Another couple that is not so well known, boarded Titanic as second class passengers in Southampton under the married name of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall, but they were not married. The couple’s great-granddaughter, Beverley Lynn Roberts, believes that James Cameron may have based part of the epic love story in his 1997 blockbuster Titanic movie on facts from her the lives of her great-grandparents.
Photo
of Kate Phillips with her Daughter Ellen Mary
Photo
Credit Beverley Lynn Roberts Kate Phillips Great Granddaughter
In fact, they were deeply in love and having a secret affair. Henry Samuel Morley was a married man, and he was also the senior partner of the firm L. Morley Confectioners. Kate Phillips was a 19 year old unmarried shop assistant of Mr Morley’s enterprise. Mr. Morley was at least 20 years older than his young, beautiful employee, Miss. Phillips. Henry sold two of his confectionary shops to make provisions for his wife and 12 year old daughter, and booked passage on Titanic to start a new life with Miss Phillips in America. It is said that Henry had a beautiful diamond encrusted sapphire necklace made for Kate and that he gave it to her while they were on board Titanic sailing towards their future together.
Photo Credit Beverley Lynn Roberts
Tragically, just like the famous 1997 James
Cameron movie Titanic , the
relationship between Henry & Kate would be cut short. When on April 14, 1912, the unthinkable
happened as Titanic struck an iceberg
at 11:40 pm. Two hours and 40 minutes
later, the “unsinkable” Titanic plunged
to the bottom of the North Atlantic, taking with her 1,496 of her passengers
and crew, including Mr. Henry Samuel
Morley, whose body was never recovered.
It is said that Henry fastened the sapphire and diamond necklace around
Kate’s neck just prior to seeing her into a lifeboat. Kate Phillips survived
the sinking, and she sat in lifeboat number 11
for close to eight hours with only her nightgown and a jacket of a crew
member to keep her warm on that cold night. She carried with her a small hand
bag and the keys to her trunk. However, she may have also been carrying
something else even more valuable than the bejeweled necklace.
Artists
recreation of Kate Phillips & Henry Morley
Photo
Credit Jorge Martinez Arias
Kate Phillips’s purse and luggage keys that she carried with her into the lifeboat.
Photo
credit Beverley Lynn Roberts
After three months living in America, Kate returned to England and to her family in Worcester. It is believed that the relationship with Henry Morley resulted in her giving birth to a baby girl on January 11, 1913 . Although, this was never officially proven, and no father was ever named on her daughter’s birth certificate. Kate named the child Ellen Mary. Her daughter Ellen would end up living with her grandparents for approximately the first 10 years of her life.
Kate later married in Middlesex in 1918 to Fredrick H Watson, a cafe owner. In 1922, she reunited with her daughter Ellen. It was not quite the happy family life that one might have hoped, as Kate had been greatly affected mentally by the tragic events that took place on the night of April 14, 1912. Sources indicate that she never fully recovered from the long term effects of losing the love of her life and the ensuing struggle thereafter. Sadly, Kate Phillips became even more mentally unstable throughout the years. She eventually became confined to bed until her death in March of 1964. Some of Titanic’s victims, like Kate, died a slow death of a broken heart.
Ellen Mary never really had much of a relationship with her mother. In fact, she didn’t even know that her mother passed away until months after her funeral. Ellen spent most of her life trying to prove that she was the illegitimate daughter of Henry Samuel Morley. Unfortunately her attempts to be recognised as Henry’s daughter never succeeded. Ellen Mary died on October 25, 2005 at the age of 92.
This
teddy bear was given to Ellen by her mother Kate Phillips in memory of her
father, Henry Morley.
This
bear meant a lot to Ellen and was given to her great-granddaughter Beverley
Lynn Roberts upon her death.
Photo
Credit Beverley Lynn Roberts
Memories of Ellen Mary from her
great-granddaughter, Beverley Lynn Roberts:
"I knew my Gran very well and she abandoned us as grandchildren
when I was 12. Like I said previously
Gran cut her mother out of her life because she was unable due to a document
she signed (so the Morley’s paid for her schooling under those conditions) to
tell her who her Father was when my Dad was only a little boy and so was very
bitter, so don’t believe all you read. I reconnected with my Gran when I was
23, My Gran was a very strong character.
I’ve heard many stories about Kate from other family members saying how
kind she was. But I did know my Gran
very well. I will always be a fantastic mum to my daughter and try my best and
give her all the love and support she needs.”
We asked Kate Phililps’s great-granddaughter, Beverley Lynn Roberts, if formal DNA testing was ever conducted to prove that Henry Morley was indeed Ellen Mary’s father. Beverley indicated that it had not, but that she had personally submitted her own DNA to Ancestry and had received approximately 15 matches to Morley family members. While this is not official or conclusive, it does seem to give credit to the assumption that Kate Phillips and Henry Morley did have a daughter together. Perhaps Ellen Mary was truly the “heart of the ocean.”
Pictured
left, great-granddaughter of Mary Kate Phillips, Beverley Lynn Roberts, &
pictured right, Henry Morley's great-niece, Deborah Allen.
Photo
Credit Beverley Lynn Roberts
Photo
of Ellen Mary on her 90th Birthday.
Photo
Credit Beverley Lynn Roberts.
We would like to dedicate this article, not
only to Kate Phillips, but also to her daughter Ellen Mary and
great-granddaughter, Beverley Lynn Roberts, who has helped tremendously with
supplying us with these amazing photos and fascinating information about her
family.
Sources include Beverley Lynn Roberts, www.encyclopedia-titanica.org, www.washigntontimes.com, https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/, and http://www.johnrichard.fast-page.org/titanic.html.
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