview.
      
      Daly also testified under oath about the shooting/suicide in the
      1915 limitation hearings. He was the only individual to mention
      this at these hearings.
      
      (For the full text of the letter transcribed by Dr. Blackmarr, click here)
      
      Miss Laura
            Francatelli, 1st Class passenger (Lady Duff Gordon's
          secretary)
      
      Miss Francatelli gave the following story in a letter to someone
      named "Marion" on April 18, 1912 (portions of this letter appeared
      in James Cameron's Titanic by Ed Marsh, and Titanic:
        Women and Children First by Judith B. Geller)
      
      "The dear brave officer gave orders to row
        away from the sinking boat at least 200 yards, he afterwards
        poor dear brave fellow, shot himself. We saw the whole thing,
        and watched that tremendous thing quickly sink...."
      
      For the full text of Miss Francatelli's letter, click here.
      
      The wording of Miss Francatelli's letter makes it difficult to
      tell whether she was referring to the ship sinking, or to the
      officer shooting himself when she says that she "saw the whole
      thing." She may have just been repeating what she heard from
      someone else, regarding the suicide. If she was actually claiming
      to have seen the suicide, her account is problematic for several
      reasons. First of all, Miss Francatelli was rescued in lifeboat #1
      along with eleven others. In all of the "reliable" accounts of the
      suicide, it takes place during the launching of collapsible A, a
      full hour after lifeboat #1 was launched. Secondly, it is very
      unlikely that Miss Francatelli could have seen a suicide from a
      lifeboat 200 yards from the ship.
      
      George Alexander
            Lucien Rheims, 1st Class passenger
      
      The following is an excerpt from an unpublished letter to his wife
      in France, dated April 19, 1912 (excerpts of this letter appeared
      in The Night Lives On by Walter Lord). It is
      translated from French:
      
      "While the last boat was leaving, I saw an
        officer with a revolver fire a shot and kill a man who was
        trying to climb into it. As there remained nothing more to do,
        the officer told us, "Gentlemen, each man for himself,
        good-bye." He gave a military salute and then fired a bullet
        into his head. That�s what I call a man!!!"
      
      (For the full text of Rheims letter, click
        here. This appears to be a different translation from what
      Lord had available; however, the meaning is essentially the same.)
      
      The following is taken from the April 20, 1912 edition of the New
        York Herald, given the same day as the letter to his
      sister.  Here are the relevant sections of the article, which
      was under the headline of "Officer Kills Man, Ends Own Life":
      
      "George Rheims, an importer, of No. 19 East
        Fifty-seventh street, Manhattan, and No. 22 Rue Octave
        Feuilliet, Paris, who assisted in loading the lifeboats, said
        yesterday he had seen an officer of the Titanic shoot a man who
        attempted to get in a boat ahead of a woman. Mr. Rheims feet
        were badly frozen.
        
        "I was with my brother-in-law, Joseph Loring of No. 811 Fifth
        Avenue," said Mr.Rheims. "The majority of men passengers did not
        attempt to get in the boats. The men assisted the women. But
        when the boats began to be lowered some men lost their heads.
        From the lower deck men jumped into crowded boats and others
        slid down ropes. One officer shot a man who attempted to get
        into a crowded boat. Immediately afterward the officer said:-
        "Well, goodby," and killed himself."
      
      Rheims was able to swim to Collapsible A, and was one of the 12
      survivors later rescued.
      
      Richard Norris
            Williams, First Class passenger
      
      Williams was on the forward starboard Boat Deck as the bridge
      dipped under. According to his personal account published in the
      May 11th 1997 edition of Main Line Life
      (excerpts of this also appeared in Paul Quinn's Dusk to
        Dawn):
      
      "I heard the crack of a revolver shot from
        the direction where I had left Captain Smith. I did not look
        around...The ship seemed to give a slight lurch. I turned
        towards the bow. I saw nothing but water with just a mast
        sticking out of it. I don't remember the shock of the cold
        water, I only remember thinking, 'suction,' and my efforts to
        swim in the direction of the starboard rail to get away from the
        ship...Before I had swam more than ten feet I felt the deck come
        up under me and I found we were high and dry. My father was not
        more than 12 or 15 feet from me...He started towards me just as
        I saw one of the four great funnels come crashing down on top of
        him. Just for one instant I stood there transfixed-not because
        it had only missed me by a few feet...curiously enough not
        because it had killed my father for whom I had a far more than
        normal feeling of love and attachment; but there I was
        transfixed wondering at the enormous size of this funnel, still
        belching smoke."
      
      This account does seem to corroborate the timing as established by
      Daly, Rheims, Dorking (see below), etc., even though Williams did
      not actually see what happened. He was in the right position at
      the right time to have heard something, and according to this
      account, he did.