Titanic Text Messages - A Streaming Log of Distress Transmissions

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  • čas přidán 16. 03. 2017
  • [***UPDATE*** The audio from 00:53 to 01:40 is incorrect. I accidentally added the wrong sound file to this section of the video. My apologies!]
    I've taken all the Morse code communications I could find from the night of the Titanic disaster and turned it into streaming text. It's painfully slow by today's standards of communications as it presents at about the speed the transmissions were made that night. I've removed the "dead air" time cutting the total time from about two hours to one.
    Morse code abbreviations have been included in the audio but the text is in English, for example the ship's ID code "MGY" will be heard but "TITANIC" will be read. "OM" will be heard but "OLD MAN" (meaning "buddy" or "friend") will be in the text.
    I've left the code "CQD" as it's very prominent and important. This was the common international distress signal at the time and stood for "ATTENTION ALL STATIONS" (CQ) "DISTRESS" (D). Titanic was not the first to transmit an SOS but she used it also. They primarily used CQD because that was the most recognized distress signal of the time.
    The log starts as the Titanic is transmitting personal telegrams for customers which are interrupted by the distress signal. It continues until the last message is transmitted. I've tried to make it as historically accurate as possible but I'm not a historian, just a Joe.

Komentáře • 9K

  • @paulbaker8734
    @paulbaker8734 Před 5 lety +7649

    TITANIC: WE ARE SINKING
    FRANKFURT: VOT IS IT YOU ARE SINKING ABOUT?

    • @marcusfossa6695
      @marcusfossa6695 Před 5 lety +204

      lmfao how does this comment not have more likes?

    • @bobrvrvrvrv
      @bobrvrvrvrv Před 4 lety +34

      Marcus Fossa cause it’s a shite joke

    • @LordAmerican
      @LordAmerican Před 4 lety +280

      TITANIC: WE HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      TITANIC: WE HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      TITANIC: WE HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      TITANIC: WE HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      TITANIC: WE HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      TITANIC: WE HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      OTHER SHIPS: TITANIC HAS STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      CAPES: TITANIC HAS STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      CAPES: TITANIC HAS STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      CAPES: TITANIC HAS STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      OTHER SHIPS: TITANIC HAS STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      TITANIC: WE HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG AND SINKING.
      INTERNET EXPLOR-er, I mean FRANKFURT: FRANKFURT TO TITANIC. WHAT IS WRONG?

    • @entity972inc.2
      @entity972inc.2 Před 4 lety +3

      @@LordAmerican No.

    • @Tr0nNick
      @Tr0nNick Před 4 lety +77

      @damnedlazern no what he is saying is true. You said White people with an annoyed emoji. You expressed how annoyed you are at white people. That is the definition of racism.
      Here the definition says , "prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race based on the belief that one's own race is superior"
      Your little comment plainly states the definition above. So dont calling people stereotypical when we dont see stereotypes.
      What we see are facts from your text. Think smarter not harder.

  • @theaidenvids
    @theaidenvids Před 4 lety +13531

    Titanic: *literally sending messages about it sinking for hours*
    Frankfurt: what is the matter bruh

    • @guilty_mulburry5903
      @guilty_mulburry5903 Před 4 lety +953

      Frankfurt's operator was German, no one else could understand German morse except titanic's operator, so he had to translate then reply

    • @justinthyme7275
      @justinthyme7275 Před 4 lety +314

      No one was ignorant enough to use words like bruh in those days. People were vastly more educated than today, bruh!

    • @guilty_mulburry5903
      @guilty_mulburry5903 Před 4 lety +1525

      @@justinthyme7275 what the actual fuck?

    • @FriedrichHerschel
      @FriedrichHerschel Před 4 lety +628

      1. those arent the complete logs, but all the maker could find. Propably only the ones with somewhat precise logs. The US senate inquiry after the incident contains the testimonials of several radio operators, and those contain hints at way more that was shown here.
      2. The Frankfurt did immediatly turn towards the Titanic, in fact, was one of the first ships to do so. But they were 140 nautical miles away. They managed to get there ~10 hours later, vastly exceeding their nominal top speed of ~ 10 knots ... at night and in iceberg infested waters.
      3. Apart from language issues, the Titanic being vague at the beginnung and this being not the complete logs, you have to keep in mind that the tech back then wasn't that reliable over greater distances, and depended on the equipment the ships had. The US senate inquiry has testimonials, that the radio of the Frankfurt (made by Telefunken, the big competitor of the Marconi Co the Titanic had) was so strong, that some ships (afair even the Titanic itself) believed it was the closest ship. Meanwhile, the Marconi radio was weaker, and it's possible not all of Titanic signals reached the Frankfurt. "What's the matter" is more of a general "can you give an update on your situation, so we can prepare".
      4. Regardless how foolish someone might come off and you may think it was justified: if I were on a boat that's sinking in the middle of an ocean, I wouldn't curse on the very people that I believe are my best chance of rescue. You can think of them any way you want, it's a different thing actually telling them.

    • @justinthyme7275
      @justinthyme7275 Před 4 lety +40

      @@guilty_mulburry5903 that is the incorrect use of the word "actual", bruh!

  • @bonnierobinson3227
    @bonnierobinson3227 Před 3 lety +5610

    His name was Jack Philips. He had just turned 25 years old. He didn’t leave his post until the radio room was flooding. Lots of comments about the bravery of this man but no mention of his name.

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 Před 3 lety +385

      Jack Phillips, senior wireless operator. And Harold Bride, junior wireless operator.
      Sadly Phillips would die that night, Bride would survive and assist his friend aboard RMS Carpathia sending messages after the rescue.

    • @darul2652
      @darul2652 Před 3 lety +151

      I agree he is brave but he ignored warning about iceberg earlier that day.
      Had he delivered the message to the bridge, Titanic would have been saved from her doomed fate.

    • @TheMojaveCourier
      @TheMojaveCourier Před 3 lety +71

      He failed to pass on warnings of icebergs earlier in the day.. but still I see what you mean.

    • @mojavepatrol4767
      @mojavepatrol4767 Před 3 lety +151

      @@sparkplug1018 Also those brave crewmen attending the scotch boilers and keeping the lights and power going are never mentioned by anyone..

    • @heroinboblivesagain5478
      @heroinboblivesagain5478 Před 3 lety +169

      ​@@darul2652 "he ignored the warning" No. He didn't. The warning the Californian sent out was one of many he had received that night. He had relayed previous warnings to the captain.

