The Father Browne SJ Photographic Collection contains the most important
collection of Titanic photographs taken during the liner’s voyage from
Southampton to Cobh
(Queenstown] in Ireland.
Frank Browne’s mother died whilst he was young and his father when in
his teens.
His uncle Robert Browne who was Bishop of Cloyne acted as
guardian to Frank and his siblings, four of whom were to enter religious
life. By the time Frank was completing his secondary education he had
decided to become a Jesuit. Immediately before entering the Order, Uncle
Robert sent him on a Grand Tour of Europe and most significantly bought
him a camera to record his trip. This visionary act was to reveal a
natural aesthetic ability and fostered an interest in photography that
was to reach fruition when Frank became the most outstanding Irish
photographer of the first half of the Twentieth Century.
The Bishop had another surprise up his sleeve, when in early 1912 he
presented Frank with a first class ticket for the Maiden Voyage of the
Titanic to bring him as far as Cobh. So it was that on the morning of
the 12th.April
1912 he arrived at Waterloo Station in London
to catch the Titanic Special. He immediately started taking photographs,
first recording the train journey and then life aboard the Titanic on
the initial section of the voyage. Having made friends with a wealthy
American family he was offered a ticket for the remaining part of the
journey and no doubt excitedly telegraphed a request for permission to
go on to New York, to which he received the terse response “Get Off That
Ship------Provincial!” That
telegram not only saved Frank’s life but also meant that this unique
record of the voyage was saved for posterity and guaranteed overnight
fame for Frank Browne SJ.
|