Titanic: Departure to Rescue

April 10–15, 1912 · From Southampton sailing to Carpathia’s recovery of survivors

How to use this page

This page is a focused event chronology rather than a general ship biography. It follows Titanic from departure at Southampton through the collision, distress phase, lifeboat launches, sinking, and the rescue work carried out by Carpathia.

Time note: most entries below are given in shipboard/local time as commonly used in public timelines. Some moments are approximate because witness clocks, recollections, and inquiry reconstructions do not always align to the minute. Where that uncertainty exists, this page preserves it rather than smoothing it away.

Filters

Toggle categories to narrow the page by voyage phase, warnings, sinking sequence, or rescue activity.

Wednesday, April 10, 1912

12:15 p.m.

Titanic departs Southampton

Voyage

Titanic leaves Southampton on her maiden voyage for Cherbourg, Queenstown, and New York. This is the formal beginning of the voyage sequence that later becomes fixed in public memory through inquiries, survivor testimony, and company records.

Shortly after sailing

A near-collision with New York delays the outward movement

Voyage

As Titanic moves down Southampton Water, suction from her passing causes the moored liner New York to surge. Tug assistance helps avert collision. It is one of the voyage’s best-known early incidents, though unrelated to the later ice disaster.

6:30 p.m.

Titanic arrives off Cherbourg

Voyage

Passengers and baggage are transferred by tender. The stop enlarges the passenger list and underscores that this is still, at this stage, a routine maiden crossing rather than an unfolding emergency narrative.

8:10 p.m.

Titanic departs Cherbourg

Voyage

With the French stop complete, the ship continues west toward Queenstown, the final embarkation point before the Atlantic crossing proper.

Thursday, April 11, 1912

Late morning

Titanic reaches Queenstown

Voyage

Additional passengers, mail, and baggage are brought aboard by tender at Queenstown (now Cobh). This is the ship’s last port call before heading out into the North Atlantic.

1:30 p.m.

Titanic departs Queenstown for New York

Voyage

Once clear of Ireland, the ship settles into the westbound crossing. For most aboard, the following days appear orderly and uneventful, which is part of why the later emergency feels so abrupt in survivor recollections.

Sunday, April 14, 1912

Daytime–evening

Ice warnings are received from other ships

Warnings

Through the day and evening, wireless messages report ice, growlers, and field ice in the region ahead. These warnings later become central to both Senate and Board of Trade inquiry discussions.

Curator note
The historical question is not whether warnings existed — they did — but how they were transmitted, prioritized, and acted upon within the operating norms of 1912.
Nightfall

Conditions are clear, cold, and unusually calm

Warnings Voyage

The sea is very still, making ice harder to detect because little or no surf breaks at its base. This deceptively quiet surface becomes one of the most discussed environmental features of the disaster night.

11:40 p.m.

Titanic strikes the iceberg

Collision

Lookouts sight ice ahead; evasive orders are given, but the ship scrapes along the starboard side. Many passengers do not experience it as a catastrophic crash, but the damage below the waterline proves fatal.

11:45 p.m.–midnight

Flooding assessments reveal that the ship cannot survive

Collision

Captain Smith, senior officers, and Thomas Andrews come to understand that too many compartments have been opened to the sea. The event shifts from a collision incident to a time-limited loss of ship.

Monday, April 15, 1912

12:00 a.m.

Lifeboats begin to be uncovered and prepared

Evacuation

The crew begins readying the boats while many passengers still do not fully grasp the seriousness of the damage. The evacuation phase starts cautiously and unevenly, not all at once.

12:15 a.m.

Distress calls are sent by wireless

Warnings Rescue

Wireless operators begin transmitting distress messages. This is the moment the sinking becomes, in practical terms, a rescue story as well as a shipboard emergency.

About 12:25 a.m.

Carpathia receives the distress and turns toward the scene

Rescue

Wireless operator Harold Cottam alerts Captain Arthur Rostron, who orders Carpathia turned around and driven at full speed through the ice region. This response becomes one of the best-documented and most consequential actions of the entire disaster.

12:40 a.m.

Boat 7 is lowered — first lifeboat away

Evacuation

The first boat leaves starboard side under capacity, a sign of how uncertain and improvised the opening stages of the evacuation still are.

12:43 a.m.

Boat 5 is lowered

Evacuation

Another early starboard boat departs before many aboard fully accept that abandonment may truly be necessary.

12:55 a.m.

Boat 6 is lowered

Evacuation

One of the early port-side boats, later associated with several well-known survivor accounts, leaves with many seats still unfilled.

12:55 a.m.

Boat 3 is lowered

Evacuation

Starboard-side launching continues in parallel, though the overall tempo is still measured rather than frantic.

About 1:00 a.m.

Passengers are more forcefully urged to the boat deck

Evacuation Warnings

Officers and stewards press more urgently for women and children to come up. The ship’s list and bow trim are not yet dramatic, but enough time has passed for disbelief to begin giving way.

1:05 a.m.

