Miss Winifred Annie Frankum

Winifred Frankum, 10-months old, of Detroit, Michigan, United States, was traveling third class on board Lusitania with her father Joseph, mother Annie, and brothers Francis and Frederick.  The family was going to see Joseph’s mother, who lived in Birmingham, England.  When the ship was struck, the family was below decks in third class.

The Frankums were from England and moved to Canada, where Annie gave birth to Frederick, and then moved to Detroit, where Winifred was born.  Joseph believed that it would be good for the family to relocate to England, and so they booked passage aboard Lusitania.  They were having a cup of tea and preparing their luggage when the torpedo hit.

Joseph Frankum’s account from the Manchester Guardian, Monday, 10 May 1915, page 8:

“We divined what it was immediately,” he said, “and I took up the children and hurried my wife to the boat deck.  I put them all in a boat, and went below for a lifebelt.  I found two, and on my way back I gave one to a man, but afterwards I was sorry I did not keep it for my wife.  She had got out of the boat again, and we waited [on the port side], because for a time we thought the ship was going to keep afloat.  When it was certain that she was sinking I put my wife back in the boat and clambered in myself.  We saw that it was not free of the ship, but thought it would float off as the ship sank.  To our horror, it went right down, and I seemed to sink a long way before I felt myself rising again.  It was a dreadful sensation.

“When I came to the top I could not see anything of my wife and children.  I swam to an upturned boat, but it was terribly difficult because of the wreckage which kept striking me.  I got on the boat with others, and we were like this for about three hours, while dead bodies in all postures were floating about us.  A young man was condoling with me because I had lost my wife and children, when a man’s body floated by.  He turned the head up with an oar and shouted out, ‘That is my father.’  Then we tried to comfort each other.  At Queenstown I went searching everywhere, and at last found my little boy, but I have now no hope that my wife and the other two children have been saved.”

Frederick, Annie, and Winifred were lost in the disaster.  Their bodies were either not recovered or never identified.

Related pages


The Frankum Family at the Mixed Claims Commission

Links of Interest


Lest We Forget

 


References:
Kalafus, Jim and Michael Poirier (2005).  Lest We Forget:  Part 1 ET Research.  <http://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/lusitania-lest-we-forget.html>

“His Wife’s Lifebelt.”  Manchester Guardian, Monday, 10 May 1915, page 8.

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