  • @mohamedabdulaal4056
    @mohamedabdulaal4056 Před 11 měsíci +2182

    The last transmission from the Titanic came at 2:17AM. The Titanic split into two at 2:18AM and sank at 2:20AM. Jack Phillips was valiant to the very end. He is an exemplary hero.

    • @johnshepard8556
      @johnshepard8556 Před 11 měsíci +61

      How was philips still in the rafio room if the titanic was a minute away from breaking up as the bow wouldof been completely submerged and the stern lifted out of the water so philips would not of been able to remain standing ket alone sending messages

    • @JSSTyger
      @JSSTyger Před 11 měsíci +15

      ​@johnshepard8556 all of that may have happened quickly

    • @camillahunt3247
      @camillahunt3247 Před 11 měsíci +128

      You can tell by the last transmission...it was never completed.

    • @mohamedabdulaal4056
      @mohamedabdulaal4056 Před 11 měsíci +58

      @@anmalaag1225 You clearly have no idea how radio operators spoke at that time. That was so normal for them.

    • @ODonthebeat
      @ODonthebeat Před 11 měsíci +47

      @@anmalaag1225 That is utterly incorrect. If you do research, you would see that language was very common among the operators, who mainly all knew each other and studied together.

  • @boleslawpetroski9681
    @boleslawpetroski9681 Před 4 lety +3316

    FRANKFURT TO TITANIC:
    HAVE YOU TRIED TURNING THE ENGINE ON AND OFF AGAIN?

  • @BrunoGamer-gf2mg
    @BrunoGamer-gf2mg Před 5 lety +3880

    2:17 a.m *CQD THIS IS TITANIC*
    2:17 a.m *CQD THIS IS*
    wow thats a little sad and scary...

    • @FinalLugiaGuardian
      @FinalLugiaGuardian Před 5 lety +579

      I think that was when bride physically yanked Phillips off of the telegraph. After that last signal both of them evacuated the telegraph room and tried to make it into a Lifeboat.

    • @royalcomputer3780
      @royalcomputer3780 Před 4 lety +43

      @@FinalLugiaGuardian did they make it?

    • @joshvan7883
      @joshvan7883 Před 4 lety +455

      @@royalcomputer3780 Phillips died either on board or in a life boat. The three main stories of his death all contradict each other, but the likely story is he fell off ship and died on Collapsible B.
      Bride survived and died in 1956 at the age of 66.

    • @royalcomputer3780
      @royalcomputer3780 Před 4 lety +32

      @@joshvan7883 thank you

    • @braydenkeel2230
      @braydenkeel2230 Před 4 lety +195

      The Titanic was gone at 2:20am. three minutes after that

  • @Ie_Shima
    @Ie_Shima Před 2 lety +2929

    A lot of grief being thrown at the Frankfurt here. She was a small ship, under 7500 tons, and still relied on sails to make up a good portion of her limited 13 knots. She didn't have the best wireless receiver but did have a very powerful transmitter, which meant she could send messages well beyond the range she could receive them.
    When the first CQD from Titanic went out Frankfurt could barely hear it, she was so far away that it came out garbled and almost unreadable. The Frankfurt's wireless operator could only make out the ship posting it's position and assumed that Titanic was asking for Frankfurt's in turn, a common practice to keep ships from colliding, so he got up and went to the bridge to get their most recent reading. He missed Mount Temple's message, giving their position only 50 miles away. When he got back, he found the wireless chattering, nonstop. Wondering what the hell is going on, he posted his ship's position and asks, "What is the matter with you?" Seconds later, he was running back to the bridge to tell the captain that they need to move, a ship was sinking. He didn't receive Carpathia's message saying they are 58 miles off and making full steam. Even if he was at his post, Capathia is on the other side of Titanic, well outside Frankfurt's receiving range.
    All Frankfurt knows is that a ship is going down, that they are close by, and that they have a duty to respond.
    When he got back, transmissions were flooding in. Carpathia at 12:40 AM, only four hours away. He couldn't hear the message. Baltic at 1:15 AM, 243 miles away. Not close enough. Virginian at 1:20 AM, 170 miles away. Not close enough. All he knew was that Frankfurt was the closest ship at 120 miles and closing as fast as they can. Then, at 1:20 AM, water reached boiler room 4, forcing the stokers and engineers to abandon the room and retreat back to boiler room 3. The loss of these boilers cut steam to the dynamos powering the ship, dropping Titanic's transmitting range to below Frankfurt's receiving range. 1:23 AM was the last time Frankfurt heard from the Titanic, the liner's transmissions fading out to nothing. Olympic's exchange at 1:27 AM is the last time a ship within Frankfurt's receiving range confirms they got a response from Titanic.
    For the tiny German ship, this was a nightmare. Imagine hearing someone screaming for help in the distance, and as you rush to their aid, telling them to hold on, the screams just end. You were the one closest to the victim, and other people are calling out to them, but no one is telling you anything and you're only getting what you hope is half of a conversation. You don't know if someone has made it there in time, or if its already too late and you're calling out to the dead. All you can do is head east as fast as you can, begging for the victim to hold on, help is coming. For many onboard the Frankfurt, the Titanic was already gone, sunk just after Olympic's message exchange. All the little steamer can do was listen as ship after ship shouts out into the void, with no response back.
    Frankfurt didn't hear Titanic's message at 1:27 AM, saying that they are putting out lifeboats with women and children.
    Frankfurt didn't hear Titanic at 1:30 AM, saying that they are losing power and don't have much time left.
    Frankfurt didn't hear as the calls get more and more desperate, the engine room and boiler rooms filling with water.
    Frankfurt didn't hear Phillip's response to their question at 1:50 AM, only knowing that they may be the closest ship in the area.
    Frankfurt didn't hear the last transmission from the liner cut out at 2:17 AM as the radio room floods.
    Frankfurt arrived at the last position they received just after 11:00 AM. Her engines are worn out, her crew is exhausted, the galley staff is asleep at their posts surrounded by a mountain of fresh baked bread for the survivors, there are blankets and hot drinks waiting at the railings, and space has been made in every available part of the ship.
    All they can do is help Mount Temple and Californian collect the dead.

    • @austenbin4068
      @austenbin4068 Před 2 lety +1

      Context is a b*tch, but she's the only b*tch for me. Thank you for the post. It's excellent

    • @michaeldunlop8536
      @michaeldunlop8536 Před 2 lety +443

      Thank you. I wish I could push this to the top of the comment section. They must have been heartbroken to arrive too late.

    • @teganceebohm7668
      @teganceebohm7668 Před rokem +146

      Jesus.

    • @aviationlover3613
      @aviationlover3613 Před rokem +116

      Damn.

