On
May 28, 1914, the Empress of Ireland set sail from Quebec City on her
96th
crossing of the Atlantic, bound for Liverpool, England with a full crew
and passengers who were anticipating another uneventful crossing.
A few short hours later, early in the morning, the Empress was to have
her fate sealed when the bow of the Storstad plunged deeply into her
starboard
side. In just 14 minutes the Empress was dispatched to the seabed,
leaving
hundreds fighting for their lives in the freezing waters of the Gulf of
St. Lawrence. With more dead passengers than the Titanic, how is it
that
Canada’s worst maritime disaster was simply forgotten? Take a
journey
into history and recount the final hours of the Empress of Ireland and
those who would soon forever be entombed within her.
Find out what makes the Empress one of the most challenging dives in the world and how the site is now changing from year to year. What is it about this dive that lures the adventurous, and why is it that some don’t survive?