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Cracker from the Titanic becomes the world's most expensive biscuit

A humble biscuit that survived the sinking of the Titanic in 1912 became the most expensive nibble in the world on Saturday when it was sold at an auction in England for $31,800.

The square-shaped biscuit, made with just flour and water, and just nine centimetres by 10cm in size, was stored in a survival kit aboard one of the Titanic's lifeboats.

The cracker was stored in a survival kit on a life boat. Photo: Supplied

Ahead of the sale, with an estimate of up to about $21,000, auctioneer Andrew Aldridge said the Spillers and Bakers Pilot cracker biscuit, found inside a lifeboat survival kit, was "the world's most valuable biscuit".

The biscuit was recovered by James Fenwick who kept it as a souvenir and stored it in a waterproof envelope used for keeping camera film.

Fenwick and his bride Mabel departed from New York on the ocean liner Carpathia on the start of a three month honeymoon.

The Carpathia was diverted to help in the rescue operation after the Titanic sank.


The Fenwick archive, being sold by descendants, is regarded as a unique collection of photographs of the rescue operation, and included that single biscuit.

More than 700 people were rescued by the Carpathia, but a further 1,500 passengers and crew from the Titanic perished.

Items from the Fenwick collection were among more than 200 items sold at auctioneers Henry Aldridge and Son in Devizes, Wiltshire.

Auctioneer Andrew Aldridge commented: "It is the world's most valuable biscuit. It was sold to a buyer from Greece. I have been selling Titanic items for more than 20 years and have never seen anything like this biscuit previously. As well as being exceptionally rare, it is quirky."

"Will the buyer take a bite out of the biscuit. I doubt it, it would be a most expensive nibble. I doubt we will ever see anything like this again from the Titanic".

The Titanic was a British passenger liner that sank in the North Atlantic Ocean in the early morning of 15 April 1912 after colliding with an iceberg. Photo: Getty

"We don't know which lifeboat the biscuit came from but there are no other Titanic lifeboat biscuits in existence. It is incredible that this biscuit has survived such a dramatic event."

"In terms of precedence, a few years ago a biscuit from one of Shackleton's expeditions (to the Antartic) sold for about 3,000 pounds (almost $6,300) and there is a biscuit from the Lusitania in a museum in the Republic of Ireland."

The menu — saved by a passenger who climbed aboard the so-called “Money Boat” before the ocean liner went down — was sold at an auction. Photo: Lion Heart Autographs

Among the other rare maritime items sold at Saturday's auction was an amazingly rare photograph of the iceberg said to be the one struck by the "unsinkable" Titanic on its maiden voyage from Southampton to North America in 1912.

It was sold to a London collector for $44,500.