What would you pay for a letter that survived the sinking of the Titanic?
The Holverson family is selling a letter written by a forebear, describing his impressions of the palatial ship and bearing stains from its time in the Atlantic
London — A handwritten letter found on the body of a man killed in the sinking of the Titanic is expected to fetch up to £80,000 ($105,000) at auction on Saturday. The letter, written by first-class passenger Alexander Oskar Holverson to his mother on embossed Titanic "on-board" stationary, describes his impressions of the palatial ship, praising the food and music. "If all goes well we will arrive in New York Wednesday A.M.," Holverson wrote the day before the ship’s fateful encounter with an iceberg. Holverson was a Minnesota-born salesman, who was travelling on the ship with his wife, Mary Alice, who survived the sinking. In the letter, he also describes his experiences rubbing shoulders with one of the ship’s most famous passengers. "John Jacob Astor is on this ship," he said of the American financier and real-estate investor, who was one of the world’s richest men at the time. "He looks like any other human being even though he has millions of money. They sit out on deck with t...
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