6. The Straus and Other Titanic Memorials

Straus Titanic Memorial
Image via Library of Congress

Many of the passengers on the ship were from wealthy and notable New York families such as the Astors. Henry Clay Frick, J.P. Morgan, and George Washington Vanderbilt had tickets but didn’t sail. Some of the more well-to-do families of victims lost in the sinking erected elaborate memorials across New York City. One such memorial can be found at Straus Park. There, visitors will find a memorial by sculptor Augustus Lukeman and architect Evarts Tracy dedicated to the memory of Isidor and his wife Ida Straus.

The memorial features the reclining figure of a mourning woman over a fountain and the inscription, “In memory of Isidor and Ida Straus who were lost at sea in the Titanic disaster April 15, 1912, Lovely and pleasant were they in their lives and in their death they were not divided.” Originally from Germany, the Strau family moved to America in 1854. In 1888, brothers Isidor and Nathan became owners of R.H. Macy & Co. and opened the world’s largest department store at Herald Square. Other memorials to victims can be found at Grace Church on West 10th Street and Broadway where there is a memorial to Edith Corse Evans, in Central Park at 91st Street and 5th Avenue where there is a memorial to journalist William T. Stead, and at the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine where a window is dedicated to John Jacob Astor IV.

Next, check out 10 Maritime Memorials in NYC