Laroche,  Courtesy of Titanic Hist. Society
The dramatic story of the  black passenger who traveled on the  Titanic is no new discovery, but visitors to a a popular exhibit in the  state’s capital may not learn of it. It’s one of thousands of tales and at least two movies about the  world’s largest passenger ship. The Titanic went down in icy seas in  1912 on its maiden voyage.
The hundreds of patrons who have come to Tallahassee’s Brogan Museum  to see popular exhibit -  Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition - might want  to learn more about Joseph Laroche.  As does the museum, the 1997  Paramount Pictures depiction of the massive ship and its infamous  disaster failed to share the evidence.
Here’s a story few people know: 
~ Joseph Laroche ~
On April 10, 1912, Joseph Laroche, accompanied by his wife Juliette  and two young daughters, took a train from Paris to Cherbourg, France,  where they boarded the ill-fated R.M.S. Titanic, the largest passenger  ship in the world. 
It was the ship’s maiden voyage, from Southhampton England to New  York City. It ended in one of the most famous episodes in maritime  history and the largest peacetime disaster at sea. From documents and histories, we can piece together facts about  Laroche, who, in his lifetime, received a good education, but,  like  many of his counterparts, encountered racism: 
He was born on May 26, 1886 in Cap Haitien, Haiti on the northern  coast of the country, its second-largest city. Today the city is home to  the second-largest airport in the country and attracts many tourists. Laroche came from a rich lineage, as his uncle, Cincinnatus Leconte,  was once president of the Caribbean island. Leconte’s great-grand-father  was an African slave who served as Haiti’s first president in its then  newly-independent state. He was addressed as “Emporer Jacques I of  Haiti.”
In 1901, 15-year-old Laroche left home with dreams of becoming an  engineer. According to the Titanic Historical Society (THS,) located in  Indian Orchard, Mass., he traveled to Beauvais, France with teacher  Monseigneur Kersuzan, the Lord Bishop of Haiti. On a trip to Villejuif, France, Joseph met Juliette Marie Louise  Lafargue, an upper-middle-class woman three years his junior and  daughter of a wine-seller. The two fell in love and married at the  Lafargue home in March 1908.
By then Joseph had graduated with his certificate. However, racial  discrimination in the country hindered a brown-skinned person from  finding adequate work. The newlywed and father of two was able to find  work, but was not paid the salary someone of his caliber deserved,  according to the THS.
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| His wife and his two daughters, Simmone and Louisianna | 
By March 1912 Louise was pregnant with the couple’s third child,  leaving them no choice but to move to Haiti, where a young engineer of  any race was sure to be in high demand. Laroche’s mother bought  first-class tickets for her son’s family to travel on the French ship,  Le France. However, the couple fatefully traded the tickets for  first-class Titanic tickets when they learned that children could not  dine with parents for meals.
On April 14, after receiving several ice warnings through wireless  telegraphy operators from ships traveling the same route, Second Officer  Charles Lightoller sent word to the crow’s nest lookouts Frederick  Fleet and Reginald Lee to stay alert while in the danger zone. 
According to the THS, just before midnight, in below 30-degree  weather, Fleet noticed a black object right ahead and reached for the  crow’s nest bell, ringing it three times. He radioed “There is ice  ahead!” 
The ship’s officers followed the command of order but were defeated  by time. The 46,000-ton liner struck an iceberg and began to take on the  North Atlantic’s freezing-cold water. All first-class passengers were  given advantage to life boats, followed by women and children of all  classes. 
Joseph Laroche saw his family off into the lifeboats.  There were not  enough lifeboats for the men on the voyage, and mostly women and  children survived. He perished along with more than 1,500 passengers.  His body was never recovered.  Mrs. Laroche, her two daughters and  unborn son survived and returned to their home in Villejuif. She named  their son after his father.
The couple’s first daughter Simonne never married and died on August  8, 1973 at the age of 64. Mrs. Laroche died at the age of 91 on January  10, 1980. Louise, the younger daughter died in January 1998. 
Articles across the web have revealed that people would have expected  to see black people depicted in the movie Titanic doing hard labor like  shoveling coal, janitorial work or serving. Some have written their  opinions centered on the fact that in 1912 racism thrived.  Many have  assumed that blacks could not even afford tickets aboard such a  prestigious ship. 
First-class parlor suites were sold for the equivalent of $50,000 today. Erin Karnell, a volunteer with the Titanic Historical Society, said  in a telephone interview from their Massachusetts headquarters and  museum that when revisiting historical facts, “one must understand  (that) society was very structured around this time by culture and  economic circumstances of people. Regardless of race, if customers had  money to spend, they were granted admission.”
Karnell says that France was much freer than other nations during that time and that the Titanic held many emigrants. Lilianna Childree of the Brogan Museum says that she does not get  many inquiries from visitors about the family or whether blacks travelled on the fateful voyage, but she found them mentioned in Premiere Exhibitions’ collection of visiting boarding passes, which are handed to  each customer who  enters the Titanic exhibit.
The company, head quartered in Atlanta, owns exclusive rights to the wreck of the Titanic and to the exhibit.
The boarding passes contain the family’s biography and facts about their  cabin class, whether they survived or perished and who accompanied them  on their tickets. 
John Williams, the principal designer for the Titanic: The Artifact  Exhibition, is quoted as saying  “When given the opportunity, we like to  present human stories relevant to the city in which the Exhibition  takes place.” He is associated with RMS Titanic Inc., a subsidiary of  Premiere Exhibitions, and 
The Laroches’ story has not gone forgotten. Biographies and facts  about the Laroche’s travel history can be found in the collections of  the Titanic Historical Society and the Encyclopedia Titanica, which is  online.
Author Mae Kent wrote a fictional novel about Joseph Laroche’s life  titled “Titanic: The Untold Story.” Kent’s book might be the only piece  of fictional work highlighting the fact that there was Black presence  aboard the ill-fated ship.
Ebony Magazine published a story about the Laroche family in its June 2000 issue. 
Tom Joyner enlightened listeners of the Laroches in March 2011 during  his “little known Black history facts” segment of his morning show. With the disaster’s 100 anniversary approaching, the THS plans to  host Titanic Centennial Weekend 2012 on April 20-22 in Springfield,  Mass. 
The unveiling and dedication of the Titanic Centennial Memorial will  be open to the public, while other activities in the convention will  require registration. The formal Titanic dinner will be one where attendees are asked to  dress as an officer, passenger or crew member to recreate the ambiance  of a supper aboard the White Star Line ship.

