‘Prophetic’ letter written by Titanic survivor sells for nearly $400,000 at auction
When first-class passenger Col. Archibald Gracie boarded the Titanic in Southampton, England, on April 10, 1912, he drafted a letter to a friend.
“It is a fine ship,” he wrote, “but I shall await my journey’s end before I pass judgment on her.”
Five days later, the “unsinkable” ship struck an iceberg and sank in the frigid waters off Newfoundland, killing some 1,500 of the vessel’s roughly 2,200 passengers.
Now, Gracie’s eerily prescient letter has sold at auction to an anonymous bidder for a record-breaking $399,000 — nearly five times its expected price. The auction took place on Saturday in Devizes, England.
Andrew Aldridge of Henry Aldridge & Son, the auction house that oversaw the sale of the letter, told NPR he believed the note was so highly prized largely because of Gracie’s “incredible” sentence about withholding judgment before the ship’s journey ended.
Aldridge, an auctioneer who specializes in the valuation of Titanic memorabilia, added that the sale was testament to the public’s continued interest in the famous shipwreck.
“The stories of those men, women and children are told through the memorabilia, and their memories are kept alive through those items,” Aldridge said in an email.
In 2013, the auction house also sold a violin believed to have been played by bandleader Wallace Hartley as the ship sank.
The instrument sold for over $1.6 million, setting a record for Titanic-related artifacts at the time.

Col. Archibald Gracie, a wealthy American real estate investor, managed to survive the sinking by climbing onto an overturned collapsible lifeboat with around a dozen other men, according to the auction house.
He went on to write The Truth About the Titanic, a personal account of how the disaster unfolded. According to Gracie, around half the men who reached the lifeboat died from exhaustion or extreme cold.
Despite surviving the tragedy, Gracie died less than eight months later due to health issues exacerbated by hypothermia and physical injuries sustained from the shipwreck, according to the auction house.
The letter left the ship when it made a stop in Queenstown, Ireland, before embarking across the Atlantic. The seller’s great-uncle was an acquaintance of Gracie’s, who received the letter at the Waldorf Hotel in London on April 12, 1912 — three days before the ship sank.
An ape, a tea party — and the ability to imagine
The ability to imagine — to play pretend — has long been thought to be unique to humans. A new study suggests one of our closest living relatives can do it too.
How much power does the Fed chair really have?
On paper, the Fed chair is just one vote among many. In practice, the job carries far more influence. We analyze what gives the Fed chair power.
This complex brain network may explain many of Parkinson’s stranger symptoms
Parkinson's disease appears to disrupt a brain network involved in everything from movement to memory.
‘Please inform your friends’: The quest to make weather warnings universal
People in poor countries often get little or no warning about floods, storms and other deadly weather. Local efforts are changing that, and saving lives.
Immigration officials to testify before House as DHS funding deadline approaches
Congressional Democrats have a list of demands to reform Immigration and Customs Enforcement. But tensions between the two parties are high and the timeline is short – the stopgap bill funding DHS runs out Friday.
How the use of AI and ‘deepfakes’ play a role in the search for Nancy Guthrie
As artificial intelligence becomes more advanced and commonplace, it can be difficult to know what's real and what's not, which has complicated the search for Nancy Guthrie, according to law enforcement. But just how difficult is it?
