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Thomas Francis McCaffry

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Thomas Francis McCaffry

Birth
Trois-Rivières, Mauricie Region, Quebec, Canada
Death
15 Apr 1912 (aged 46)
At Sea
Burial
Montreal, Montreal Region, Quebec, Canada Add to Map
Plot
Section ML, Lot 00001
Memorial ID
View Source
Lost on SS Titanic.

Mr Thomas Francis McCaffry, 46, was born 5 February 1866, not in Ireland as often stated, but at Three Rivers, Quebec. He was of Irish-Scots descent, the son of James McCaffry and Mary Ann Campbell, and he was raised in Montreal with his two sisters, Annie and Mary Eva.

He began his career as a junior at the Union Bank of Canada in Three Rivers before becoming a clerk in Montreal in 1885. He rose through the ranks until he was sent west to manage the Union Bank in Neepawa, Manitoba. In 1897 he moved to Winnipeg to manage another branch; there he befriended Thomson Beattie. They would travel together to the Agean in 1908, and to North Africa in 1910 as well as, ultimately, on the Titanic.

In 1900 McCaffrey resigned his job to go to Vancouver where he managed the gold assay office opened by the Dominion Government. In 1907 he left to became manager of the newly opened Vancouver branch of the Union Bank.

In early 1912, he and Beattie left with John Hugo Ross on the eastward crossing of the Franconia, and they spent the next few months touring the middle east and Europe.

The party arrived in Cairo about 10 February where they visited a hospitalized friend before taking a side trip up the Nile to Luxor and Aswan. They left Cairo on 23 February and headed for Naples.

McCaffry and his frineds booked first class passage on the Titanic, which they boarded when the ship touched at Cherbourg on the evening of 10 April. McCaffry and Beattie shared cabin C-6 (Ticket No. 13050, £75 4s 10d). C-6 was a forward cabin whose window looked out directly upon the base of an electric crane.

Both McCaffry and Beattie were almost certainly on the roof beside the last available raft, Collapsible A, when the Titanic began its slide. Beattie made it into the boat; McCaffry didn't. His body was later recovered by the MacKay Bennett (#292).

The body was delivered to E.E. Code on May 2, 1912, and sent to Montreal he he was buried in Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery. His large granite tombstone was paid for by the bank.

(2017) Thomas Francis McCaffry Encyclopedia Titanica (ref: #202, accessed 3rd March 2017 11:37:33 PM)
Lost on SS Titanic.

Mr Thomas Francis McCaffry, 46, was born 5 February 1866, not in Ireland as often stated, but at Three Rivers, Quebec. He was of Irish-Scots descent, the son of James McCaffry and Mary Ann Campbell, and he was raised in Montreal with his two sisters, Annie and Mary Eva.

He began his career as a junior at the Union Bank of Canada in Three Rivers before becoming a clerk in Montreal in 1885. He rose through the ranks until he was sent west to manage the Union Bank in Neepawa, Manitoba. In 1897 he moved to Winnipeg to manage another branch; there he befriended Thomson Beattie. They would travel together to the Agean in 1908, and to North Africa in 1910 as well as, ultimately, on the Titanic.

In 1900 McCaffrey resigned his job to go to Vancouver where he managed the gold assay office opened by the Dominion Government. In 1907 he left to became manager of the newly opened Vancouver branch of the Union Bank.

In early 1912, he and Beattie left with John Hugo Ross on the eastward crossing of the Franconia, and they spent the next few months touring the middle east and Europe.

The party arrived in Cairo about 10 February where they visited a hospitalized friend before taking a side trip up the Nile to Luxor and Aswan. They left Cairo on 23 February and headed for Naples.

McCaffry and his frineds booked first class passage on the Titanic, which they boarded when the ship touched at Cherbourg on the evening of 10 April. McCaffry and Beattie shared cabin C-6 (Ticket No. 13050, £75 4s 10d). C-6 was a forward cabin whose window looked out directly upon the base of an electric crane.

Both McCaffry and Beattie were almost certainly on the roof beside the last available raft, Collapsible A, when the Titanic began its slide. Beattie made it into the boat; McCaffry didn't. His body was later recovered by the MacKay Bennett (#292).

The body was delivered to E.E. Code on May 2, 1912, and sent to Montreal he he was buried in Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery. His large granite tombstone was paid for by the bank.

(2017) Thomas Francis McCaffry Encyclopedia Titanica (ref: #202, accessed 3rd March 2017 11:37:33 PM)

Inscription

IN LOVING MEMORY OF
THOMAS FRANCIS MCCAFFRY
WHO PERISHED IN THE FOUNFERING OF
THE S.S. TITANIC APRILL 15 1912


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  • Maintained by: Trevor Baxter
  • Added: Sep 12, 2000
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/12523/thomas_francis-mccaffry: accessed ), memorial page for Thomas Francis McCaffry (5 Feb 1866–15 Apr 1912), Find a Grave Memorial ID 12523, citing Cimetière Notre-Dame-des-Neiges, Montreal, Montreal Region, Quebec, Canada; Maintained by Trevor Baxter (contributor 48403329).