If other survivor accounts are to be believed, he declined to go back anywhere near the sinking ship and by inference, might have been too far away to hear the screams and other sounds towards the end. But I'd like to be enlightened on this; did many survivors on board Lifeboat #6 report hearing them?
A few did. Arthur Peuchen,
Robert Hichens and Mary Eloise Smith all refer to it.
Peuchen during his testimony on Day 4 at the U.S. Inquiry:
5546. From your position in the boat, did you face it?
- I was facing it at this time. I was rowing this way ( indicating), and afterwards I changed to the other way. We heard a sort of a call for help after this whistle I described a few minutes ago. This was the officer calling us back. We heard a sort of a rumbling sound and the lights were still on at the rumbling sound, as far as my memory serves me; then a sort of an explosion, then another. It seemed to be one, two, or three rumbling sounds, then the lights went out. Then the dreadful calls and cries.
5547. For help?
- We could not distinguish the exact cry for assistance; moaning and crying; frightful. It affected all the women in our boat whose husbands were among these; and this went on for some time, gradually getting fainter, fainter. At first it was horrible to listen to.
Hichens in his biography states "After the lights disappeared and went out, we did hear cries of distress - a lot of crying, moaning and screaming, for two or three minutes."
In his testimony at the U.S. Inquiry, he also does mention it:
Senator SMITH.
After the lights disappeared and went out, did you then hear cries of distress?
Mr. HICHENS.
We did hear cries of distress, or I imagined so, sir, for two or three minutes. Some of the men in the boat said it was the cries of one boat hailing the other. I suppose the reason they said this was not to alarm the women - the ladies in the boat.
Last but not least, Mary Smith swears to it in her affidavit to the inquiry, dated 20 May 1912:
"We watched with sorrow, and heard the many cries for help and pitied the captain, because we knew he would have to stay with his ship. The cries we heard I thought were seamen, or possibly steerage, who had overslept, it not occurring to me for a moment that my husband and my friends were not saved."