Boat 1 is lowered

Evacuation

This emergency cutter becomes notorious because it is sent away with very few people aboard relative to its capacity.

1:10 a.m.

Boat 8 is lowered

Evacuation

More women and children are now boarding, but the pattern remains inconsistent and shaped heavily by deck location, crew direction, and willingness to leave the ship.

1:15 a.m.

Boat 10 is lowered

Evacuation

Port-side loading continues as the evacuation becomes visibly more organized, though still shaped by confusion and uneven access from different class areas.

1:20 a.m.

Boat 9 is lowered

Evacuation

Boat departures are now occurring more frequently, a sign that the last remaining window for orderly launching is closing.

1:25 a.m.

Boat 12 is lowered

Evacuation

Boat 12 later becomes significant in the rescue phase as one of the last boats recovered alongside Carpathia.

Around 1:30 a.m.

Distress rockets are being fired regularly

Evacuation Warnings

Rockets continue to rise over the ship as wireless traffic carries on. Their later significance is heightened by testimony regarding the nearby Californian.

1:30 a.m.

Boat 11 is lowered

Evacuation

By this stage some boats are leaving much more heavily loaded than the earliest ones, reflecting the growing urgency aboard ship.

1:35 a.m.

Boat 14 is lowered

Evacuation

Fifth Officer Lowe later uses this boat in some of the more active post-sinking rescue attempts among the nearby lifeboats.

1:35 a.m.

Boat 13 is lowered

Evacuation

As the launch tempo rises, the evacuation becomes more compressed and more hazardous, especially near the ship’s discharge openings and lowering stations.

1:40 a.m.

Boat 15 is lowered

Evacuation

Closely following Boat 13, Boat 15 descends in one of the better-known near-accident episodes of the lifeboat launching sequence.

1:40 a.m.

Boat 16 is lowered

Evacuation

The number of available conventional boats is rapidly shrinking. For many still aboard, options are narrowing by the minute.

1:45 a.m.

Final coherent wireless messages are sent as the ship’s condition worsens

Evacuation Rescue

The electrical situation is deteriorating, but the distress traffic continues nearly to the end. This moment ties the shipboard collapse directly to the rescue now racing toward it.

1:50 a.m.

Boat C is lowered

Evacuation

One of the Engelhardt collapsibles, Boat C marks the transition from regular lifeboat operations to the last available emergency craft.

1:55 a.m.

Boat 2 is lowered

Evacuation

Though an emergency cutter, Boat 2 leaves relatively late in the sequence and later becomes the first boat picked up by Carpathia.

1:55 a.m.

Boat 4 is lowered

Evacuation

Boat 4’s departure comes after delays linked to deck access and loading difficulties. It is among the last of the standard boats to get away successfully.

2:00 a.m.

Boat D is lowered

Evacuation

The final collapsible launched in anything like an orderly manner, Boat D leaves just minutes before the ship’s remaining deck space becomes unmanageable.

About 2:05 a.m.

Collapsibles A and B are worked on as the last chances off the ship

Evacuation

These final collapsibles are not lowered in the same controlled way as earlier boats. As the bow sinks deeper and deck conditions collapse, they become part of the last desperate phase rather than the organized launch sequence.

Curator note
This is one reason some summaries say “last boat lowered” while others distinguish between the last properly launched boat and the last collapsibles that floated off or were swept from the deck.
2:20 a.m.

Titanic sinks

Collision Evacuation

The ship disappears beneath the surface, leaving boats, swimmers, wreckage, and debris scattered in darkness. The disaster shifts fully from abandonment to survival and rescue.

About 3:30 a.m.

Survivors in the boats sight Carpathia’s lights and rockets

Rescue

After hours in the boats, the first visual confirmation of help appears. This is one of the major emotional turning points in survivor accounts.

4:00 a.m.

Carpathia reaches the disaster area

Rescue

Captain Rostron brings Carpathia into a dangerous field of ice and debris. The ship herself is gone, so the rescue must now proceed boat by boat.

4:10 a.m.

Boat 2 is the first lifeboat picked up by Carpathia

Rescue

The first successful transfer begins the long recovery phase. Survivors are helped aboard by ladder, sling, and crew assistance, then given blankets, medical care, and warm drinks.

4:10–8:15 a.m.

Carpathia gathers survivors and lifeboats one by one

Rescue

The rescue takes hours rather than moments. Boats come alongside in sequence, and the work is cold, methodical, and physically demanding for both rescuers and survivors.

About 8:15 a.m.

The last lifeboat reaches Carpathia

Rescue

One of the final boats recovered is Boat 12. By now, the active gathering phase is nearly complete, though transfers and final handling continue briefly.

About 8:30 a.m.

The rescue phase is complete: survivors and remaining recovered boats are aboard Carpathia

Rescue

The final survivors have been recovered from the lifeboats. What began as a celebrated maiden voyage has, within five days, become one of the most documented maritime disasters in history.

Evidence-first voyage timeline · April 10–15, 1912

Sources (Selected)

This list stays high-level and cross-check oriented.