
Charles Hebert Lightoller: Mr. Lightoller was born on March 30, 1874, in Chorley, Lancashire. This man lived a full life. He was stranded on a deserted island for 80 days, survived the sinking of the Titanic (while saving many lives), sunk a German U-boat in WW1, and did something at 66 years old that topped everything else. When I first read about Lightoller, I didn’t know what to think of him; he was strict on the women and children first policy. He interpreted it as women and children only on the Titanic. But in that situation, I can see why. This was standard practice at the time. Lifeboats were not seen as a way to save everyone. But as a way to ferry people from one ship to another. I would suggest watching a documentary or reading a book about this man.
He lived a life that almost reads like fiction. Before the RMS Titanic disaster ever happened, he had already been through shipwrecks and survival situations that would have broken most people. As a young sailor in the 1880s, he was aboard the ship Holt Hill when it caught fire in the Indian Ocean. Lightoller and others escaped in small boats and were stranded on a deserted island for 80 days, with little food or water, before being rescued. Years later, he joined the White Star Line and became Second Officer on the Titanic. On the night of April 14, 1912, he worked steadily as the ship sank, loading women and children into lifeboats and refusing to panic even as the decks tilted into the freezing Atlantic. When the water finally swept over the bridge, Lightoller was pulled under against a ventilator grate before a blast of air forced him back to the surface. He survived by climbing onto an overturned collapsible lifeboat with other men and was the highest-ranking officer to survive the sinking.
During World War I, he served in the Royal Navy and commanded torpedo boats and destroyers in dangerous waters. He fought at the Battle of Jutland in 1916 aboard HMS Garry, where his ship rammed and sank a German U-boat, an action that earned him recognition for bravery. Lightoller also took part in Atlantic convoy duty and anti-submarine patrols during the war.
Most people would have spent the rest of their lives talking about surviving the Titanic, fighting in WW1, and being shipwrecked, but Lightoller still had another chapter ahead of him. During World War II in 1940, when British troops were trapped on the beaches of Dunkirk, the British government called for civilian boats to help with the evacuation. Lightoller was 66 years old by then, old enough to stay safely at home, but instead he took his small motor yacht, the Sundowner, across the English Channel himself with his son and a young Sea Scout. German aircraft were attacking the beaches and the Channel was filled with burning ships and wreckage, but Lightoller pushed on anyway. The Sundowner was built to carry around 20 people comfortably, yet Lightoller brought back more than 120 exhausted British soldiers packed onto the little boat. He could easily have been killed during the crossing, but the same calmness he showed on Titanic appeared again at Dunkirk. He was shot at and bombed by German airplanes. It turned Charles Lightoller into one of the few men connected to two of the most famous sea stories of the 20th century.
He married in 1903 to Iowa Sylvania Zillah Hawley-Wilson, whom he was married to until he died in 1952. They had 5 children: Frederick Roger, Herbert Brian, Richard Trevor, Sylvia Mavis, and Claire Doreen. Roger was killed on March 9, 1945, near the end of the war; Herbert Brian was killed on September 4, 1939, near the start of the war.
His famous boat, the Sundowner, is being refurbished and saved. I want to thank Bruce Goodman for helping me with research about Charles Lightoller.
A Bad Omen

When RMS Titanic first pulled away from Southampton on April 10, 1912, thousands of people lined the docks to watch the biggest ship in the world begin her maiden voyage. As her massive propellers started turning, they created a strong suction in the harbor. Nearby was the smaller liner SS New York, tied up alongside the dock. The force from Titanic’s spinning propellers snapped New York’s mooring ropes and pulled the ship toward Titanic’s stern. For a few tense minutes, it looked like the two ships might collide before tugboats rushed in to push New York away. Titanic missed her by only a few feet. Many passengers and dock workers were shaken by what they had just seen.
Below is a picture taken on the Titanic which shows just how close the SS New York was to her.

Afterward, some people quietly called it a bad omen. In the early 1900s, sailors and passengers often believed strange accidents before a voyage meant trouble ahead. At the time, most people brushed it off as just the danger of handling a ship so large in a crowded harbor. But after the disaster, survivors and historians looked back on the near collision with SS New York as one of the eerie moments connected to Titanic’s short life. It is possible that even a moderate collision on April 10, 1912, could have changed history.
If you are wondering what the RMS stood for, it stands for Royal Mail Ship (or Royal Mail Steamer). It was a prestigious designation indicating that the vessel was contracted by the British government to transport mail for the Royal Mail Service
Below is an excellent video, but long on Charles Lightoller’s heroism at Dunkirk.

