Charlotte Drake Martinez-Cardeza | |
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Born | April 10, 1854 Pennsylvania, United States |
Died | August 2, 1939 Pennsylvania, United States |
(aged 85)
Other names | Charlotte Wardle Drake |
Spouse | James Warburton Martinez Cardeza (Divorced, 1874 -1900) |
Relatives | Thomas Drake (Father) |
Charlotte Drake Martinez-Cardeza (April 10, 1854 – August 2, 1939) was a survivor of the Titanic disaster of 1912.
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Charlotte Wardle Drake was born on April 10, 1854. Her father, Thomas Drake, was a British textile manufacturer. From 1874 to 1900 she was married to James Warburton Martinez Cardeza, with whom she had one child Thomas. In 1912 she and her son were returning to their home in Germantown, Pennsylvania, USA on board the Titanic, and boarded in Cherbourg. Charlotte was a lover of big game hunting, as well as animal protection and she and her son were returning from a safari in Africa and a visit to Thomas' hunting reserve in Hungary. Charlotte and Thomas left the sinking ship in Lifeboat #3.
Charlotte was accompanied on the Titanic by her son, Thomas Drake M. Cardeza, and staff Anna Ward and Gustave Lesuer, all of who survived. The Cardeza entourage brought fourteen trunks, four suitcases, and three crates of baggage. Mrs Cardeza would later file a detailed claim to the value of £36,567 for their loss. They stayed in the most expensive suite on Titanic (B-51-53-55), featuring two bedrooms, a sitting room, and a private fifty-foot promenade.[1][2]
Returning to Germantown, Pennsylvania, Mrs. Cardeza kept to her peripatetic ways, only settling down at Montebello in the late 1930s. She died of heart disease.
Montebello was later demolished and turned into a parking lot.