We are back to civilization and it is already the last day of our trip. We are using the time to discover the “Mile High City”, which is exactly 5280 feet (one mile) above sealevel.
While Denver itself is not in the mountains, the city is so close that the presence is always felt. This city has the best of both worlds – easy access to the high country and a mild climate that sees on average 300 days of sunshine a year. We saw three of them!! To the west, at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, lies a chain of ochre sandstone ridges, which acts as a primordial picket fence to Denver’s backyards.
We have all heard of the Titanic tragedy. But have you also heard of Molly Brown, one of the Titanic survivors and Denver’s daughter of adventure?
Molly described her experience in the Newport Herald, “I stretched on the brass bed, at the side of which was a lamp. So completely absorbed in my reading I gave little thought to the crash that struck at my window overhead and threw me to the floor. “
After the crash, Molly heard increasing confusion in the hall causing her to investigate further. “I again looked out and saw a man whose face was blanched, his eyes protruding, wearing the look of a haunted creature. He was gasping for breath and in an undertone he gasped, ‘get your life saver’.” After helping fellow passengers she was taken a hold of and with the words “you are going too” was dropped four feet into the lowering lifeboat #6.
Lifeboat #6 was equipped to hold 65 passengers. However, it pushed off from Titanic with 21 women, 2 men and a twelve-year-old boy on board. The women in the lifeboat rowed for hours. At 4:30 a.m. Molly saw a flash of light. It was from the approaching ship Carpathia, which was the first to answer the distress call. After some difficulty, lifeboat #6 pulled up along side of the Carpathia, and the occupants were pulled aboard one at a time.
Molly, though sore, tired and cold, began to take action. Her knowledge of foreign languages enabled her to console survivors who spoke little English. She also rifled through the ship to find extra blankets and supplies to distribute to women who were sleeping in the dining room and corridors. Molly realized that many women had lost everything- husbands, children, clothes, money and valuables- and needed to start a life in a new country. She rallied the first class passengers to donate money to help less fortunate passengers. Before the Carpathia reached New York $10,000 had been raised.
The Carpathia docked at New York’s pier 54 where it was met by a crowd of 30,000 people. Molly was surrounded by reporters and was asked to what she attributed her survival. “Typical Brown luck,” she replied. “We’re unsinkable.”
