    • @xmadeinwyoming
      @xmadeinwyoming Před rokem +216

      Thank you for this. I can’t imagine what a horrifying experience that it must have been for them. Well written.

  • @quantomic1106
    @quantomic1106 Před 11 měsíci +806

    Crazy how these people were able to converse like this in dots and dashes.
    Their skills were phenomenal.

    • @zach7948
      @zach7948 Před 11 měsíci +70

      It surprises me that they didn't use even more shorthand. Surely "help" or "aid" are much quicker to transmit than "assistance," for example.

    • @adrianbiankin
      @adrianbiankin Před 10 měsíci +58

      @@zach7948they did use shorthand, just in this video, they used the entire word

    • @Amrod97
      @Amrod97 Před 10 měsíci +65

      The message "CQD This is Titanic" in Morse code looked like this "CQD MGY". Full sentences are written in transcript only.

    • @justanotherhappyhumanist8832
      @justanotherhappyhumanist8832 Před 10 měsíci

      @@Amrod97 What does CQD mean?

    • @justanotherhappyhumanist8832
      @justanotherhappyhumanist8832 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@Amrod97 Also, how does MGY stand for “This is Titanic”? I know nothing about Morse Code.

  • @SteveThaGr8
    @SteveThaGr8 Před 4 lety +5134

    TITANIC: WE ARE SINKING!!! WE ARE SINKING!! REQUEST ASSISTANCE! PEOPLE ARE PANICKING AND DYING!!
    OLYMPIC: oh ok, How is the weather?
    TITANIC: quite calm actually.

  • @somethingsomethingdead7411
    @somethingsomethingdead7411 Před 4 lety +4839

    1912 : a bunch of ships talking
    2019 : a regular discord chat

  • @Sabrinajaine
    @Sabrinajaine Před 3 lety +1177

    The tone changing abruptly from light-hearted messages from passengers to 'CQD THIS IS TITANIC' is gut wrenching

    • @JW-zx5dr
      @JW-zx5dr Před rokem +6

      Ikr

    • @CaptainJZH
      @CaptainJZH Před rokem +127

      You can tell Phillips was in the middle of just sending passenger messages when Smith came in and gave the CQD order

    • @ReveredDead
      @ReveredDead Před 11 měsíci +4

      It's because the ship was losing power. Has nothing to do with emotion or human input.

    • @snowgurl21
      @snowgurl21 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Horrific

    • @piratesswoop725
      @piratesswoop725 Před 10 měsíci +16

      @@ReveredDeadThey’re talking about at the very beginning b

  • @p_filippouz
    @p_filippouz Před 2 lety +609

    31:50 seeing Olympic telling everyone to shut up not to jam Titanic's comunaction is actually very depressing...
    It felt like Olympic was treating titanic like a human sister

    • @thunda7928
      @thunda7928 Před rokem +123

      The practical element of it was that the Olympic was the only one loud enough to be heard. Transmitter effectiveness correlated directly with the amount of power you were able to pump into it. Olympic and Titanic had very robust power generation capabilities for the time, so they would have been the only ones able to cut through the noise of dozens of other ships jamming each other's transmissions.

    • @chipsiss7280
      @chipsiss7280 Před rokem +41

      this is a very late reply but this is due to the fact that the Olympic is the sister ship of the titanic.

    • @p_filippouz
      @p_filippouz Před rokem +13

      @@chipsiss7280 no sh*t?

    • @Ricardocomics14
      @Ricardocomics14 Před rokem +5

      @@p_filippouz Yeah en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RMS_Olympic

    • @p_filippouz
      @p_filippouz Před rokem +5

      @@Ricardocomics14 oh my god? For real??
      Who could've though??
      /S

  • @lenglain
    @lenglain Před 4 lety +6172

    CZcams is truly amazing. To be able to sit down in your underwear and experience something like this is unreal

  • @pat7785
    @pat7785 Před 4 lety +6242

    (Titanic) 20 missed calls

    • @TeodorLojewski
      @TeodorLojewski Před 4 lety +21

      PåT lmao

    • @rasmitdevkota5295
      @rasmitdevkota5295 Před 4 lety +8

      you killed me

    • @masonf7332
      @masonf7332 Před 4 lety +23

      *left on read*

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety +64

      12:15am *Man I"m tired, I'll take a little nap*
      *20 missed calls from titanic*
      *2:15 am: Goddammit*

    • @georgiasmith64
      @georgiasmith64 Před 4 lety +14

      @@joshuazero2277 "the Nextel subscriber you're trying to locate is currently unavailable, at the tone rah rah blah ya da ya da"

  • @LordCaledonFraszer
    @LordCaledonFraszer Před 2 lety +992

    Titanic's wireless set had failed that Sunday morning and was down for several hours. It needs to be said that the _only_ reason Phillips was able to send distress signals at all is because he and Bride disobeyed their written company orders. Marconi policy of the time explicitly stated that operators were not to attempt repairs on equipment under any circumstances; they were only to secure their gear and inform company offices in New York upon arrival.
    Defying their employer, Phillips and Bride spent those hours of down-time in the silent room troubleshooting their gear; they got the transmitter back online and even boosted it's performance a bit. They then stayed at their posts, squeezing every watt out of that transmitter they could, until their cabin began flooding.
    Were it not for their actions, _everyone_ aboard Titanic would have died that night; the ship would have sunk without a word, taking most of the victims with her, the others would have frozen to death in their lifeboats waiting for rescue and no one would have even suspected anything about it until she failed to arrive in New York as scheduled.

    • @CardinalEgan
      @CardinalEgan Před rokem +54

      Attempting repairs will void the warranty...

    • @bertramusb8162
      @bertramusb8162 Před rokem +33

      @@CardinalEgan Next thing you know these upstart hooligans will want a raise for fixing equipment as well as operating it!

    • @Brenhearts
      @Brenhearts Před rokem +4

      Where did you find this info?

    • @janedoe1776
      @janedoe1776 Před rokem +42

      Bureaucracy never saved anyone. What a stupid, reckless and pointless rule. Not much has changed in 110 years

    • @thejakefort
      @thejakefort Před rokem +1

      Hmmmm interesting....

  • @actioncom2748
    @actioncom2748 Před rokem +547

    God bless the guy from Cape Race. He's obviously monitoring the channels and listening to the message's going out. When he thinks one of Titanic's messages has not gotten through, he repeats it on his own to make sure everyone heard it.

    • @frumentarii376
      @frumentarii376 Před rokem +122

      At the beginning the guy at Cape Race manning the radio was a 14 year old apprentice

    • @Laueee95
      @Laueee95 Před 10 měsíci +13

      Must have been traumatic to hear Titanic's voice calling out for help and learning that she lost 50% of her capacity that night.

