A Summary Of A History In Numbers By Sidney Samuel Jacobsohn

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Fun fact! According to the article “ A History in Numbers” by Dave Fowler, 706 people survived the Titanic, and Sidney Samuel Jacobsohn was not one of them. There were many reasons for the lack of survivors and the failure of the Titanic, and most were on the conceited people who thought it was the “unsinkable ship”. Sidney Samuel Jacobsohn was not a special man although the story of his life was one involved in one of the most horrible accidents of history, the sinking of the Titanic.There were many people on the ship that died but the story one of them, Sidney Samuel Jacobsohn, showed how people can react and what can come from them during extreme crisis. Due to the ignorance and arrogance of people and how society treats people can cause Sidney Samuel Jacobsohn and many others to suffer the consequences. There were many reasons for the lack of survivors and the failure of the Titanic, and most were on the conceited people who thought it was the “unsinkable ship”. According to the article “R.M.S. Titanic”, there were many reasons why things went wrong. People …show more content…

According to the article “Mr Sidney Samuel Jacobsohn”, he was born in Cape Town, South Africa on October 23, 1869. He was one of seven other children. He trained as a lawyer and was apart of the the legal practice called Walker and Jacobsohn. On August 28, 1910, he married his wife, Amy Frances Cohen Christy. The couple settled in London after their honeymoon. They eventually had a child, but it didn’t survive infancy. On April 10, 1912, his wife, his wife’s sister, his wife’s widowed mother, and himself boarded the Titanic as second class passengers. They were journeying to Montreal, Quebec. After the crash, it was found out that the three ladies lived only leaving Jacobsohn dead. If his body was ever found, it was never

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