Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 22
US Opposes Auction of 100-Plus Titanic Artifacts as Salvager Tests Court Limits
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 22

US Opposes Auction of 100-Plus Titanic Artifacts as Salvager Tests Court Limits

2 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 22

Summary

  • Newly unsealed court filings show the US government is trying to block RMS Titanic Inc. from auctioning more than 100 artifacts recovered from the wreck.
  • Noaa says the sale would breach the company’s legal obligations and past agreements to keep the items together for museum and exhibition display rather than private sale.
  • RMS Titanic argues court approval is not required and had proposed pairing the auction with a four-city global tour; the company did not comment on Monday.
  • The dispute revives a long-running fight over Titanic relics: courts, preservation groups and victims’ relatives have previously resisted sales, even as memorabilia linked to the 1912 sinking that killed more than 1,500 people draws prices from $900,000 to nearly $2 million.

Insights

Can international agreements prevent the Titanic's treasures from being sold off piece by piece?
When a tragedy becomes treasure, who truly owns the artifacts recovered from the Titanic's depths?