    • @ryanhampson673
      @ryanhampson673 Před 9 měsíci +21

      Cape Race’s transmitter was probably the most powerful out of everything since it was land based. Relaying messages is still something we do today, I’m a pilot and sometimes other aircraft have to relay a message from ATC to you if you are out of range.

    • @actioncom2748
      @actioncom2748 Před 9 měsíci +11

      @@ryanhampson673 It wasn't so much the power of Cape Race, it was the fact that Titanic's Power was slowly slipping off. As each Boiler Room flooded out, the Transmitter became less and less powerful. There's a great documentary by National Geographic talking about the electricians on for the Titanic. They had to rewire the system as she sank to make sure the lights and the transmitters kept going. Imagine being The Tech Guy on a sinking ship.

    • @shadowpoet4398
      @shadowpoet4398 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Wow.... May the Omnissiah usher him into the Emperor's eternal peace, as a warrior has arrived 😞

  • @insanem5258
    @insanem5258 Před 4 lety +9940

    Poor guy spent his last hours repeatedly explaining to everyone what happened

    • @leithesocialistyuricon8981
      @leithesocialistyuricon8981 Před 4 lety +992

      Imsane M Two operators, last message was Phillips being yoinked away by Bride to find a lifeboat, Phillips died of hypothermia on a boat, Bride, survived and met his good friend aboard Carpathia who was their radio operator.

    • @sebastiangonzalezschwidrow603
      @sebastiangonzalezschwidrow603 Před 4 lety +108

      @@leithesocialistyuricon8981 So when was the switch from Phillips to Bride?

    • @leithesocialistyuricon8981
      @leithesocialistyuricon8981 Před 4 lety +77

      Sebastian Gonzalez Schwidrowski I’m not at all familiar with how wireless communication Worked then sadly..

    • @joelg83
      @joelg83 Před 4 lety +154

      An issue at the time was people making their own sets and sending out fake information. I'm sure that a few people assumed at first it was something like that.

    • @murph7421
      @murph7421 Před 4 lety +17

      @@leithesocialistyuricon8981 Wow, thank you for that extra info.

  • @crazyjoe152
    @crazyjoe152 Před 4 lety +2775

    1912: ALRIGHT OLD MAN
    2019: ok boomer

    • @elm4453
      @elm4453 Před 4 lety +25

      That's better because its faster

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety +176

      Old man is a compliment. Kinda like calling someone 'buddy'

    • @crazyjoe152
      @crazyjoe152 Před 4 lety +24

      @@joshuazero2277You're right! Although I believe in this context it is a term referring to the commander of the ship.

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety +3

      @@crazyjoe152 captains?

    • @crazyjoe152
      @crazyjoe152 Před 4 lety +6

      @@joshuazero2277 Yes, of course I'm no expert but I believe that is what they are called.

  • @aponisuka
    @aponisuka Před 11 měsíci +673

    Would be so cool to see an animation of this. Like using an ocean map like where they are exactly in the ocean while communicating with each other and racing against time to reach Titanic.

    • @braydenwildey3366
      @braydenwildey3366 Před 11 měsíci +53

      This would be amazing! Someone please make this.

    • @themightyangustma2753
      @themightyangustma2753 Před 11 měsíci +35

      Might give it a go, sorry don’t do this kind of thing, would it be okay if I used his audio?

    • @klotz__
      @klotz__ Před 11 měsíci +17

      Here are some maps of all the vessels in the area: paulleeXcom7titanic7pvXphp (replace X with dot and / with slash)

    • @themightyangustma2753
      @themightyangustma2753 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@klotz__ Thanks mate!

    • @finhz
      @finhz Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@themightyangustma2753Good luck

  • @phoenyxashes2064
    @phoenyxashes2064 Před 11 měsíci +272

    For 1912 this type of communication is mind blowing.

    • @zach7948
      @zach7948 Před 11 měsíci +49

      It reminds me of sending text messages on flip phones, one letter at a time, in the early 2000's.

    • @CiRdy34
      @CiRdy34 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Exactly what I thought

  • @Tonys_Gabagool
    @Tonys_Gabagool Před 5 lety +2100

    Titanic:OMFG PLZ HELP! WE HIT AN ICEBERG! WE'RE SINKING!
    Frankfurt: Lol wtf? Brb

  • @sir.barnaby6328
    @sir.barnaby6328 Před 5 lety +1633

    "CQD THIS IS-"
    no ending to the message. gave me chills

  • @richieordeanidc536
    @richieordeanidc536 Před 11 měsíci +442

    the way it goes from lighthearted messages between ships to a relatively calm distress call to pure panic and repeated SOS SOS CQD is actually so scary. in a weird way the fact that so many ships were racing to get to them even though they knew they'd never get there in time is heartwarming.

    • @johnshepard8556
      @johnshepard8556 Před 11 měsíci +40

      Yeah i don't think anybody thought it would go down so fast even the captain was in shock when he realised the ship woukd founder in less than 3 hours i think he was in a catatonic state at that point but i don't thik many other people including the wireless room crew knew how soon the ship would sink so philips stayed for as long as he could and became one of the greatest heros of that night god rest his soul

    • @Calucifer13
      @Calucifer13 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I wouldn´t call it "heartwarming", and most of these ships didn´t make it in time, anyway, and some even refused to come

    • @roy12525
      @roy12525 Před měsícem

      Heartwarming lol

    • @Orly90
      @Orly90 Před měsícem

      @@Calucifer13 Some of them were too far away and too slow to reach her and they knew it.

  • @oxygenbreather1
    @oxygenbreather1 Před rokem +61

    “CQD THIS IS-“ the unfinished sentence is so eerie

  • @MrHestichs
    @MrHestichs Před 5 lety +3328

    I can't even believe to understand the level of frustration at play here.

    • @ontledingen3348
      @ontledingen3348 Před 4 lety +385

      Or the anxiety coming through the messages.

    • @kimberlyklaus7296
      @kimberlyklaus7296 Před 4 lety +98

      Especially whenever he got a message from the Frankfurt...

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety +58

      @@kimberlyklaus7296 What is the matter with you? We're 100 miles off.

    • @centerstagestudios285
      @centerstagestudios285 Před 4 lety +131

      Literally got so pissed he went “FOOL. YOU FOOL.” aka the Edwardian version of “DUMBASS I HATE YOU”

    • @raf.nogueira
      @raf.nogueira Před 4 lety +73

      Must of that is because in that time the communication was one side at time, not full duplex, so when someone is sending the other one need to be listening, and in a chaos situation imagine that, many ships trying to understand each other, the morse was just invented less then 10 years before that, these ships was one of the firsts ships in the world to use this technology.

