London – A life jacket connected to the tragic 1912 sinking of the RMS Titanic was sold for £670,000 (approximately $906,000), greatly exceeding its estimated price. The item belonged to survivor Laura Mabel Francatelli, who wore it while escaping on Lifeboat No. 1. Its rarity and strong historical significance drew global attention, making it one of the most valuable Titanic artifacts sold in recent years.
The life jacket is especially notable because it is directly associated with a known survivor and even bears signatures from others who escaped with her. The auction also included other Titanic memorabilia, such as a lifeboat seat cushion and a gold watch, which also attracted high bids. Experts note that the sale underscores the lasting fascination with the Titanic disaster, which claimed over 1,500 lives and continues to captivate worldwide interest more than a century later.
Read More
- Massive fire destroys 200 stilt homes, displaces hundreds in Malaysian waterfront village
- Queen Elizabeth II’s private papers released for first official biography
- Urgent diplomatic engagement sought over Strait of Hormuz as gunboats fire at Indian ships
- Iran’s six key airports resume operations
- Japan–EU forge defence alliance, eye reduced reliance on US





