#18: Unveiling the True Story of Third-Class Travel
Despite popular belief, third-class passengers on the Titanic weren’t as impoverished as depicted. With tickets at $40—equivalent to today’s $1,000—it represented a significant expense, revealing that third-class travel was not just for the destitute.

In 1912, a third-class ticket consumed months of savings for the working class, who earned about $10 weekly. Thus, the notion of Leonardo DiCaprio’s character affording a ticket on his own becomes more fictional than factual, underscoring the economic hurdles of that era.