  • @TheCubicplanet
    @TheCubicplanet Před 4 lety +2092

    The legend says that Frankfurt's radio operator's grandchildren, still send radio messages asking Titanic what is the matter.

    • @andreascovano7742
      @andreascovano7742 Před 4 lety +209

      "titanic from the bottom of the sea: Fuck off, you brainlets"

    • @Halalhurricane
      @Halalhurricane Před 4 lety +71

      Frankfurt is like nvm they sinking but won't tell me why

    • @Cthight
      @Cthight Před 4 lety +45

      "Are you coming to our assistance". Frankfurt just like whats the matter. I would cry out in despair in such a situation. Death is near and they dont get it that its really serious.

    • @potato7617
      @potato7617 Před 4 lety +31

      I think the titanic was better off without the frankfurt, they probably would've rammed the titanic

    • @FriedrichHerschel
      @FriedrichHerschel Před 4 lety +111

      The Frankfurt did immediatly turn towards the Titanic, exceeding their rated maximum speed by 15% at night in iceberg infested waters. They were just too far away to get there in time.

  • @cellocat-sm8lx
    @cellocat-sm8lx Před 11 měsíci +486

    Olympic was such an underrated big sister. Telling everyone to be quiet so her crew could hear her sister's distress calls, and being 500 miles away yet still rushing in to help in any way she could.
    May the memory of those who died that terrible night and the memory of those who tried to help be eternal ❤️

    • @LumpyAdams
      @LumpyAdams Před 11 měsíci +17

      How the fuck can a ship be sO unDerRateD lol.. goddamn.

    • @robinhoodwinker8621
      @robinhoodwinker8621 Před 11 měsíci +16

      Good old Gen Z

    • @insomniac9933
      @insomniac9933 Před 10 měsíci +21

      ​@@LumpyAdamsnot as many people tell her tale or even appreciate her. Most focus is on the sinking itself and not the rescue

    • @craigusselman546
      @craigusselman546 Před 10 měsíci +6

      They should make a movie about the Olympia and it's exploits

    • @ezekiel440
      @ezekiel440 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@insomniac9933but the olympic did not initiate the rescue.

  • @sorenpx
    @sorenpx Před 3 lety +767

    What's most heartening about this is that the entire nautical community stopped what they were doing and started trying to help.

    • @total_epicness6776
      @total_epicness6776 Před 2 lety +60

      However they were sadly too far to reach them in time (or clueless like the frankfurt)

    • @blackopscw7913
      @blackopscw7913 Před 2 lety +7

      @@total_epicness6776 Frankfurt was having problems that night with her mast which will add to any signal sent to her being just in audible therefore she was racing to Titanic without knowing if there was a problem which is quite heroic

    • @PolarizedMechs
      @PolarizedMechs Před 2 lety +91

      That's pretty much the way it is at sea. If someone's in trouble, everyone drops everything to go and help. Nationalities don't matter when that happens.

    • @hobomike6935
      @hobomike6935 Před rokem +14

      @@PolarizedMechs your country becomes your ship out there on the high seas lol

    • @hobomike6935
      @hobomike6935 Před rokem +32

      At least the Carpathia's unending pursuit of the Titanic paid off, and they rescued the few survivors left.
      if everyone had dismissed it as "probably not _too_ serious the way the _californian_ did, no one would have survived

  • @bobzeepl
    @bobzeepl Před 4 lety +1341

    So, talking to Frankfurt was like talking to an Indian call center. Just with so much more at stake.

    • @ThatDangerousWolf
      @ThatDangerousWolf Před 4 lety +18

      Rob Z. OMG 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 Most underrated comment ever.

    • @truesoulghost2777
      @truesoulghost2777 Před 4 lety +45

      I thought the same thing.
      Indian call center worker: are you satisfied with the assistance you have received?

    • @Agomacule
      @Agomacule Před 4 lety +15

      Language barrier though

    • @Saffy1
      @Saffy1 Před 4 lety +6

      Well maybe learn German next time ?

    • @camuigackpo
      @camuigackpo Před 4 lety +6

      Funny, cause Frankfurt is german, so it litterally was.

  • @rdvgrd6
    @rdvgrd6 Před 5 lety +2391

    the next day:
    FRANKFURT TO TITANIC:
    BUT WHATS THE MATTER WITH YOU?

    • @keenbean8428
      @keenbean8428 Před 5 lety +22

      i laughed outloud

    • @ChronoStar
      @ChronoStar Před 5 lety +20

      You'd think that with how long it takes for these messages to send, they'd write something down!

    • @neglesaks
      @neglesaks Před 5 lety +71

      Lag kills you every time, be it 1912 or 2012.

    • @bernihautzi1604
      @bernihautzi1604 Před 5 lety +10

      Titanic: ...

    • @AA-bs3iy
      @AA-bs3iy Před 4 lety +16

      Frankfurt to titanic What's your fucking problem

  • @sonnestrasza2149
    @sonnestrasza2149 Před 2 lety +542

    It was insanely loud on the sinking Titanic, so it was extremely difficult to hear the beeps as is. Also, imagine having to listen carefully and translate beeps into words during this crisis. Jack was doing this until the last possible second.

    • @FlatEarthKiller
      @FlatEarthKiller Před rokem +9

      Jack wasn’t there. James cameron’s movie is inaccurate.

    • @FlatEarthKiller
      @FlatEarthKiller Před rokem +28

      Though Jack Philipps existed

    • @sergeantdornan7000
      @sergeantdornan7000 Před rokem +59

      ​@@FlatEarthKillerpretty sure they meant Jack Phillips

    • @FlatEarthKiller
      @FlatEarthKiller Před rokem +5

      @@sergeantdornan7000 yes, that was me obsessed with titanic, now im obsessed with flat earth killing

    • @zanotellitb5457
      @zanotellitb5457 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@FlatEarthKillerlmao, at least you were honest

  • @salivatinggreed4219
    @salivatinggreed4219 Před 11 měsíci +119

    Starting at 30:31 I don't know why but Olympic's request to "STOP TALKING" due to jammed signals is morbidly amusing to me. It's like telling a room of panicked people to "just shut UP! everyone!" so they can hear Titanic. Reminds me of an elementary school classroom.

