Mr. Robert Pinkerton, Chief Baker

Robert Pinkerton, 50, was the chief waiter aboard the Lusitania. He was lost in the sinking. Pinkerton had been born in Belfast, County Antrim, Ireland, the son of the late Robert and Margaret Jane Pinkerton. He lived with his wife Eliza Jane Pinkerton (née Clokey) at 40 Linacre Road, Liverpool, England Contributors: Senan Molony References: …

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Mr. Kenneth MacKenzie, Waiter

Kenneth MacKenzie (or McKenzie), 22, was a waiter lost in the Lusitania disaster. He was from Belfast, County Antrim, Ireland. Contributors: Senan Molony References: Molony, Senan. Lusitania: An Irish Tragedy, pg. 95. Mercier Press, 2004.

Miss Margaret McClintock

Margaret McClintock, 31, was originally from Mountpottinger, Belfast, County Antrim, Ireland. She had been living in New York City, New York, United States for three years before returning to Ireland to see her sister at 3, George’s Terrace, Castlereagh Street, Belfast. Margaret survived the Lusitania sinking. Margaret was at lunch when the torpedo struck. She …

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Mrs. Walter Dawson Mitchell (Jeanette “Nettie” Elizabeth Moore)

Jeanette Mitchell (c. 1888 – 1966), 27, was a British subject from County Down, Ireland (present-day Northern Ireland), traveling aboard Lusitania with her husband Walter Dawson Mitchell, their son, also named Walter Dawson, and her brother, John Moore.  Before boarding, they had made friends with fellow Ulster passenger, Mary Agnes Hume. Jeanette and John were saved, but …

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