Correlation between Passenger Class and Survival Status on the Titanic

The RMS Titanic, a British passenger liner that sank on its maiden voyage in April 1912 after hitting an iceberg, remains one of the most infamous maritime disasters in history. Analyzing this data shows that passenger class had a significant impact on the survival counts on the Titanic.

The following data was pulled from Stanford University’s ‘titanic.csv’ dataset. This dataset provides comprehensive information on the passengers aboard the Titanic, including details such as age, gender, class, name, and survival status. The dataset was used to create a graph illustrating the survival counts by passenger class on the Titanic in a clear and informative manner.

Class 1: Upper Class
Class 2: Middle Class
Class 3: Lower class

The number of survivors was roughly similar across passenger classes (this is a partial dataset, with variations in the FULL Titanic passenger data), but non-survivors showed a slight increase from Class 1 to Class 2 and a significant increase from Class 2 to Class 3.