A resilient cracker that survived the Titanic sells for $23,000

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steve1989
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A resilient cracker that survived the Titanic sells for $23,000

Post by steve1989 » Sat Dec 05, 2015 3:35 am

Hey guys, I found this and figured it would be interesting and on-topic enough to share here.

First off, here is the actual link to The Washington Post where the report originated - https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/mor ... for-23000/

But I am also going to copy & paste the report W/ the photo so in case you don't want to open another window for that link. :wink:

Folks, I think this one may be a bit too expensive for me to do a review & taste test on..! :lol: :shock:




________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
By Yanan Wang October 27

An artifact of the world’s most famous sunken ship has brought new meaning to the phrase “tough cookie.”

An English biscuit saved by James Fenwick, a passenger on the Carpathia vessel that saved Titanic passengers at sea, has been sold to a Greek collector for $23,000 — $8,000 more than it was expected to receive. The Spillers and Bakers snack, what Americans call a cracker, was kept intact in a Kodak film envelope by Fenwick along with the following notation: “Pilot biscuit from Titanic lifeboat April 1912.”

It was sold over the weekend by Henry Aldridge & Son auction house, along with a photograph that purports to show the iceberg that caused the historic collision, which went for $32,200.

“You might say it’s the cracker that took the biscuit,” Alan Aldridge told The Washington Post, referencing a Britishism that uses “take the biscuit” to mean arriving at a pinnacle — similar to Americans’ “take the cake.”

Aldridge noted with a chuckle that while the 3.5 inches square artifact is “very much a human biscuit,” Spillers and Bakers was known as a manufacturer of dog treats. The human goods they created were “nothing fancy”; they were generally used as emergency rations or sustenance during times of war.

In this case, the 103-year-old cracker was part of a survival kit on one of the Titanic lifeboats. The Carpathia, after finally hearing a distress signal from the Titanic, steamed beyond its rated top speed for some 58 miles over four hours, only to discover the Titanic gone. The ship did manage to rescue some 700 passengers who had escaped in lifeboats.

“I couldn’t imagine anything less appetizing, but if you’re in a rowing boat in the middle of the ocean, you’d certainly eat it with the rest of them,” Aldridge said.

He explained that the cracker has survived all these years because it’s similar in composition to a hot cross bun.

“If you get one of those and leave it out, it will dry and it will fossilize,” Aldridge said. “If you left a slice of bread out, it would go green and start to rot, but hot cross buns don’t, and neither do these biscuits.”
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$23,000 biscuit from The Titanic.jpg
$23,000 biscuit from The Titanic.jpg (59.71 KiB) Viewed 4669 times
Yanan Wang is a reporter on the Morning Mix team..jpg
Thank you Yanan Wang, of the Morning Mix Team from the Washington post for reporting this fascinating article!
Yanan Wang is a reporter on the Morning Mix team..jpg (3.64 KiB) Viewed 4669 times

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parafireboy
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Re: A resilient cracker that survived the Titanic sells for $23,000

Post by parafireboy » Sat Dec 05, 2015 3:06 pm

Wow, what a rare item, thanks for sharing this! Yeah, it might be a bit out of the price range for something to review, haha. It's amazing how well it has held up for all these years!

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Ruleryak
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Re: A resilient cracker that survived the Titanic sells for $23,000

Post by Ruleryak » Wed Jan 13, 2016 6:52 pm

Man oh man I wanna eat that thing.

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elandil
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Re: A resilient cracker that survived the Titanic sells for $23,000

Post by elandil » Wed Jan 13, 2016 8:45 pm

well...that's gotta be a dry biscuit...

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