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The Last Survivor

Featured Replies

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Millvina Dean was forced to sell her items to pay for a nursing home.

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Ms Dean's 100-year-old suitcase. (AAP)

The last remaining survivor of the Titanic received over $70,000 in an auction of items from the liner to raise money to pay her nursing home fees, auctioneers have said.

Millvina Dean, 96, was forced to sell a 100-year-old suitcase filled with clothes which was donated to her family by the people of New York when they arrived in the United States after being rescued.

Rare prints of the liner signed by the artists along with compensation letters sent to her mother by the Titanic Relief Fund also went under the hammer in Devizes, southwest England.

The sale raised $78,073 — ten times what Dean was hoping to raise — with the letter attracting the highest single bid of $27,569.

Auctioneer Andrew Aldridge said: "It is a great amount of money, I am sure she will be very happy when we tell her the news."

Aldridge said the Titanic International Society had bid for the items with the intention of returning them to their owner.

"Unfortunately they were blown out of the water by other bidders," he said.

Dean was a two-month-old baby and her family were emigrating to Kansas when the Titanic sank on its maiden voyage in 1912.

She was placed in a sack and carried to safety. Her mother and brother also survived, but her father was among the 1,500 passengers and crew who died.

Dean moved into a private nursing home in Ashurst, southern England, after breaking her hip two years ago.

Poor old dear..... (well, not so poor now, and she probably wouldn't have used the suitcase again)

It's suitcases like that that give ventriloquists a bad name

It just seems a shame, that she must sell these precious items to pay for something the state should accommodate.

Good Luck

Moss

It just seems a shame, that she must sell these precious items to pay for something the state should accommodate.

Good Luck

Moss

So true,

If you have elderly relatives in the UK, take a part share in their property asap...............Only sure way to stop the Bas%$%^&ds taking it and selling it to pay for such fees.

It just seems a shame, that she must sell these precious items to pay for something the state should accommodate.

Good Luck

Moss

Can I be completely heartless for a moment (it isn't the first and it won't be last time) ....... precious items, to who? the items themselves have actually no value apart from what someone is willing to pay for them, the most precious item in this particular garage sale is the old ladies memories, you can never take those away from her.

She lived it, and now someone with a stack of cash thinks that by buying that suitcase makes them connected to it too.... it doesn't... hope they feel better, or go broke, whichever comes soonest is fine by me.

I'm sure that the state would have accommodated her, they do have a habit of doing it.... but if she can get State DeLux, good luck to her .... the real travesty would be if she get's no better treatment.

precious items, to who?

Well, she has kept them for 93/94 years, so I would hazard a guess she was quite attached to them.

the items themselves have actually no value apart from what someone is willing to pay for them,

Isn't that the same for any Picasso, Rodin or Turner?

ever take those away from her.

Altzeimer's might?

I'm sure that the state would have accommodated her, they do have a habit of doing it.... but if she can get State DeLux, good luck to her .... the real travesty would be if she get's no better treatment.

It is, on occasion still very difficult to get state help, I know of one of my employees who's mother is suffering from extreme senile dementia and has struggled to get a home for her, all they do is threaten to sell the home to pay for the care.

I am not sure she will get better treatment, just a continuation of the status Quo.

Moss

I'm a great fan of memorabilia type bric-a-brac.

In another life I was a bit of a collector in my fields of interest. More a scavanger of junk shops and garage sales than a bidder at high profile auctions though.

I could understand people calling it junk, and many did, but I couldn't understand how vehement some were about it. It was almost as they considered my small collections to be a personal affront.

It just seems a shame, that she must sell these precious items to pay for something the state should accommodate.

Good Luck

Moss

So true,

If you have elderly relatives in the UK, take a part share in their property asap...............Only sure way to stop the Bas%$%^&ds taking it and selling it to pay for such fees.

I concur...what if she would not have some old suitcase with a story to sell?

I concur...what if she would not have some old suitcase with a story to sell?

That's the rub I am afraid, a lot of people who wish to leave a monetary legacy fot their off spring are seeing it eaten up by care fees.

Moss

  • Author
It just seems a shame, that she must sell these precious items to pay for something the state should accommodate.

Maybe she can claim to be a Gurkha and claim state help

:o

CB

I was watching the Antiques Roadshow a couple of months ago and they had a black teddy bear on it that was made by the German Teddy makers Steifel (the ones with the staple in their ears) after the the Titanic sank. It was called the "mourning Bear" and the guy valued it at 100,000 pounds or more.

It just seems a shame, that she must sell these precious items to pay for something the state should accommodate.

Maybe she can claim to be a Gurkha and claim state help

:o

CB

Neither should need to claim, it is a matter of moral justice, but now as ever, two wrongs always did make a Right :D

Moss

  • Author
It just seems a shame, that she must sell these precious items to pay for something the state should accommodate.

Maybe she can claim to be a Gurkha and claim state help

:o

CB

Neither should need to claim, it is a matter of moral justice, but now as ever, two wrongs always did make a Right :D

Moss

5555555 and the last word goes to Moss :D

:D

CB

ENGLAND.. THE BEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD IF YOU HAVE NOTHING. :D

Now she has a bank balance of GBP27,000, I'd bet her benifits will stop. She should have got someone else to sell it on 'the quiet' :o

Dave

ENGLAND.. THE BEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD IF YOU HAVE NOTHING. :D

Now she has a bank balance of GBP27,000, I'd bet her benifits will stop. She should have got someone else to sell it on 'the quiet' :o

Dave

Well I hope they didn't exchange the dollars for pounds too quickly, she'd get about 48kGBP for the same 78kUSD today. Since Merv the swerve of the Bank of England stated today that Britain was in recession the pound is following the Titanic.

And yes the state will only pay for care if the person has assetts below a certain figure. I know I had to pay for my mother's old folk's home fees rather than sell her house. Reason being we couldn't ethically sell the house without telling her and that would have finished her quicker than the "care" did.

It just seems a shame, that she must sell these precious items to pay for something the state should accommodate.

Maybe she can claim to be a Gurkha and claim state help

:o

CB

Neither should need to claim, it is a matter of moral justice, but now as ever, two wrongs always did make a Right :D

Moss

5555555 and the last word goes to Moss :D

:D

CB

:D

Great. Now I just have to hound Suiging and Jangles into submission :(

Good luck

Moss

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