Well, I hope WordPress will allow me to post today.
This is a fascinating post. Thank you, Max. Your fascination with the Titanic and that which surrounds it is greatly appreciated.
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It did! Thank you Arthur…I really appreciate it. I’ve gotten lost in this story. There are so many great stories of men and women that sailed on her.
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What an absolute legend of a man… and yet I knew nothing about him before today!
You’ve done it again Max… absolutely fascinating post! Thank you!
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Thank you so much Jane! Yes I have started to read about him…he is a person that is movie worthy. I was startled that he went through that much. The Titanic part is only a fraction.
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wow –
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Thanks for reading Beth!
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Another interesting Titanic post, Max that was very well researched. I always thought that RMS stood for Royal Majesty’s Ship, thanks for straightening me out on that.
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I didn’t know what it stood for either. I noticed that some of their other ships had that label as well and wanted to find out. The whole story is interesting for sure. Thanks for reading this Jim.
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wow, that was quite a life. Have they made a movie about him? If not, why not!
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I know…I agree. There is a new book about him out so maybe that will spur something on. Over there the Dunkirk event is up there or more than the Titanic in a way. He was a very interesting man.
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Just from your description, a fascinating man. Thinking about a movie, how could one handle it? The Titanic stuff is heroic enough, but really is shadowed by the Dunkirk work. And at his age!!! (Hey, at 72 I’m entitled to applaud the age as well as the events!!!)
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I totally agree with you. The Titanic was overshadowed by what he did at Dunkirk. I never knew about that at all.
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Thanks for the thank you, Max. It’s always fun collaborating with you!
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All I ever knew him for is this almost fictional character on the Titanic…now…he is a real person to me…as odd as that is to say. When reading about these events you forget these are real people at times.
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Amazing! Thanks, Max, I really enjoyed this series.
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Thank you! I hope I’m not burning people out.
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Not me!
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The life of Mr. Lightoller was fascinating; the guy was a true hero.
Thanks for your research and sharing these riveting stories.
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Thank you so much for reading. I’m glad you enjoyed it! It’s been so interesting learning about the actual people involved with it.
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The Lightoller story is straight out of Hollywood, or should be. I’ll check out the longer video tonight. The Dunkirk rescue is one of those stories that became legendary. I read Spike Milligan’s War Memoirs* and he had a guy transferred to his battalion in WW2 and he asked him about the British Army’s retreat to the beach at Dunkirk and the guy said ‘it was a total f**k up.’ The actions of the Army Commanders was a f**k up, but the actions of the captains of the little flotilla of small boats rescuing the trapped soldiers was heroic. (*Well worth a read or listen to Max, if you have the time. Spike was a top clash British eccentric of the highest order humour-wise. )
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I never knew about Dunkirk and this was a good education…I don’t know how I didn’t know about this because I know some about WW2.
I have one of his books but not that one. I will track that down obbverse. You told me more that I didn’t know.
I think you will enjoy that video…he animates it while talking about it….it was a thrilling ride! He was dodging bombs and machine gun fire all the way there and back.
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Sorry, should be ‘top class.’ (I shoulda proof read before replying. Coulda shoulda didn’t .)
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I just picked up 6 of his War Memoirs in PDF…I’m looking for a different format but these will do right now…thanks Obbverse.
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I think you’ll enjoy them, especially the first two or three. He was basically manic depressive, as they said at the time. Madcap genius streaked with swings down to deeeeeep depression.
I’ll take a stab in the dark and say the one book you have is ‘Puckoon???’
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YES! That is the one!
I’m sure I will…
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Wow, what a life! I knew the name from the Titanic, but had no idea what he went through before and after that.
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I didn’t know either. The Dunkirk event I should have heard of but haven’t… the guy had 9 lives.
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The Christopher Nolan movie on Dunkirk is pretty good. Crazy how many ordinary people sailed into a war zone to help.
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Thanks…I’ll check that out. …I can’t imagine the chaos going on.
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