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A bank note dollar bill and gold coin from the Titanic wreckage are among a sampling of Titanic artifacts previewed on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012 in New York.  (AP / Bebeto Matthews) This October 19, 2011 image provided by RMS Titanic, Inc., shows a bracelet from the RMS Titanic which was recovered from the ocean floor during an expedition to the site of the tragedy. (AP / RMS Titanic, Inc.) A first class smoking room chandelier found in the Titanic wreckage is previewed among a sampling of Titanic artifacts on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012 in New York. (AP / Bebeto Matthews) Titanic treasures

Titanic artifacts up for auction, but you must buy the whole lot

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Canada AM: 'Qualified' bidders only
Alan Ruffman, author of 'Titanic Remembered: The Unsinkable Ship and Halifax' says the entire lot of artifacts must be sold as a whole, and explains how only qualified bidders, such as museums, may bid on the items.
Canada AM: Titanic items to be kept together
Arlan Ettinger, president of Guerney's Auction House, says there are no limitations on who the buyer can be, but the buyer must agree to the terms, which state the Titanic collection must be kept together.

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A bank note dollar bill and gold coin from the Titanic wreckage are among a sampling of Titanic artifacts previewed on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012 in New York.  (AP / Bebeto Matthews) This October 19, 2011 image provided by RMS Titanic, Inc., shows a bracelet from the RMS Titanic which was recovered from the ocean floor during an expedition to the site of the tragedy. (AP / RMS Titanic, Inc.) A first class smoking room chandelier found in the Titanic wreckage is previewed among a sampling of Titanic artifacts on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012 in New York. (AP / Bebeto Matthews) Titanic treasures

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A bank note dollar bill and gold coin from the Titanic wreckage are among a sampling of Titanic artifacts previewed on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012 in New York.  (AP / Bebeto Matthews)

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Date: Fri. Jan. 6 2012 12:19 PM ET

It has gone down in history as a night to remember.

On 2:30 am on the morning April 15, 1912 the Titanic went to its watery grave, taking 1,517 people along with it in one of history's deadliest maritime disasters.

One hundred years later, this tragedy still fascinates the world.

That fascination will likely grow in April of 2012, when more than 5,000 artifacts from the doomed shipwreck go up for auction. But bidding on this bit of history comes with a catch.

According to a court ruling, the treasure trove valued at US$189 million must stay together.

The auction's lucky winner must also take on the task of being the collection's steward and preserving it, and the ship's remains, for future generations.

"There are no limitations on who the buyer may be or where that buyer will come from. They can come from the United States, Canada, anywhere," said Arlan Ettinger, president of Guernsey's Auctioneers & Brokers in New York.

"But the current owners believe that this is the correct thing to do," Ettinger told CTV's Canada AM on Friday

"Future generations should be able to view these materials and understand and be fascinated by them."

The Titanic was the world's largest and most luxurious ship when it set sail from Southampton, England, on April 10, 1912, for New York.

That luxury is clearly reflected in these items that were retrieved from a 20 km area of debris around the site where the ship sank after hitting an iceberg in the North Atlantic on the night of April 14, 1912.

The items up for grabs at April's auction include a bounty of small, personal items such as reading glasses and clothing. Bidders will also find everything from gold coins, perfectly preserved demitasse cups and saucers, as well as an actual piece of the ship's 17-tonne hull.

"Nothing has been touched from the ship. The ship itself is viewed as sacred," said Ettinger.

This won't be the first auction of Titanic memorabilia. But it will be the first auction of items taken directly from the wreckage site. In fact, 2012 marks the 25th anniversary of the recovery of the first artifacts from the sea floor.

Previous sales featured items such as a recovered deck chair, letters written by survivors, and the advertising brochures that White Star Line produced in advance of Titanic's first, doomed voyage.

None of those sales, however, came close to what the April auction could fetch.

Comments are now closed for this story

Cameron
said

Notice the currency is a silver certificate and the coin was gold - no worthless fiat cash then!


Diana 3
said

One thing you can say about the Titanic junk is that it sure as hell lasts longer than any of the crap we buy at ChinaMart "Made in China" today!


anti thiefery
said

The bracelet shows the name amy on it.
we have the list of people on the ship, how many can there peossibly be that are named amy
give it to her descendants, it belongs to them.


Annie
said

Who on earth would want the entire collection? What a ridiculous stipulation to make.


Disgusted Canadian
said

I was undeer the impression that the titanic was concidered a GRAVE SITE.
Then these artifacts anr there because of grave robbers, and should be say photorraphed, given to the descendants, or sent back down to the titanic.


J-zizzle
said

Im guessing that this court ruling was in the USA and therefore as no jurisdiction once a foriegn owner purchase the lot than splits them up. Well whatever court it was, its arms surely have limited reach so I can see this being spolit up soon.


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