Lusitania sank at 14:30 on May 7, 1915, the length of the ship was 240 meters, the width was 27 meters, and Lusitania settled to the bottom of the sea. Despite the fact that so many people, 1,195 people were killed, this ship, unlike the Titanic, did not become the most famous ship in history. This is because Lusitania was sunk by Germans during the First World War. Lusitania and its sister ship Mole Tania was built by Glasgow's John Brown and CO to regain the blue rebound which is the reward for crossing the fastest Atlantic Ocean.
The sinking of Lusitania (1918) is a short film of silent animation by American cartoonist Windsor Mackay. This is an advertisement activity to recreate the sinking of the British liner RMS Lusitania which had never been shot in 1915. When the animation was released, in 12 minutes, it was called the longest animation. This movie is the earliest animation documentary, it is a serious and dramatic animation. The nationwide movie registration is 2017, and it is saved. In 1915, a submarine of Germany sunk, RMS Lusitania sunk, and 128 Americans died of 1,198 people. The incident angered Mackay, but his employer William Randolph Hearst's newspaper did not agree with the case as Hurst opposed the US participation in the First World War. Mackay was asked to explain the anti-war for the Hurst's thesis and anti-British editorial cartoon. In 1916, Mackay rebelled against his employer's position and started working at his own time with his own money.
Emile Henry Lacom wrote a letter to the "New York Times" proposing a conspiracy theory about the sunken of Lucitania in Germany in 1915. His letter was published on 14th page of Monday, October 22, 1917 entitled "The New Theory of Susania's Sinking". Report the evidence of German medals and explosive "cigars" on May 5. "In 1916, Lord Newton who was in charge of promotion at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs decided to develop anti-German feelings for promotional purposes, and medals of department store entrepreneur Harry Gordon Selfridge The replica medal is made in an attractive case, it is an accurate copy of a German medal and it is sold in the form of each shilling.