Reference Object
SS Olympic Breakfast Menu Card — June 2, 1929 (printed)
Primary Visual Evidence
Attribution Assessment
Attribution to SS Olympic is confirmed by object-level printed identifiers: the card explicitly reads “S.S. ‘OLYMPIC’.” The date “June 2nd, 1929.” is likewise printed on the face of the menu, providing direct internal dating. The White Star Line house flag further supports company association. Because the core identifiers are printed on the object, this reference object does not rely on comparative typographic matching to establish ship attribution.
Historical Context
Shipboard menus served both as service instruments and as take-home mementos. When a menu includes object-printed identifiers (ship name and date), it functions as a self-documenting artifact of onboard hospitality and provisioning practices on a specific day of service.
The seller frames this object as illustrating the “elegance and sophistication” of transatlantic travel and references Titanic as a contextual association. Ocean Liner Curator treats that framing as interpretive context rather than evidence. The object itself supports SS Olympic and the printed date; it does not, by itself, establish route, class, or passenger association.
Limits of Evidence
- Only one photograph is available; reverse-side printing, watermarks, and paper-stock details cannot be fully assessed.
- No route, sailing direction, port sequence, or voyage number is printed on the menu; the specific crossing is not identifiable from the object alone.
- Class/venue is not explicitly stated on the face (“Breakfast” is printed, but dining-room class designation is not).
- “Originating from the United Kingdom” and condition claims (“mint”) are seller statements; this entry records them as unverified unless corroborated by additional images or documentation.