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RMS Lusitania was an ocean liner of the Cunard Steamship Lines that was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine on May 7 1915 on her 202nd crossing of the Atlantic in an incident that played a role in the USA's entry into World War I.

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German medal recognizing the sinking of the Lusitania

The Lusitania was a British cargo and passenger ship that was torpedoed and sank within sight of the coast of Southern Ireland, due to German submarine activity in May of 1915. It was here that Captain Turner’s ill fated ship was thrown into darkness.

The ship had been hit by an enemy torpedo, fired from a U-boat at 700 yards, causing an explosion in the ship, said at the time to have been triggered by the residue of gasses from what remained of the ship's 100,000 tons of coal fuel dust; however, the sudden force of the cold sea pouring onto the hot steam boilers would in all likelihood itself have provided reason enough to have caused a massive explosion.

That any residual coal dust would at this point have been dry enough to ignite is reasonably questionable. The submarine U 20, commanded by Captain Walther Schweiger , seems to have also had a routine and uneventful journey, until he encountered the prestigious target.

The Lusitania was principally a luxury passenger liner built to exchange people and property between England and the United States.

It is now known that a secret warning was made to the wealthiest of the ship's passengers, reporting that trouble from U-boat activity was to be expected, and advising the same not to travel. It has since been further argued that the Lusitania was coldly sacrificed by the 1st Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, as a maneuver to hasten America's involvement in the European conflict.

There was also a public warning given by the Imperial German Embassy:

NOTICE!

TRAVELERS intending to embark on the Atlantic voyage are reminded that a state of war exists between Germany and her allies and Great Britain and her allies; that the zone of war includes the waters adjacent to the British Isles; that, in accordance with formal notice given by the Imperial German Government, vessels flying the flag of Great Britain, or any of her allies, are liable to destruction in those waters and that travelers sailing in the war zone on the ships of Great Britain or her allies do so at their own risk.

IMPERIAL GERMAN EMBASSY Washington, D.C. April 22, 1915


Given that the great ship, like so many other private vessels, had been fitted out, in her instance with 12" gun mounts, carefully hidden under coils of rope, legitimately made her a target. She was also hauling hundreds of rounds of artillery ammunition and hundreds of thousands of rounds of rifle and small-bore cartridges, making her a military transport of sorts.

Six days after setting out, on May 7 1915, the Lusitania was too slow in noticing both the periscope and the torpedo of the German submarine in her wake.

The ship's sinking was seen by the Allies as yet another example of the "barbarity" of the German war machine, particularly in the context of Germany's actions in occupied France and BelgiumFor alternate meanings, see Belgium (disambiguation). Belgian redirects here. For the horse breed commonly used as a draft horse, see Belgian. The Kingdom of Belgium ( Dutch: Belgi French: Belgique German: Belgien is a country in Western Europe, bordered.

Infamously, a Munich metalworker named Karl Goetz struck commemorative medallions apparently celebrating its sinking as a triumph of the German navy over the British.

The German government only learned of the medal through the British press and launched an inquiry. Goetz defended his medals as satire, but the government had their distribution halted.

SelfridgesSelfridges is a chain of department stores in the United Kingdom. It was founded by American entrepreneur Harry Gordon Selfridge who opened a large store in London's Oxford Street on 15 March 1909. Credited with coining the phrase "The customer is always of LondonLondon is the capital of the United Kingdom and of England, and with over seven million inhabitants in the Greater London area, is the second-most populous conurbation in Europe (after Moscow). From being Londinium the capital of the Roman province of Bri had been pre-commissioned by British propagandists to make several thousand copies, which were then sold to benefit the British Red Cross.

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