Providence, RI – Titanic Survivor’s Light-up Cane To Be Sold At Auction

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    This 2019 photo provided by Guernsey's Auction House shows a walking cane that was owned by Titanic survivor Ella White. The cane, with a built-in electric light that she used to signal from a lifeboat, is one of several maritime items that will be up for auction on July 19 and 20, 2019, in Newport, R.I. (Rafael Zegarra/Guernsey's Auction House via AP)Providence, RI – A Titanic survivor’s walking stick, with an electric light she used to signal for help from a lifeboat, is one of thousands of maritime items that will be up for auction in Rhode Island.

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    Guernsey’s auction house is holding the auction at the International Yacht Restoration School in Newport on July 19 and 20. Guernsey’s President Arlan Ettinger described Ella White’s cane as one of the most extraordinary items to have survived the sinking.

    “It’s a fabled object and Titanic enthusiasts have certainly heard of it,” he said. “Most didn’t know it has survived. The family didn’t do anything to promote it, so it’s a very exciting discovery.”

    The walking stick was consigned to Guernsey’s by the Williams family in Milford, Connecticut.

    Brad Williams said his grandmother was White’s niece and cared for her affairs before she died in 1942 at the age of 85, then took possession of the walking stick. It was passed on to Williams’ mother, then to him.

    Williams, a 59-year-old cane collector, kept it in an umbrella stand with about 35 other canes. He said he wants it to go to a home where it will be better displayed, and use the proceeds for his children. It’s obviously the most famous cane in the collection, he said.

    “It’s family history so I do I have trepidation about parting with it, but I also have to pay for college,” said Williams, who runs a boat repair business in Bridgeport, Connecticut.

    The pre-auction estimate is $300,000 to $500,000, though Ettinger said it’s very hard to predict what it might fetch because it’s such an unprecedented artifact. A violin played by the Titanic’s bandleader as the ship sank sold at auction in 2013 for about $1.7 million.

    On the night of April 14, 1912, the British liner RMS Titanic collided with an iceberg in the North Atlantic and began sinking. The ship went under two hours and 40 minutes later and more than 1,500 people died.

    In Walter Lord’s book about the Titanic and in investigative hearings after the sinking, it’s documented that White appointed herself as a signalman for lifeboat 8, waving her walking stick about.

    Guernsey’s will have other Titanic items for sale, but the walking stick is clearly the most noteworthy item and the auction house has verified its authenticity, Ettinger said. It’s a black enameled stick with an amber-colored bakelite and battery-illuminated crown. Williams said it still lights up.

    “Things don’t usually stay protected in this way. Objects get misplaced, lost, forgotten about, thrown out, traded,” Ettinger said. “This most historic walking stick stayed in that family’s hands and it will be sold for the first time in more than 100 years.”

    The 700-lot “A Century at Sea” auction also includes paintings by well-known marine artists, wooden boats, hand-crafted ship models and items from a wide array of other noteworthy ships, including the RMS Lusitania, the SS Normandie, SS Andrea Doria and SS United States. Gold, pearls and emeralds from two 1600s Spanish shipwrecks, recovered by treasure hunter Mel Fisher, will be auctioned too.

    It’s the first auction the New York-based auction house has held in Newport since 1988. The auction preview begins July 18 at the yacht restoration school, which prepares students for careers in technology and the marine trades.


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    1 Comment
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    EllaWhiteStolenCane
    EllaWhiteStolenCane
    4 years ago

    Brad Williams, who is trying to auction a cane that was given to our late father, Harry S. Durand from his mother Mildred Holmes Durand who was the niece of Ella White. . She received this from Marie Grice Young, Ella’s companion before she died in 1959. She in turn gave this to her son, my father, Harry S. Durand.

    This cane was in my fathers sole possession and kept in an umbrella stand at our apartment on east 72nd street during my entire childhood years. Both my brother and I distinctly remember this as if it were yesterday. At some point we realized the cane was missing and presumed lost or stolen, we now know for certain which.

    Through the years we have wondered whatever became of this famous cane as it was always a very proud possession of our father’s who showed it to guests and talked about it and Ella White’s night on the lifeboat endlessly when we were children. It’s incredibly upsetting to now learn the true disposition of this item and my cousins intention to sell and solely benefit from something that rightfully does not belong to him.

    We are quite sure he has absolutely no documentation or proof of ownership. His story that this cane was passed down to him from h