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In Manhattan, Edith and her mother boarded another steamer, the SS Majestic, which was part of the White Star fleet but bound for Cherbourg, France. Edith spoke about the Titanic experience to some foreign journalists, most of whom were on the Majestic. With them was 31-year-old Bill Bostock, who had been aboard the Titanic as second officer of the Carpathia.[29] Bostock told one of the newspapermen that Edith had been a great comfort to him and that she had concealed her full name from everyone else aboard. She had introduced herself to him by saying "Good Morning" to him, and was the only woman since they left New York who had been as friendly as he. The group was transferred from the Majestic to the Lapland on 2 April. This was the same boat on which the Polish count and his family were taken from the Titanic. Edith and Bostock went up on deck to get some fresh air and watched as the ship made its way through South America. Edith then returned to her cabin to get her hat and coat. It was during this time she learned of her father’s death.[30]
On 19 April the Dutch liner SS Netherland (from New York to Antwerp, via Southampton) picked up Edith and her mother, and their destination was the Belgian port of Ostend. Edith once again boarded another White Star steamer, the SS Teutonic, leaving the other two passengers on the other boat to their own devices. Her mother was leaving the children with a maternal aunt who had come to Europe to visit and live. Edith did not know where her aunt was located but on 21 April with her mother she boarded a train bound for Brussels. At the time of the maiden voyage, Edith was eight years old, a day shy of her ninth birthday, and she was thrilled by the view of England as they approached the English Channel, and when they arrived in Southampton the following day, the first time she had ever seen the place. The city was something of an adjustment for Edith because it had been stored in her imagination and in her home movie footage. The place-memories made her emotional for many years. As she grew older, the city still evoked in her a sense of loss. d2c66b5586