<BGSOUND SRC="http://www.revdma2.com/meditation.mid" LOOP=INFINITE>
Massachusetts
Father,  Percival  White gave his son Richard a graduation gift (Bowdoin College)  of a European trip,  and the pair sailed on Olympic.  Both Father and son were lost on Titanic on their return, after helping Mary Lines and her mother into a boat. 
Winchendon, Riverside Cemetery,  family cross marker to the right.
Ellen Bird Beattie is buried with her husband and brother William and his wife Maggie (Margaret) Bird in Acushnet Cemetery,  just outside of Dartmouth- near New Bedford.  Ellen lived and worked in New Bedford,  and Newport, where she died in 1949. Her brother worked for Wing Clothiers and lived on Emery Street, with a summer home in Clarks Pt.
The plot for Sisters of Mercy in Leicester
Sr. Mary Patricia's marker
Currently the marker contains only the surname of the family.  Miss Lillian is the only survivor still living in a nursing home outside Worcester. She will be 97 this October.  Mrs. Asplund died in 1964 on Titanic's anniversary at age 90 and son Felix died in 1983, aged 73.  Mr. Asplund's remains were recovered, but not those of the other three sons- one of Titanic's most tragic family stories.  The Old Swedish Cemetery is now called All Faiths and can be found on Webster Street in Worcester, across the street from Hope Cemetery.
Just across the street from All Faiths is Hope Cemetery, where Walter Chamberlain Porter, First Class last manufacturer, aged 46, was laid to rest on a hill overlooking Worcester.
Mother and daughter buried in Topsfield in Pine Grove Cemetery.