A selection of resources about the Titanic disaster can be found in the Philip Robinson Library.
Shipping casualties (loss of the steamship "Titanic."). Report of a formal investigation into the circumstances attending the foundering on 15th April, 1912, of the British steamship "Titanic," of Liverpool, after striking ice in or near latitude 410 46' N., Longitude 500 14' W., North Atlantic Ocean, whereby loss of life ensued.
International Conference on Safety of Life at Sea. Text of the convention for the safety of life at sea. Ratified by the major seafaring nations in the wake of the Titanic disaster 1914.
Merchant shipping (convention). A bill to make such amendments of the law relating to merchant shipping as are necessary or expedient to give effect to an International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea, signed in London on January the twentieth, nineteen hundred and fourteen, and for purposes incidental thereto.
Merchant shipping (convention). A bill [as amended in Standing Committee C] to make such amendments of the law relating to merchant shipping as are necessary or expedient to give effect to an International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea, signed in London on January the twentieth, nineteen hundred and fourteen, and for purposes incidental thereto.
Image: The Library of Congress via Flickr
"The Largest Vessel Afloat." Times [London, England] 11 Apr. 1912: 13. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 2 Apr. 2012
The largest liner afloan. (1912, Apr 11). The Manchester Guardian (1901-1959), pp. 8.