Shetland Museum has acquired the bridge bell from the Titanic’s sister ship more than 90 years after it was lost.
The bell is from the liner RMS Oceanic, which sank in 1914 off the coast of Foula in the Shetland Islands. How it was recovered is a mystery, however, as it had not been recorded during operations to salvage items from the vessel in the 1920s and 70s.
“The wreck itself was extensively salvaged,” said Tommy Watt, curator of the Shetland Museum. “We have been in touch with the two divers who were there (in the 1970s), however there was no record of the bell on finds from the dives. We think it was taken after that dive, maybe in the late 1970s.”
The museum acquired it after a local diver spotted it on the Ocean Liner Auctions internet site and alerted the museum. It had been put up for sale by a local shipping agency.
After talks with the owners and a 50 per cent grant from the National Museums for Scotland’s National Fund For Acquisitions it was removed from auction and bought by the museum.