Source: The Conversation – UK
A recreation of the sinking of the RMS Titanic. meunierd/Shutterstock A supposedly unsinkable ship, an iceberg and a catastrophe that circulates through popular culture – the Titanic disaster is one of the most retold events in modern history.
But familiarity comes at a cost. Repeated retellings tend to simplify what happened and reduce the real people involved to a basic story. Retellings of the Titanic disaster often focus only on the sinking itself and forget what happened afterwards.
Many lives were deeply affected by the disaster long after it ended, including people who were not even on the ship. One such life is that of Helen Melville Smith, daughter of Captain Edward Smith, the man who commanded Titanic on its maiden voyage.
While researching my new novel Daughter of the Titanic, I became increasingly struck not by the scale of the disaster itself, but by the quieter afterlives that followed it. Melville was 14 when her father went down with the ship in April 1912.
Overnight, she inherited not only personal grief, but a public identity she had not chosen: the captain’s daughter, permanently attached to a disaster she did not witness but could not escape. What followed has often been framed through the language of fate.
Over the next decades, Melville’s husband died in an accident, her mother was killed in a road incident, her son died during the second world war and her daughter died of polio. Taken together, these events could be interpreted through the language of a “Titanic curse”.
As recently as July 2025, a Daily Mail feature revisited Melville’s life through this logic, treating unrelated tragedies as part of a doomed narrative arc. Survivors of the Titanic talk about their experience. Psychological research and research into narrative meaning-making have long shown that humans are predisposed to look for patterns, particularly after traumatic events.
As psychologist Jerome Bruner has argued, we make sense of experience through narrative, organising events into stories that impose coherence. When multiple tragedies occur, we connect them into meaningful sequences. The Titanic intensifies this impulse.
Because the disaster occupies such a prominent place in public memory, it exerts a kind of narrative gravity. Lives connected to it are drawn into its orbit, interpreted through its lens and reduced to extensions of its story.
The Titanic has become, in many ways, a modern myth: a historical event transformed into symbolic narrative, through which later lives are interpreted. But Melville was not defined solely by catastrophe. She learned to fly aircraft at a time when aviation was still new and dangerous.
She drove fast cars, moved within social and artistic circles and remained famous in ways that complicate the image of a life overshadowed by tragedy. Photographs from later life show a poised, fashionable woman who continued to participate in public life despite the losses she had endured.
Flying and motoring were associated with modernity, glamour and risk, and her enthusiasm for both suggests someone drawn to experience rather than retreat. The picture that emerges is not simply of a bereaved daughter, wife and mother, but of a woman who remained curious, socially engaged and determined to continue living fully.
While public narratives may attempt to fix people in place – particularly those connected to major historical events – they continue to reshape their lives in ways that exceed those frameworks. Melville’s story is therefore not simply one of loss, but one of negotiation between private experience and public expectation, between inherited identity and self-determined action.
The afterlife of disaster Melville’s life also points to a wider problem in how we tell history. Disasters do not end when the immediate crisis is over. They continue to shape meaning long afterwards, influencing reputations, identities and interpretations across generations.
Yet popular retellings tend to focus on the moment of impact rather than its aftermath. Titanic is repeatedly reconstructed as spectacle – the sinking, the heroism, the failure – while quieter, long-term consequences are marginalised. When we privilege the event over its aftermath, we reduce history to a series of dramatic moments rather than recognising it as a continuing process.
Melville’s life offers a corrective, shifting attention from the disaster itself to its enduring effects. Why are we so drawn to narratives of fate, curse or inevitability when we encounter repeated loss? And what happens when those patterns are imposed on real lives?
Footage of the Titanic leaving Belfast. In Melville Smith’s case, the idea of a Titanic curse imposes coherence where there may be none, compressing decades of lived experience into a single, legible narrative. In doing so, it recasts survival itself as misfortune.
This is not a neutral process. Historians, journalists and novelists like myself shape how lives are remembered and, in some cases, reduced. With that comes an ethical responsibility: to resist imposing patterns that make lives appear more coherent or narratively satisfying than they were, and to remain attentive to contradiction, complexity and reality.
Melville’s life resists that kind of closure. It contains independence, persistence and contradiction that sit uneasily alongside the narrative imposed upon her. To take that seriously is not only to recover an overlooked figure, but to recognise the limits of the frameworks through which we understand her.
The story of the Titanic disaster continues in the lives shaped by it – lives that cannot be reduced to the tragedy alone without losing what made them human.
Caroline Cauchi does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Original source: https://analysis1.mil-osi.com/2026/06/26/the-titanic-curse-and-the-forgotten-fearless-life-of-the-captains-daughter/
