If you survive one shipwreck, that’s luck. Two shipwrecks? An incredible coincidence. But what if you lived through accidents on all three of the most famous sister ships in history — and walked away from every one of them?
Violet Jessop was born in Argentina in 1887. As a child, she contracted tuberculosis, and doctors gave her only months to live. That was her first “impossible” survival. She recovered, moved to Britain, and began working as a stewardess on transatlantic ocean liners while still young.
In 1911, she was serving aboard the largest ship in the world at the time, the RMS Olympic. The liner collided with a British warship, tearing a large gash in its hull — but the Olympic managed to return to port without sinking.
A year later, in April 1912, Jessop was working on the Olympic’s sister ship: the RMS Titanic. She was on duty the night the ship struck the iceberg. She was placed in lifeboat 16 — and at the last moment, someone handed her a baby to hold. She was rescued at dawn by the Carpathia.
Most people would never set foot on a ship again. Violet Jessop did the opposite. During World War I, she signed on as a nurse aboard the third sister ship: the HMHS Britannic, which had been converted into a hospital ship.
In 1916, the Britannic struck a mine in the Aegean Sea and sank far faster than the Titanic — in roughly 55 minutes. Jessop’s lifeboat was pulled toward the ship’s still-spinning giant propellers. She had to leap into the water and suffered a serious head injury striking the hull. But once again — she survived.
And here’s the most remarkable part: Violet Jessop never gave up the sea. She continued working aboard ocean liners until the age of 61, and passed away peacefully at 83.
Maritime history remembers her by a single name: “Miss Unsinkable.”