Elizabeth Mainman Second Cabin Passenger Saved |
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[No Picture Provided] | |
Born | Elizabeth Sarah Mainman 4 October 1907 Edmonton, Alberta, Canada |
Died | 1983 (age 79) Lancaster, England, United Kingdom |
Age on Lusitania | 7 |
Traveling with | – Alfred Mainman, Sr. (father) – Elizabeth Mainman (mother) – John Mainman (brother) – Alfred Mainman, Jr. (brother) – Molly Mainman (sister) – Edwin Mainman (brother) |
Citizenship | British (Canada) |
Residence | Edmonton, Alberta, Canada |
Spouse(s) | John Kennedy (1936 – ?) Please provide dates |
Elizabeth Mainman, 7, was a British citizen living in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada with her parents Alfred and Elizabeth and her siblings John, Alfred, Jr., Molly, and her twin brother Edwin. The Mainman Family was traveling to England aboard Lusitania in May 1915 to inherit a large estate left by Alfred, Sr.’s parents. Alfred, Sr., Elizabeth, John, and Alfred, Jr. were lost in the Lusitania sinking. Molly and the twins were the only survivors in their family.
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A well-traveled family
Elizabeth Sarah and Edwin Richard Mainman were fraternal twins born in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada to Alfred and Elizabeth Mainman on 4 October 1907. The twins had three older siblings, John, Alfred, Jr., and Molly, all of whom had been born when the family was living in Australia.
In Edmonton, the Mainman Family lived on Jasper Street, and the patriarch, Alfred, Sr., worked at the City of Edmonton’s Treasurer’s Office.
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. 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. Researchers have speculated that the teenage girl Herbert Ehrhardt mentions who helped entertain a group of children who wouldn’t leave Ehrhardt alone may have been Molly Mainman, but as only the mother and not the children of that family survived, the girl was more likely to have been Evelyn Neville.
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.
Commander Chaytor of the HMS Ariadne and his wife took care of the three surviving members of the Mainman Family. Molly searched Queenstown for the rest of her family, where she found the body of her brother Jack in the town’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.
Wealth at great cost
Arriving in England, Molly and the twins were housed with Mr. and Mrs. Ellison of Liverpool. John Mainman’s personal effects were forwarded to the Ellisons who gave them to Molly and the twins. They also received a £25 grant from the Lusitania Relief Fund. Molly and the twins continued on to the home of a relative, Mrs. Clarence Merrett, who lived at Montrose, St. Thomas Hill, Canterbury. Mr. Brown, the family solicitor from Exeter, oversaw the inheritance.
Molly was now the matriarch of what was left of the Mainman Family. She raised her younger brother and sister and never married. She died in late 1973 at age 75.
Elizabeth and Edwin settled down in the Liverpool area. Elizabeth married John Kennedy in 1936. She died in late 1983 in Lancaster. Edwin married Doris Holmes in 1937. He died in January 1976 in Beccles, Suffolk.
Links of Interest
Lest We Forget Part 2: As the Lusitania Went Down – Encyclopedia Titanica
Contributors:
Jim Kalafus, USA
Michael Poirier, USA
Judith Tavares
Hildo Thiel, The Netherlands
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.
This child’s mother was Elizabeth Sarah (Dowsett) Mainman, who was born in Daylesford, Victoria, Australia.
Hi Shirley
Do any pictures of the family exist?
Mike
Hi Mike,
I have photocopies of photographs which I saw when I visited Edmund’s (“Teddy”) son in Walesl . One was of Alfred Reid Mainman and a picture of the two older boys, John “Jack” and Alfred Jnr, who died. At present they are packed away. William Mainman, Edmund’s son, had the originals but I’ve lost contact with him. When I’m able, I will make copies of what I have and perhaps they’d be of interest to you. There seemed to be no photographs of the family at the family home in Richmond (other than one of the mother – Sarah (Shaw) Dowsett and a couple of damaged and very faded photos which seemed to turn up when my father died. There is a photograph of Bessie’s mother and one of her sisters (I think it was Mary Frances – our Auntie “Polly”) holding a baby which would certainly have been one of the three Australian-born children – but that’s all we seem to have, sadly.
Shirley
Hi Mike,
Sorry, I meant Edwin, not Edmund.
Shirley
Hi Shirley
That’s fantastic. No rush at all. My email is Lusitaniasinking@yahoo.com
Very best
Mike
My aunt, Lilly Anton, was sent a postcard from Alfred Mainman, the son, dated May 2 , 1915 while his family was aboard the Luistania in New York. She always told us her love had gone down on the Lusitania with her picture in his pocket. The last paragraph of his postcard says “Will write when I arrive- if I do. Yours Alf”. I also have two pictures he drew for my aunt in her autograph book. She was two years younger than he and lived in Edmonton.
Hi Barbara
That is fascinating. Would it possible to see scans?
Thank you
Mike