  • @queenfan45
    @queenfan45 Před 5 lety +5058

    The saddest part is that clearly everyone is racing to the Titanic to help, yet they were all too far. It could have been the greatest rescue at sea of all time, but instead it was the greatest disaster.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 5 lety +305

      The greatest disaster at sea was the Wilhelm Gustloff with 6x the casualties of Titanic.

    • @CalcifersKeeper
      @CalcifersKeeper Před 5 lety +307

      Frankfurt fucking thought it was a joke.

    • @YabaiModding
      @YabaiModding Před 5 lety +571

      @@CalcifersKeeper Frankfurt had a german operator, they couldn't understand english.

    • @CalcifersKeeper
      @CalcifersKeeper Před 5 lety +344

      @@YabaiModding That's a real problem. The more and more I've done research about the titanic over the years, it seemed like when the Captain gave the orders 'woman and children' the crew got confused and thought he meant *only* women and children. The whole tragedy is terrifying to think about.
      Edit: Especially all the life boats that were half full and half empty. I couldn't imagine the feeling those people felt that were told they couldn't be put into a life boat.

    • @TheTrueAdept
      @TheTrueAdept Před 5 lety +204

      @@Anna74308 the thing was that the Californian was NOT 20 miles out, it was greater than that but people believe that bullshit because of reports of lights off starboard. There was a weather phenomenon at work that night that screwed with the human perception of the horizon. In addition to that, the Californian was NOT under steam at the time, it was on standby and that required an hour of preparation and work to get under steam again...

  • @TheCubicplanet
    @TheCubicplanet Před 4 lety +425

    2:46 Frankfurt, the first ship to respond the distress call, the last one to understand what's going on. Oh, the irony.

    • @Agusnico-yq5wv
      @Agusnico-yq5wv Před 4 lety +63

      They understood something was wrong and they were coming to the rescue. But they were too far away to get there in time and they wanted details

    • @Agomacule
      @Agomacule Před 4 lety +42

      They also were German.

    • @fenceunderscore7410
      @fenceunderscore7410 Před 4 lety +40

      they thought it was a lighthouse apparently lmao

    • @drpingpongs2593
      @drpingpongs2593 Před 4 lety +1

      @@fenceunderscore7410 lmao

    • @someoneelse583
      @someoneelse583 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Agusnico-yq5wv i thought they were one of the closest? 100 miles compared 500 miles?

  • @joulskafilms8815
    @joulskafilms8815 Před 11 měsíci +294

    I know this is really tragic and it should be taken seriously but I find it kinda funny that at one point all the transmissions get jammed and Olympic just says “STOP TALKING.” 😭😭

    • @kobodas
      @kobodas Před 11 měsíci +46

      roblox chat fr

    • @Lulu-pd1zb
      @Lulu-pd1zb Před 10 měsíci +1

      That is pretty funny 😂🙂

    • @amy.ilcsfm
      @amy.ilcsfm Před 10 měsíci

      Right 💀

    • @richardparker2555
      @richardparker2555 Před 10 měsíci +34

      I thought the opposite. That part was horrifying because it showed how desperate everyone one was getting and that panic was starting to get hold of them as each ship realize they weren't going to make in time. The frantic beeping only madie it more anxiety inducing

    • @WindowsDrawer
      @WindowsDrawer Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@AsoGamer33Stfu

  • @understatedwalrus
    @understatedwalrus Před 2 lety +428

    What always grabbed me is that the radio set had broken during the voyage, and, against company orders that only technicians in port were allowed to service the set, Philips and Bride had stayed up all night and actually managed to fix it. If they'd followed company rules, there would've been no working wireless that night, and nobody would've known that anything had even gone wrong until days later when Titanic didn't show up in NY. Titanic would've just disappeared without a trace somewhere in the Atlantic, and every so often for the next couple years someone would have come across a lifeboat or two full of frozen corpses. Every single person who survived is because they broke the rules and got the set working.

    • @spaceoddity3958
      @spaceoddity3958 Před 11 měsíci +3

      There is no doubt they went well beyond to help save life's that awful night. Yet, they maybe could of saved everyone if they had done their duty correctly and passed on the ice berg warning to the bridge hours before disaster.

    • @chocothebananacat7686
      @chocothebananacat7686 Před 11 měsíci +18

      ​@@spaceoddity3958They had already sent multiple ice warnings to the bridge that day. The Captain was aware they were heading into an ice field. Even if he had passed them on, it is unlikely it would have made any difference as all the procedures for ice were already in place.

    • @karlosskrak
      @karlosskrak Před 11 měsíci

      Absolute heroes

    • @yiman7370
      @yiman7370 Před 11 měsíci +2

      If this would have happened today... they'd definitely still not have the set working cuz today most people r like sheep, doing whatever a policy says

    • @CapCrunch45
      @CapCrunch45 Před 6 měsíci +3

      They invoked their “right to repair” before right to repair became thing. And they made a difference.

  • @tildawoof7
    @tildawoof7 Před 4 lety +3820

    This must have been frustrating to keep sending the same stuff and having no one understand you when you are about to die.

    • @auroraborealis8229
      @auroraborealis8229 Před 4 lety +183

      The titanic said to the Frankford “ FOOL.YOU FOOL.” Etc

    • @MrYouarethecancer
      @MrYouarethecancer Před 4 lety +277

      @Abcity Frankfurt turned around almost immediately and exceeded safe speeds. They were simply too far away.

    • @ky5657
      @ky5657 Před 4 lety +4

      oh wow 666 like

    • @SuAva
      @SuAva Před 4 lety +20

      The captain of the Californian was just a dick, tho

    • @juanp2664
      @juanp2664 Před 4 lety +58

      Suzanne The operator of the Californian was asleep even tho earlier the Titanic operator told him to shut up (they were 20 miles away and did not see Titanic)

  • @zenphire
    @zenphire Před 4 lety +2415

    It’s even sadder when the first message isn’t even a distress call, it’s a message about coming to New York :(

    • @ReportsOnChina
      @ReportsOnChina Před 4 lety +144

      Cocoawhirl They were sending messages on behalf of passengers.

    • @shape-shiftingcatandhermin2508
      @shape-shiftingcatandhermin2508 Před 4 lety +187

      Chilling that the words used were "will be with you in spirit" too given that passenger could have been one of those that died

    • @sturmovik5448
      @sturmovik5448 Před 4 lety +59

      Makes you wonder if the sender was alive a few hours later. But, if not, that would be a pretty good final message to a loved one.

    • @jeremyud
      @jeremyud Před 4 lety +74

      @@sturmovik5448 I think it was likely a woman sending a message to a male friend in New York, so there's a chance she made it. Women had a 73 percent chance of making it.

