Mr. Alfred Reid Mainman

Alfred Mainman
Second Cabin Passenger
Lost
[No Picture Provided]
Born Alfred Reid Mainman
4 August 1859
Manchester, England, United Kingdom
Died 7 May 1915 (age 55)
At sea
Age on Lusitania 55
Traveling with

– Elizabeth Mainman (wife)
– John Mainman (son)
– Alfred Mainman, Jr. (son)
– Molly Mainman (daughter)
– Elizabeth Mainman (daughter)
– Edwin Mainman (son)

Occupation Public administrator
Citizenship British (Canada)
Residence Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Sarah Dowsett (1893 – 1915, their deaths)

Alfred Mainman (1859 – 1915), 55, was a British citizen living in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada with his wife Elizabeth and their children JohnAlfred, Jr.Molly, and twins Elizabeth and Edwin.  The Mainman Family was traveling to England aboard Lusitania in May 1915 to inherit a large estate left by Alfred’s parents.  Alfred, Annie, John, and Alfred, Jr. were lost in the Lusitania sinking.  Molly and the twins were the only survivors in their family.

Contents

  1. A well-traveled family
  2. Inheritance
  3. Lusitania
  4. Links of interest

 

A well-traveled family 


Alfred was the only child of John and Mary Mainman of Exeter, England, United Kingdom.  He was born at 22 Patchett Street Hulme, Manchester, on 4 August 1859. As a young man, Alfred moved to Victoria, Australia.  There, he met and married Elizabeth Sarah Dowsett in 1893.  Alfred and Elizabeth’s first three children were born in Victoria.  The eldest, John (nicknamed Jack), was born in 1894.  Their second child, Alfred Shaw (nicknamed Alf), was born in 1895.  Their first daughter, Mary Frances (nicknamed Molly), was born on 1 September 1898.

The Mainmans moved to Canada and first lived in Fort Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan before settling down in Edmonton.  There, they made a home on Jasper Street, and Alfred found a job in the City of Edmonton’s Treasurer’s Office.  The twins Edwin Richard (nicknamed Teddy) and Elizabeth Sarah (nicknamed Betty) were born in Edmonton on 4 October 1907.

Inheritance 


Alfred’s parents, John and Mary Mainman, passed away in early 1915.  Being John and Mary’s only child, Alfred inherited the entirety of the family estate in Exeter.  John and Mary’s solicitors had also found over $10,000 in cash in the house.  With the cash readily disposable, money in the bank, and the sale of the estate, Alfred realized that relocating to England would be in his family’s best interest.

Alfred resigned from his job at the Treasurer’s Office and made arrangements to sell any household possessions that they would not need in England.  Alfred also had his employers send a sworn photograph of him to his parents’ solicitors to assist in identification.  The Mainmans booked second cabin tickets aboard what was to be Lusitania’s last crossing to claim their inheritance.

Lusitania 


Not much is known about the Mainman Family’s activities during the voyage.  According to Molly’s account, during the sinking, she and the twins were able to get into a starboard lifeboat.  As the boat was about to be lowered, someone handed an infant of about three months old to her.  She held onto the baby until they reached Queenstown.  Molly and the twins Edwin and Elizabeth were the only survivors of their family.

Molly identified her brother Jack in the Queenstown’s temporary morgue.  Jack Mainman was body #118.  He was buried in Queenstown on 13 May, Common Grave B. The rest of the family was not recovered.  Molly became the matriarch of the surviving Mainman Family and administratrix of the inherited estate.

Links of Interest 


Lest We Forget Part 2:  As the Lusitania Went Down – Encyclopedia Titanica 

 


Contributors:
Cliff Barry
Jim Kalafus
Michael Poirier
Judith Tavares 

References:
Kalafus, Jim and Michael Poirier (2005).  Lest We Forget Part 2:  As the Lusitania Went Down  ET Research. <http://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/lusitania-lest-we-forget-2.html>

New York Times.  Monday, 10 May 1915, page 3.

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