A letter written by a Titanic hero who sacrificed his life to save others has sold at auction for £42,000.

14th November 2020

John Harper 1
Mr Harper has been described as "one of the bravest men" on the Titanic.

Baptist preacher John Harper gave his lifejacket to another passenger and went down with the doomed ocean liner in April 1912.

His last letter was sold at an online auction of Titanic memorabilia in Wiltshire on Saturday.

Auctioneer Andrew Aldridge said: "John Harper was probably one of the bravest men on that boat."

Written on Titanic stationery on April 11, 1912 to a fellow clergyman, the letter was posted at Cobh in Ireland, which was known as Queenstown when the Titanic stopped at the port before setting out across the Atlantic.

Pastor Harper, 39, was the pastor of Walworth Road Baptist Church, in London. He was a widower and was travelling with his daughter Annie Jessie and his sister Jessie W. Leitch to Chicago to preach at the Moody Church.

John Harper 2
John Harper's daughter Annie Jessie went on to be the longest living Scottish Titanic survivor.

He refused a seat in a lifeboat alongside his daughter and sister, instead staying on board to offer words of comfort to passengers.

He then gave his lifejacket to another passenger who survived, with other survivors reporting he continued to preach the Gospel as the ship sank.

The letter talks about life on board the ship and thanks his friend and colleague for a recent kindness.

Originally from Glasgow, Pastor Harper first preached at the Paisley Road Baptist Church which would later be renamed the Harper Memorial Church in 1921.

John Harper 3
The letter begins: "I am penning you this line just before we get to Queenstown to assure you that I have not forgotten you and especially all your kindness while we were north."

His daughter Annie Jessie went to be the longest-living Scottish Titanic survivor and died in 1986.

Mr Aldridge, from Henry Aldridge and Sons auctioneers in Devizes, Wiltshire, said: "His actions epitomised that British generation in times of adversity.

"The condition of the letter is superb, it has been owned by a private collector for the last 25 years who has decided to pass the baton on to the next generation."

Full article from BBC

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