No other photos that have been claimed to be of the iceberg are that verifiable, although one sold in 2015 by the same auction house may be authentic because the photographer - the chief steward of the ocean liner Prinz Adalbert – took it just hours after the RMS Titanic sank and claimed in a note that he saw red paint on it that could have been left by the ship scraping against it. They are reproduced in "Triumph and Tragedy" by John P. The iceberg was also sketched by Fredrick Fleet, the lookout on duty who first spotted the iceberg, and Joseph Scarrott, a sailor. We crossed the ice tracks 40hrs before her and in daylight so saw the ice easily and I got a picture".” Wood states "I am sending you a sea picture the Etonian running before a gale and the iceberg that sank the Titanic. “The significance of this photo is heightened by an original handwritten letter by Captain Wood written on board SS Etonian to the vendor's great grandfather Billy Tucker who as a young man wrote to Wood regarding the matter of photography. The photo is being offered by the Henry Aldridge & Son Ltd auction house as part of a “Titanic, White Star, Ocean Liner & Transport Memorabilia Auction on Saturday 20th June 2020.” The collection includes newspaper clippings, postcards and photographs of everything but the ship hitting the iceberg and sinking – which are not believed to exist anywhere. "Iceberg taken by Captain Wood SS Etonian in 41★0N 49★0W April 12th at 4pm 1913 (sic) Titanic struck April 14th and sank in 3 hours.” ![]() The image shows a massive iceberg with a very odd elliptical shape, and is captioned in black ink. “Extremely rare photo of an oddly-shaped 'blueberg' photographed by the Captain of the S.S. Why didn’t he warn the captain of the Titanic? An auction house taking bids on a large cache of Titanic memorabilia unveiled what is possibly the only photograph of the killer iceberg – taken just 40 hours before by the captain of another ship passing through the same waters. In fact, they don’t even have verifiable photos of the iceberg on its collision course … until now. What no one has is photographs of the ship actually hitting the infamous iceberg (Hollywood movies don’t count). They have artifacts from the ship that have been brought after its location was finally discovered. ![]() Experts researching it have photographs of the ship being built and launched. ![]() The RMS Titanic is perhaps the most studied shipwreck of all time.
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