A menu from Titanic's first-class restaurant sold for £60,000 and a small locker key went under the hammer for £62,000 in Devizes on Saturday.

The menu was part of the Lurette Collection, items once owned by maid Elise Lurette.

French-born Ms Lurette was one of about 700 people who survived when the passenger liner hit an iceberg on its maiden voyage from Southampton on April 14, 1912. More than 1,500 people died.

In Ms Lurette's coat pocket was a menu, dated April 12, listing dishes such as mutton chops, Melton Mowbray pie and tapioca pudding.

And a deck plan used by Ms Lurette to help find her way to a lifeboat was sold for £33,000 - almost double its guide price.

Auctioneer Alan Aldridge, of Henry Aldridge and Son, said having both menu and the deck plan was "unheard of".

He said: "The items have some amazing stories behind them."

A letter by engineer Joseph Bell, describing how the Titanic almost hit two other liners as it left Southampton docks, sold for £24,000.

And a tiny locker key owned by Southampton man Sidney Sedunary fetched £62,000.

Mr Sedunary's body was recovered after the tragedy and his possessions, including his pocket watch and keys to his cabin - number 45 on E deck - were sent to his pregnant wife, Madge.