Passengers of The RMS Titanic - Last Survivors

Last Survivors

Name Date of Birth Date of Death Age at Time of Disaster Age at Time of Death Additional Notes
McGowan, Anna "Annie" 5 July 1897 30 January 1990 700114000000000000014 years, 7002285000000000000285 days 700192000000000000092 years, 7002209000000000000209 days
Blanchard (née Becker), Ruth Elizabeth 28 October 1899 6 July 1990 700112000000000000012 years, 7002170000000000000170 days 700190000000000000090 years, 7002251000000000000251 days
Dean, Bertram 21 May 1910 14 April 1992 70001000000000000001 year, 7002330000000000000330 days 700181000000000000081 years, 7002329000000000000329 days Sibling of the last living survivor, Millvina Dean
Pope (née Kink), Louise Gretchen 8 April 1908 25 August 1992 70004000000000000004 years, 70007000000000000007 days 700184000000000000084 years, 7002139000000000000139 days
Newell (née Robb), Marjorie Anne 12 February 1889 11 June 1992 700123000000000000023 years, 700163000000000000063 days 7002103000000000000103 years, 7002195000000000000195 days The last living survivor who was an adult at the time of the sinking; she was the last living survivor who was a first class passenger.
Sandström, Beatrice Irene 9 August 1910 3 September 1995 70001000000000000001 year, 7002250000000000000250 days 700185000000000000085 years, 700125000000000000025 days
Hart, Eva Miriam 31 January 1905 14 February 1996 70007000000000000007 years, 700175000000000000075 days 700191000000000000091 years, 700114000000000000014 days
Haisman (née Brown), Edith Eileen 27 October 1896 20 January 1997 700115000000000000015 years, 7002171000000000000171 days 7002100000000000000100 years, 700185000000000000085 days
Laroche, Louise 2 July 1910 28 January 1998 70001000000000000001 year, 7002288000000000000288 days 700187000000000000087 years, 7002210000000000000210 days
Shuman (née Johnson), Eleanor Ileen 23 August 1910 9 March 1998 70001000000000000001 year, 7002236000000000000236 days 700187000000000000087 years, 7002259000000000000259 days
Navratil, Michel Marcel 12 June 1908 30 January 2001 70003000000000000003 years, 7002308000000000000308 days 700192000000000000092 years, 7002232000000000000232 days Last living male survivor. Along with brother Edmond (1910–1953), were the only children rescued without a parent or guardian (known as the Titanic Orphans)
Van Tongerloo (née Quick), Winnifred Vera 23 January 1904 6 July 2002 70008000000000000008 years, 700183000000000000083 days 700198000000000000098 years, 7002164000000000000164 days Last living survivor who did not lose a relative in the sinking
Asplund, Lillian Gertrud 21 October 1906 6 May 2006 70005000000000000005 years, 7002177000000000000177 days 700199000000000000099 years, 7002197000000000000197 days Last living survivor with memories of the accident
Dainton (née West), Barbara Joyce 24 May 1911 16 October 2007 50000000000000000000 years, 7002327000000000000327 days 700196000000000000096 years, 7002145000000000000145 days She was the last remaining survivor who was a second class passenger.
Dean, Millvina 2 February 1912 31 May 2009 50000000000000000000 years, 700173000000000000073 days 700197000000000000097 years, 7002118000000000000118 days Last living survivor and sibling of Bertram Dean, another one of the last remaining survivors. She was the last remaining survivor who was a third class passenger.

Read more about this topic:  Passengers Of The RMS Titanic

Famous quotes containing the word survivors:

    I want to celebrate these elms which have been spared by the plague, these survivors of a once flourishing tribe commemorated by all the Elm Streets in America. But to celebrate them is to be silent about the people who sit and sleep underneath them, the homeless poor who are hauled away by the city like trash, except it has no place to dump them. To speak of one thing is to suppress another.
    Lisel Mueller (b. 1924)

    I believe that all the survivors are mad. One time or another their madness will explode. You cannot absorb that much madness and not be influenced by it. That is why the children of survivors are so tragic. I see them in school. They don’t know how to handle their parents. They see that their parents are traumatized: they scream and don’t react normally.
    Elie Wiesel (b. 1928)