Her sinking with the loss of almost 1,200 lives caused such outrage that it
propelled the U.S. into the First World War.
But now divers have revealed a dark secret about the cargo carried by the
Lusitania on its final journey in May 1915.
Munitions they found in the hold suggest that the Germans had been right all
along in claiming the ship was carrying war materials and was a legitimate
military target.
The Cunard vessel, steaming from New York to Liverpool, was sunk eight miles
off the Irish coast by a U-boat.
Maintaining that the Lusitania was solely a passenger vessel, the British
quickly accused the 'Pirate Hun' of slaughtering civilians.
The disaster was used to whip up anti-German anger, especially in the U.S.,
where 128 of the 1,198 victims came from.
A hundred of the dead were children, many of them under two.
Robert Lansing, the U.S. secretary of state, later wrote that the sinking
gave him the 'conviction we would ultimately become the ally of Britain'.
Americans were even told, falsely, that German children were given a day off
school to celebrate the sinking of the Lusitania.
The disaster inspired a multitude of recruitment posters demanding vengeance
for the victims.
One, famously showing a young mother slipping below the waves with her baby,
carried the simple slogan 'Enlist'.
Two years later, the Americans joined the Allies as an associated power - a
decision that turned the war decisively against Germany.
The diving team estimates that around four million rounds of
U.S.-manufactured Remington .303 bullets lie in the Lusitania's hold at a
depth of 300ft.
The Germans had insisted the Lusitania - the fastest liner in the North
Atlantic - was being used as a weapons ship to break the blockade Berlin had
been trying to impose around Britain since the outbreak of hostilities in
August 1914.
Winston Churchill, who was first Lord of the Admiralty and has long been
suspected of knowing more about the circumstances of the attack than he let
on in public, wrote in a confidential letter shortly before the sinking that
some German submarine attacks were to be welcomed.
He said: 'It is most important to attract neutral shipping to our shores, in
the hope especially of embroiling the U.S. with Germany.
'For our part we want the traffic - the more the better and if some of it
gets into trouble, better still.'
Hampton Sides, a writer with Men's Vogue in the U.S., witnessed the divers'
discovery.
He said: 'They are bullets that were expressly manufactured to kill Germans
in World War I - bullets that British officials in Whitehall, and American
officials in Washington, have long denied were aboard the Lusitania.'
The discovery may help explain why the 787ft Lusitania sank within 18
minutes of a single German torpedo slamming into its hull.
Some of the 764 survivors reported a second explosion which might have been
munitions going off.
Gregg Bemis, an American businessman who owns the rights to the wreck and is
funding its exploration, said: 'Those four million rounds of .303s were not
just some private hunter's stash.
'Now that we've found it, the British can't deny any more that there was
ammunition on board. That raises the question of what else was on board.
'There were literally tons and tons of stuff stored in unrefrigerated cargo
holds that were dubiously marked cheese, butter and oysters.
'I've always felt there were some significant high explosives in the holds -
shells, powder, gun cotton - that were set off by the torpedo and the inflow
of water. That's what sank the ship.'
Mr Bemis is planning to commission further dives next year in a full-scale
forensic examination of the wreck off County Cork.
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