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Irene <I>Colvin</I> Corbett

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Irene Colvin Corbett

Birth
Payson, Utah County, Utah, USA
Death
15 Apr 1912 (aged 30)
At Sea
Burial
Buried or Lost at Sea. Specifically: Titanic Sinking Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Irene travelled to London in the winter of 1911-1912 to study nursing while her 3 children stayed with her parents. Irene returned via the Titanic as a second cabin list of passengers having sailed from Southampton WHITE STAR LINE. Irene was one of 14 second class women who perished in the sinking. (See Salt Lake Tribune 17 April 1912 and 20 April 1912.)

Her grandson gives this summary:
Irene had significant talents as an artist and musician; she was also a teacher and a nurse. At the urging of medical professionals in Provo, she attended a six-month course of study on midwife skills in London. It was her great desire to make a difference in the world. She was careful, thoughtful, prayerful, and valiant. One of the reasons she chose the Titanic to return to the United States was because she thought the missionaries would be traveling with her and that this would provide additional safety. Irene was one of the few women who did not survive this terrible tragedy. Most of the women and children were placed in the lifeboats and were ultimately rescued. There were not enough lifeboats for everyone. But it is believed that she did not get in the lifeboats because, with her special training, she was attending to the needs of the numerous passengers who were injured from the iceberg collision.

See link: Irene Corbett
Irene travelled to London in the winter of 1911-1912 to study nursing while her 3 children stayed with her parents. Irene returned via the Titanic as a second cabin list of passengers having sailed from Southampton WHITE STAR LINE. Irene was one of 14 second class women who perished in the sinking. (See Salt Lake Tribune 17 April 1912 and 20 April 1912.)

Her grandson gives this summary:
Irene had significant talents as an artist and musician; she was also a teacher and a nurse. At the urging of medical professionals in Provo, she attended a six-month course of study on midwife skills in London. It was her great desire to make a difference in the world. She was careful, thoughtful, prayerful, and valiant. One of the reasons she chose the Titanic to return to the United States was because she thought the missionaries would be traveling with her and that this would provide additional safety. Irene was one of the few women who did not survive this terrible tragedy. Most of the women and children were placed in the lifeboats and were ultimately rescued. There were not enough lifeboats for everyone. But it is believed that she did not get in the lifeboats because, with her special training, she was attending to the needs of the numerous passengers who were injured from the iceberg collision.

See link: Irene Corbett


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