‘The sinking of the Empress of Ireland’ by Hugh Ferguson
12th February 2025 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
This event is both an in-person and on-line event. Visit nearer the time to reserve a spot for either option via the lecture’s Eventbrite page
In the early hours of 29th May 1914, the British-built ocean liner RMS Empress of Ireland, on route from Quebec to Liverpool, was struck by a Norwegian collier near the mouth of the St Lawrence river, and sank within fourteen minutes. More than 1000 of the nearly 1500 people on board died – including 840 passengers, which was more than on the Titanic two years earlier or on the Lusitania a year later. This was one of the world’s worst peacetime maritime disasters, yet it has been largely forgotten.
Hugh Ferguson will relate the events leading up to the disaster, the event itself, and its aftermath – largely through the words of his father Ronald Ferguson, the young Chief Wireless Operator on the Empress, who sent out the SOS which alerted rescue ships, and who was the last to leave the sinking ship.
The talk will touch on several aspects of engineering, including early wireless and contemporary design of ocean liners. But it is primarily a dramatic story of human courage, tragedy and survival.
About the Speaker
Hugh Ferguson is an engineer, journalist and writer. He was formerly editor of New Civil Engineer magazine, managing director of the Institution of Civil Engineers’ commercial company Thomas Telford Ltd, and ICE’s Deputy Director General.
He is author or co-author of The Civil Engineers (2011), Engineers (2012), The Contractors (2013), Constructionarium (2016) and The Consulting Engineers (2020).