Chipped 'Titanic' cup made for tragic liner found in Derby attic

Blog

HomeHome / Blog / Chipped 'Titanic' cup made for tragic liner found in Derby attic

Oct 25, 2023

Chipped 'Titanic' cup made for tragic liner found in Derby attic

A small, chipped cup found on a kitchen shelf has sold for thousands of pounds

A small, chipped cup found on a kitchen shelf has sold for thousands of pounds at auction - as it is a rare survivor of a range made for the ill-fated ocean-liner Titanic.

The cup, spotted by eagle-eyed antiques experts at a house in Burton-on-Trent, Staffs, turned out to be from a range of ceramics made exclusively for Titanic more than a century ago.

It went under the hammer at Hansons Auctioneers in May with a guide price of £800-£1,200 but sold for £3,200 - three times its estimate - much to the delight of the seller.

The vendor, a 61-year-old retired Rolls-Royce worker from Derby, said: "I found the cup when I was clearing out my late parents' house. I lost my dad five years ago and my mum just before Christmas. The cup had been stuck in the attic for years.

"I have no idea how dad came to own something that valuable. My guess is someone gave it to him as a gift. He sold groceries and was always doing favours for his customers.

"I found it in the attic and bought it down into the kitchen along with other items I wanted to have valued. I am grateful to Hansons for spotting its potential. I was delighted with the result. When the cup went under the hammer I was at a London museum with my family. I was trying to watch the auction on my phone but the fire alarm when off. We had to evacuate and, as we walked out, we were cheering because the price kept going up and up."

Charles Hanson, owner of Hansons Auctioneers, said: "Of course, this survivor would not have set sail on the Titanic but some items may have been presented at the time as gifts or sold as White Starline souvenirs. Ceramic pieces bearing the pattern R4332 have been recovered from the site of where the Titanic sank."

Titanic, said to be unsinkable, hit an iceberg on April 15, 1912, after setting off on its journey from Southampton to New York. More than 1,500 of the 2,224 passengers on board lost their lives. The Titanic cup was sold on May 10 in Hansons Auctioneers' Travel and Exploration Auction.