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New York: Four bronze plates from the lifeboats that carried Titanic survivors are expected to command some of the highest auction prices ever associated with the 1912 maritime disaster, auction house Christie's in New York said on Friday.
A plate reading 'S S Titanic' and a White Star lines house flag rendered in bronze, another plate also reading 'S S Titanic' and one saying 'Liverpool', where the ship was built, are expected to command $40,000 to $70,000 each at next week's sale, the auction house said.
"It's certainly a possibility that they could go well over $100,000," said Gregg Dietrich, Christie's maritime specialist in charge of the sale.
The items are the highlights of a June 1 sale of 350 lots of ocean-liner furnishings and art, from three major collections as well as the Steamship Historical Society.
Models of other ill-fated ships including the RMS Lusitania, S S Andrea Doria, S S United States, S S Normandie and S S France, are also featured.
The Titanic offerings also include a detailed deck plan given to first class passengers (auction estimate $15,000 to $20,000) and a medal commissioned by famed survivor Molly Brown and presented to crew members of the rescue ship Carpathia.
Also being sold are facing slips stamped 'Titanic' that were used to bundle mail. They were recovered from a postal clerk's body. The four brass plates, among only six known to exist, are being sold from a New York family's collection.
One of the highest prices fetched by Titanic memorabilia was the $88,500 paid for a menu from the ship. Earlier this month, a deck chair failed to sell when bidding topped out at $62,000, below a prearranged minimum.
But a miniature locket portrait, handed from a survivor to a friend as she boarded a lifeboat and later retrieved from his body, fetched more than $100,000 at an auction in April.
Titanic sank after hitting an iceberg on her maiden voyage to New York. More than 1,520 passengers and crew died, including some leading celebrities, leaving only about 700 survivors.
Titanic, the 1997 movie about the disaster, was the biggest box-office film ever, earning $1.8 billion worldwide.
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