Margaret (Molly) Brown: The Most Famous Titanic Survivor

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Hero’s help others in need; that is their most important characteristic in a hero, they also put other people before them. All heroes have other contributing qualities that make them distinct, but every hero has his/her own spotlight. Margaret (Molly) Brown, the most famous Titanic survivor, was the hero of many, many people. Her adventure started when she herself was saved from the sea by the Carpathia when the Titanic sank. She was a survivor, a helper, and most importantly: a hero. Margaret Brown was born in Missouri in 1867 and worked stripping tobacco to support her family. Brown has a round shaped face with hazel eyes, the height of when she died was 1.65 m (five feet and five inches). According to Wikipedia, her parents were Irish Catholic immigrants; John Tobin (1823–1899) and Johanna Tobin (1825–1905). Her siblings were Daniel Tobin (born 1863), Michael Tobin (born …show more content…

After the Titanic sank, Margaret was forced to board a lifeboat after helping others. At sea, she and six other women - including a boy and man- paddled through the ice-cold water. After being saved by the Carpathia, she supported other Titanic survivors, to put it another way, many people viewed her as a humanitarian. Which is one reason why Brown established the Survivor’s Committee by the time the Carpathia reached New York and was elected as chair. The Committee raised about ten thousand dollars for the survivors that need the money. After all the survivors reunited with their families, she wrote a letter to her daughter: “After being brined, salted, and pickled in mid-ocean I am now high and dry… I have had flowers, letters, telegrams-people until I am befuddled. They are petitioning Congress to give me medal… If I must call a specialist to examine by head it is due to the title of Heroine of the

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