Our Family
Genealogy Pages

Kornelia Theodosia Andrews
-
Name Kornelia Theodosia Andrews Birth 12 Aug 1848 Hudson, Columbia, New York
[1] Christening 22 Oct 1848 Schaghticoke, Rensselaer, New York
[1] Gender Female Death 4 Dec 1913 Hudson, Columbia, New York
[1] Burial 5 Dec 1913 Hudson, Columbia, New York
Person ID I13361 Scudder Last Modified 17 Mar 2010
Father Robert Emmet Andrews, b. 25 May 1819, New Lebanon, Columbia, New York
d. 16 Apr 1901, Hudson, Columbia, New York
(Age 81 years) Mother Matilda Scudder Fonda, b. 25 Jun 1822, Union Village, New York
d. 11 Feb 1911, Hudson, Columbia, New York
(Age 88 years) Marriage 13 Jul 1846 Livingstone, Columbia, New York
[2] Family ID F4609 Group Sheet | Family Chart
-
Notes - Kornelia was a graduate of Oberlin College in Ohio, and was for many years a leader in society and charitable works in Hudson, New York. She was one of the Managers of the Hudson City Hospital since its founding, and was its Vice-President in 1912.
Kornelia was returning home on the Titanic to Hudson with her sister, Anna Hogeboom, and their twenty-one-year old niece, Gretchen Fiske Longley. All three ladies boarded in Southampton under ticket number 13502 (£77 19s 2d). Miss Andrews occupied cabin D-7.
On the night of the disaster, Gretchen and Anna were asleep. Kornelia, who had apparently been ill, was reading when the Titanic struck the iceberg. Gretchen, who was awakened by the impact, asked her aunt what happened. Interestingly, Kornelia seemed to know without having been told. "We must have struck an iceberg. Go and ask the steward if we are in danger." Gretchen went out three times to ask if there was danger, but was reassured by stewards that everything was fine.
Kornelia did not believe what the stewards were saying so she went out to find their day-steward who informed her that the Titanic was in danger and that they were to report to the boat deck with lifebelts. The ladies dressed, put on fur coats, and headed to the Boat Deck.
Kornelia related that the first three boats they tried to enter did not contain room for them. They waited for the fourth boat, which turned out to be lifeboat 10, and were helped aboard. She told of how annoyed she was with many of the crew who were in her boat. 'When we got out on the water,' she said, 'we realized that the crewmen had claimed they could row only for the purpose of saving themselves. My niece had to take an oar. In a boat alongside of ours, a sailor lighted a cigarette and flung the match carelessly among the women in our boat. We screamed with protest to which he replied, "Ah, we're all going to the devil anyway, and we might as well be cremated now as then.'"
In describing the Titanic's final moments, Kornelia explained, "We were a mile away from the Titanic when there was a great explosion. It appeared to me as if the boilers had blown up and the Titanic had been lifted up amidships and broken in half. This is the way it appeared to me."
All three ladies were rescued by the Carpathia, and eventually reached their homes in Hudson, New York. Kornelia later filed a $480.50 claim against the White Star Line for lost possessions including such items are fur coats, numerous dresses, 3 brass antique lamps and "one velvet hat with ostrich plumes."
- Kornelia was a graduate of Oberlin College in Ohio, and was for many years a leader in society and charitable works in Hudson, New York. She was one of the Managers of the Hudson City Hospital since its founding, and was its Vice-President in 1912.
-
Sources
