Mr. Martin Mannion

image credit:  New York Times, Sunday, 18 May 1915. Click for full image. Martin Mannion, while listed in the newspapers from Troy, New York, United States, is stated in Hoehling/Hoehling to be from St. Louis, Missouri, had an address in Albany, New York, United States, but had roots in Kildare, County Kildare, Ireland.  He was described …

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Mr. George Benjamin Lane

George Lane, 26, was a member of the Welsh Choir. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer, Monday, 10 May 1915, page 3: G.B. Lane, a youthful but cool headed second cabin passenger who was returning to Wales from New York was in a life boat capsized from the davits as the Lusitania keeled over. Stops, Helps Children …

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Mr. William Ernest Inch

William Ernest Inch, 27, was the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Inch of 97, Lonsdale Avenue, Wembley, Middlesex, England.  He had stayed in the United States for almost three years, arriving in New York in September 1912 on the Olympic.  On board the Lusitania for her last voyage, Inch survived and gave an interview to …

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Mrs. George Hardie Hunter (Maggie MacGregor)

Maggie Hunter, 39, and her husband George were among the group who transferred from the Cameronia.  They were both lost in the Lusitania sinking. Maggie Hunter was born Maggie MacGregor on 12 April 1876 in Fyvie parish, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.  She was engaged to George Hunter, a cabinet maker from Aberdeen, who emigrated to the United States in January …

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