Attractions

Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition

3900 S. Las Vegas Blvd.
Las Vegas, NV 89109
(702) 492-3960
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Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition

Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition Details

  • Hours of operation: Open daily, 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. Last admission is sold at 9 p.m.
  • Cost: General admission, $27. Combo tickets for Titanic and Bodies are available for $53 (without the audio tour) and $59 (with the audio tour). Tickets are good for seven days from date of purchase.
  • Payment options: Cash, Visa, MasterCard, American Express.
  • Reservations: TBA
  • Location: Near the intersection of Tropicana Avenue and the Las Vegas Strip, inside the Luxor.
  • Age/Height/Weight restrictions: TBA

Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition Review

Haunted Titanic tours

Have you ever wondered if the lost passengers on the Titanic returned for the personal items they once carried on board? 

This year at Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition, experience spooky fun and discover if the ghost stories are true. The haunted tour is free with paid admission. 

Here are a few of the bone-chilling details shared by Titanic experts who have seen and heard it all:  

  • Hear about The "Lady in Black," who is often seen on the Grand Staircase, crying for  her friend.
  • See Frederick Fleet, the Titanic's look-out, watching over the Promenade Deck as he attempts to make up for his unfortunate late sighting of the iceberg.
  • Hear about the longest living Titanic survivor who passed away exactly 80 years to the day the ship struck the iceberg, along with other mysterious coincidences. 
  • Find out who prophesied the sinking of Titanic by writing to a friend just a few days before the fateful night.

This tour is available Oct. 23-25, 29-31 at 8 p.m. 

Although the "ship of dreams" met its demise nearly a century ago, the spirit of the Titanic and its passengers live on through "Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition."

Described as a floating palace, the incomparable Titanic was deemed "practically unsinkable" by the White Star Line and its builders. But on a calm April night in 1912, the massive luxury liner struck an iceberg and slowly sank into the North Atlantic.

Since then, many items from the wreckage have been recovered and added to "Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition." The 25,000-square-foot exhibit features numerous items from the Titanic, including luggage, the ship's whistles, floor tiles from the first-class smoking room, a window frame from the Verandah Café and an unopened bottle of champagne with a 1900 vintage.

In addition, the exhibit features a full-scale re-creation of the Grand Staircase as well as a newly expanded outer Promenade Deck, complete with the frigid temperatures felt on that fateful April night.

The personal artifacts on display offer haunting, emotional connections to the forever-altered lives of those on board the Titanic. Visitors even have a chance to walk through authentically re-created first- and third-class rooms, with furnishings by original manufacturers.

The passenger list for the Titanic's maiden voyage read like a social register for the time, including names such as John Jacob Astor IV, who built the Astoria Hotel in New York; women's rights advocate Molly Brown; businessman Benjamin Guggenheim; Isidor Straus, of the L. Straus & Son fame, and his wife; and many others. There also were a number of immigrants on board, pursuing the dream of a better life in America.

Of the 2,228 passengers on board; more than 1,500 of them died. The exhibit concludes with a memorial wall honoring all those who lost their lives that fateful night.

The subject matter is somber, but "Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition" details an important chapter in maritime history that will leave a lasting impression.

-- Review by Noelani Jones

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