    • @noobplayerbr388
      @noobplayerbr388 Před 4 lety +3

      You have now 666 likes

  • @CallmeJAYNE
    @CallmeJAYNE Před 2 lety +62

    Feels like i just watched a chaotic WhatsApp group chat. Titanic pleading for help, Californian sleeping through the whole thing, Olympic telling all stations to stfu and poor Frankfurt getting yelled at even though it was the first to respond. This so heartwrenching.

  • @aster_angel
    @aster_angel Před 11 měsíci +97

    The way the formal communications were replaced to panicked and rushed ones were heartbreaking. 😭

  • @snowflake09161
    @snowflake09161 Před 4 lety +3166

    you can _see_ the operator slowly becoming more panicked over time. that’s scary

    • @sophiaredwood5825
      @sophiaredwood5825 Před 4 lety +139

      ~LuigiFan~ This whole video is terrifying

    • @Sea-zu4bj
      @Sea-zu4bj Před 4 lety +61

      Very eery. I would have liked to be an operator back then but no onboard the titanic

    • @adaharrisonn
      @adaharrisonn Před 4 lety +46

      Cause everyone was replying so god damn obliviously and doing next to nothing about it

    • @Kromaatikse
      @Kromaatikse Před 4 lety +180

      @@adaharrisonn Well, Frankfurt seemed to be. Several other ships set course and put on speed, but it's hard to cover 100+ miles of ocean quickly in a ship that'll only make 15 knots on a good day. Many of the messages were about ascertaining the situation and the conditions likely to be found on arrival, so they could prepare.
      *Carpathia* was particularly notable. She was 58 nautical miles away from the disaster on first receiving the CQD call, and covered the distance in 3.5 hours, an average speed of 16.5 knots - remarkable for a ship whose normal service speed was 14 knots and her *sea trials* speed was just 15.5 knots. This was achieved by double-manning the boilers (which were coal fired, so needed men with shovels) and cutting off heating to the cabins. This made her the first ship on scene, an hour and a half after Titanic sank.

    • @adaharrisonn
      @adaharrisonn Před 4 lety +139

      @@Kromaatikse yeah, the carpathia was the real mvp. You can tell they truly dropped everything to go aid titanic and pushed themselves to the limit to get there in time. Or try to :'(

  • @youneszadi2332
    @youneszadi2332 Před 5 lety +557

    "CQD THIS IS....", can't imagine what a moment like that would be like

    • @leithesocialistyuricon8981
      @leithesocialistyuricon8981 Před 4 lety +75

      YOUNES ZADI One of the radio operators was yoinked from post just in time by his fellow operator, one died in 1956, one died of hypothermia in a life boat.

    • @Sarastarlight100
      @Sarastarlight100 Před 4 lety +1

      @Smokes McGee I agree.

    • @killiakakinnet9071
      @killiakakinnet9071 Před 4 lety

      ​@@leithesocialistyuricon8981Harold Bride died of lung cancer in 1956, Jack Phillips was the one who was torn away from his station and died that night.

  • @people6117
    @people6117 Před 2 lety +22

    “Dining with you in spirit tonight” broke me man. They had no idea.

  • @JitJit-ESPI
    @JitJit-ESPI Před 11 měsíci +29

    Carpathia to Titanic: We are coming your way coming at full speed doing 15 knots.
    Hats off to Capt. Rostron and all the Carpathian crew on that fateful night.

    • @ganymede12283
      @ganymede12283 Před 10 měsíci

      👏

    • @sirboomsalot4902
      @sirboomsalot4902 Před měsícem +1

      It's been suspected that they may have been able to get her up to 17 knots depending on who's calculating how far she went in what time.

  • @mr.scatman3131
    @mr.scatman3131 Před 4 lety +814

    Titanic: “COME AT ONCE. WE HAVE STRUCK A BERG. IT’S A CQD OLD MAN.”
    Carpathia: “ShAlL i TeLl mY CaPtaIn? Do YoU ReQUiRe AsSIsTaNcE?”

    • @pedroakjr2371
      @pedroakjr2371 Před 4 lety +96

      no, we can handle that, just letting y'all know lol

    • @arfansthename
      @arfansthename Před 4 lety +17

      Titanic: Yeah! Duh! (-_Q)

    • @thedeuce1374
      @thedeuce1374 Před 4 lety +63

      "No, when I said come at once I meant that I want you to start jerking off. YES WE NEED ASSISTANCE!"

    • @ethanhatcher5533
      @ethanhatcher5533 Před 4 lety +23

      I mean, she redeemed herself by rescuing the survivors

    • @michael88h
      @michael88h Před 4 lety +3

      I mean they made up for it. They came for titanic.

  • @IgKravenchenko
    @IgKravenchenko Před 4 lety +939

    we're sinking
    frankfurt: u wot m8?

    • @goldi955
      @goldi955 Před 4 lety +16

      Language barrier

    • @3brendan933
      @3brendan933 Před 4 lety +7

      we are a sinking ship!!
      you're a whot???

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety +9

      Frankfurt was a German boat, English and European Morse code are different so they needed translators. Took awhile to understand each other.

    • @ereder1476
      @ereder1476 Před 4 lety +2

      @@goldi955 stop with that BS of language barrier, SOS and CQD are interational term, same with the position

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety +5

      @@ereder1476 CQD wasn't international. SOS was, even so they still need to know what is going on

  • @avavulpes9106
    @avavulpes9106 Před 11 měsíci +54

    Kinda made me cry. Imagine being alone in the darkness of the ocean, realizing your ship is sinking and hoping that these little beeps in your ear will manifest in aid for the lives on your vessel.

  • @caffplays
    @caffplays Před rokem +31

    0:51 - This part hurts hard my soul; Titanic:"weather delightful. Feeling fine. Hope all... "

  • @raxnm2851
    @raxnm2851 Před 4 lety +1286

    TITANIC:
    COME AT ONCE. WE HAVE STRUCK A BERG. IT’S A CQD OLD MAN.
    CARPATHIA:
    DO YOU REQUIRE ASSISTANCE?
    *Boi*

    • @michaelz7683
      @michaelz7683 Před 4 lety +81

      It was the standard procedure from marconi to confirm a distress signal

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety +75

      They wanted to confirm the distress call. It's why today you need to say "mayday" 3 times so the other vessels around don't misunderstand.

    • @michaelz7683
      @michaelz7683 Před 4 lety +15

      @Mary's Mother protocol is protocol. Had they instantly went without confirming the message and it turned out to be a false alarm, or in the inquiry with them doing nothing. It would look bad

    • @annas9882
      @annas9882 Před 4 lety +8

      @@michaelz7683 how would "hit a berg require assistance" possibly be misunderstood. If they went to that and it turned out to be nothing, it would be better than not arriving soon enough. And that's basic common sense.

