Seen here at Titanic’s wreck site are the remains of her crow’s nest


Seen here at Titanic’s wreck site are the remains of her crow’s nest, where lookouts Frederick Fleet and Reginald Lee first spotted the iceberg just before 11.40 PM on the evening of April 14th, 1912. 

For scale, the hole at center was a doorway, accessible by ladder which ran up the interior of the hollow foremast to the nest itself. 

The remains of the base of the crow’s nest can just be seen below in this 1991 photo. Still prominent above this doorway is the metal hook upon which her bell once hung, sounded three times in the moments between sighting and collision on the night of the disaster. 

In the years since Titanic’s discovery in 1985, this area has gradually collapsed - as of the most recent dives to the wreck site, it has been reported that the large areas of mast itself are now nearly completely gone, leaving only shadowy trails of rust under its former resting place between the liner’s forecastle and bridge. 

For more on the wreck of the crow’s nest, Paul Lee’s highly detailed synopsis can be viewed here: http://www.paullee.com/titanic/crowsnest.php

Photo by Emory Kristof/National Geographic Society

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