Robert - Hi and welcome.
For some technical reason I cannot access the biographies of the three people you are interested in so some of the below may be duplicated anyway here are my entries for them:
JOSEPH, MRS. CATHERINE. Saved in Lifeboat D. Aged 24 years. Returning to husband in America after visiting relatives in Syria.
Died in 1915 and is buried in the Mount Olivet Cemetery, Detroit, Michigan. in Section 44, tier 10, lot 529.
JOSEPH, MICHAEL PETER JOSEPH. Saved in Lifeboat D. Syrian. Son of above. Aged four years. Died 18th May 1991, Warren, Michigan.
Joseph, Miss Catherine. Daughter of above. Aged 1 year.
(From the Emergency and Relief Booklet by the American Red Cross, 1913).
No. 225. (Syrian). Mother 24 years of age, and two young children returning from a visit to relatives, to join father and husband in Michigan, suffered severely from shock and exposure, and lost baggage valued at $100 and $40 in cash. received Hospital care, clothing and $100 from other American relief funds. ($100).
The Obituary for Michael J. Joseph reads:
Michael J. Joseph, 84 years old, passed away at the Bi-County Hospital of heart failure, Saturday may 18, 1991 in Warren, Michigan.
Mr. Joseph was only four years old when he, along with his 24 year old mother Catherine, and one year old sister Mary, ended their visit to Syria and boarded the Titanic at Cherbourg in order to rejoin Mr. Joseph's father in the United States.
Both mother and children were asleep at the time of the Titanic's collision with the iceberg. Catherine was awakened by the impact, and shortly thereafter stewards circulated among the Third Class passengers ordering them to get out of bed, at the same time insisting that nothing was seriously wrong with the ship. Mrs. Joseph got her children dressed and, picking up little Mary, told Michael to hang on to her skirt tails as she started for the upper decks. The little boy did his best, but in the confusion somehow lost his grip and became separated from his mother. At this point a man whom Mr. Joseph later described as his 'Guardian angel', grabbed his hand and hurried the little boy through the crowds towards the upper decks. Catherine Joseph apparently saw her son vanish in the throng ahead of her, and she rushed along as best as she could with her infant daughter; by the time she reached the lifeboats, however, Michael was nowhere to be seen. Mrs. Joseph and Mary got into a lifeboat containing four men rowers and about twenty women and children. The boat reached the water safely and was rowed away before the ship sank, and Catherine and the little Mary spent the rest of the night crying - Mary for herself and Catherine for her son Michael, whom she thought had gone down with the ship. When Mrs. Joseph and her daughter were taken on board the
Carpathia however, Michael was already there waiting for them - he had left the Titanic in another lifeboat and made the trip to the rescue ship all by himself.
Mary and Michael both contracted measles while on the
Carpathia, but this brief bout with illness left no lasting effect on either of the children. When the nuns of St Peter and Paul School in Detroit which Michael later attended learned of his experience on the Titanic they bestowed the nickname 'TY' on him , considering him a 'miricle child', and the nickname stuck all his life.
(From the Detroit News, May, 1991)
Michael Joseph is survived by his wife, Catherine, a daughter, Liela Dunlap and three sons, Peter, Tony, and Louis.
Mr. Joseph was a beer and soft drink driver in Detroit, retiring 24 years ago from Vernor's, but he never ceased telling how he escaped from the sea. He also leaves nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Has a pictorial headstone in the Ressurrection Cemetery, Clinton. Michigan.
JOSEPH MRS., GEORGES. Saved. Syria. She was listed as Mrs. Georges Chanini or as Chanini Georges. Apparently she was going to her family in Ohio. Her correct name is Chanini Joseph. She was saved but her name was confused with that of Mr. Ibrahim Youssef Shawah.
Cheers Brian