    • @bjfincher773
      @bjfincher773 Před 4 lety +4

      @@annas9882 Could have been the tail end of a passenger's message - 'Dear Jack, I'm writing 'Hit a berg. Require assistance' in this telegram as a jolly old jape. Yours sincerely, Rose'

  • @emimoon1712
    @emimoon1712 Před 5 lety +2029

    WEATHER DELIGHTFUL. FEELING FINE.
    HOPE ALL
    WAIT NVM SEND HELP

    • @andmos1001
      @andmos1001 Před 5 lety +53

      Thats emergency Messages for you. It will ignore every single personal Messages to get across

    • @user-ge4uk9ui8y
      @user-ge4uk9ui8y Před 4 lety +31

      that was a civilian telegram to george simund, new york by another passenger. it wasn't made by the titanic crew.

    • @squares4u
      @squares4u Před 4 lety

      Marissa Lopes Isn’t that a personal message from Titanic?

    • @Sarah.Riedel
      @Sarah.Riedel Před 4 lety +12

      So, "civilian messages" still had to go through the Titanic's telegraph operator who would transcribe it from the written text - the passenger cabins didn't have their own Morse Code stations. The operator was in the middle of sending George Sigmund's message when the impact happened and he immediately began transmitting a distress call.

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety

      @@Sarah.Riedel they struck the Berg an hour before. The captian didn't think it was that serious until an hour later

  • @robmemeoverlord6399
    @robmemeoverlord6399 Před 2 lety +228

    Every time they say “Old man” I feel sad. It’s very endearing and almost hopeful, like “Hang in there old man were coming to the rescue, hang on!”. But they were too late ):

    • @Larpushka
      @Larpushka Před 11 měsíci +16

      Morse code abbreviation, I don't think it's meant as endearing but saves time in communication

    • @ThePointlessBox_
      @ThePointlessBox_ Před 11 měsíci +34

      Old man is a morse code abbreviation, it refers to the operator so you dont need to type out names etc. They wouldnt spell out ''old man'' but just type out ''OM''

    • @phillyedhrj
      @phillyedhrj Před 2 měsíci

      The band conditions must have been rough.

    • @phillyedhrj
      @phillyedhrj Před 2 měsíci +1

      Female operators are called YLs (Young Ladies)

  • @bio_5467
    @bio_5467 Před 11 měsíci +108

    48:20 I can’t imagine just how frustrated he must of been hearing that message after spending hours frantically sending out messages

    • @mattybob12310
      @mattybob12310 Před měsícem +1

      What this doesn't give you, is the sense of range, Frankfurt had a powerful emitter but a poor receiver, she could talk to Titanic but they couldn't hear her responses, so all they knew is that someone was in trouble and they were making best speed for the location, Frankfurt was an old ship that still relied on sails for a good portion of her speed. Frankfurt's radio man left to get their own position to reply to Titanic (misunderstanding), and when he got back all hell had broken loose on the channel and he could no longer hear Titanic as her range was dampened by lack of electricity to the communications equipment. A lot of Titanic's messages after 01:30AM are being heard by no-one. Frankfurt arrived the next day all ready to receive Titanic's stricken passengers but all they could do was help sift through the Dead, after making full speed all night.

  • @k444ng
    @k444ng Před 4 lety +1344

    Frankfurt to Titanic: we are 100 miles off. what is the matter with you?
    Titanic: *fool. you fooL-*

    • @pedroakjr2371
      @pedroakjr2371 Před 4 lety +25

      What's the meaning of that? were they being offensive or is it code language to something?

    • @dracos0024
      @dracos0024 Před 4 lety +338

      @@pedroakjr2371 Basically the fact that Frankfurt still asked what's the matter while the Titanic made it abundantly clear that they're sinking I'm guessing.

    • @raulssorban
      @raulssorban Před 4 lety +209

      That's such a respectful and impactful insult, like a true gentleman being in a near-death situation

    • @pedroakjr2371
      @pedroakjr2371 Před 4 lety +27

      @@dracos0024 I mean, I don't understand how things worked at that time, but couldn't that be that many different people were operating this terminal called Frankfurt? It's hard to believe it's the same person asking hundreds of time the same question.

    • @dracos0024
      @dracos0024 Před 4 lety +34

      @@pedroakjr2371 Pretty sure there was only one person on transmitting duty (or whatever it's called) at a time. Otherwise you'd get the same ship transmitting the same message 10 times over.

  • @waiifey
    @waiifey Před 4 lety +1226

    Titanic: BRO WE GOING DOWN
    Frankfurt: 🆗🆒

    • @savantianprince
      @savantianprince Před 4 lety +2

      I think the Germans wanted the Titanic to go down.

    • @Cygnator
      @Cygnator Před 4 lety +69

      @@savantianprince That hast got to be the stupidest shit I've heard this week

    • @yourbrotherfromanothermother21
      @yourbrotherfromanothermother21 Před 4 lety +11

      Kim Lowe wow are you fucking stupid? not gonna bother writing a whole paragraph explaining this shit

    • @JA01WJ
      @JA01WJ Před 4 lety +16

      @@savantianprince world War 1 wasn't happening yet during 1912. WW1 Started in 1914. 2 years after Titanic sunk

    • @xdbym
      @xdbym Před 4 lety

      Yes ,the Frankfurt operator was an idiot , Harold Bride and Harold Cottam say that in his own words

  • @nathanviebranz9111
    @nathanviebranz9111 Před 10 měsíci +26

    “Fool. You fool! Stand by. Stand by. Stand by and keep out! Keep out!”
    That message to Frankfurt was unspoken by a human voice. However, the anger and desperate frustration behind it as Phillips’ ship was quickly dropping from underneath him, knowing the situation was deteriorating and that his short life was likely coming to an end along with many others, makes his emotions in that moment quite palpable even through coded messages and text.

  • @jacobrutty1109
    @jacobrutty1109 Před 2 lety +132

    Imagine how fast time flies when you're as busy and panicked as Philips increasingly was. Suddenly there's water coming into the room and the ship breaks up minutes later. That's the scariest part of the Titanic for me. The people left aboard had legit minutes to react once all doubt was removed near the end.

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 Před 2 lety +18

      While the actual time was minutes, the passengers and crew experienced it the exact opposite. Harold Bride and Jack Phillips likely felt like they'd spent days hammering out those messages, time from your perspective just freezes, events that take literal minutes feel like hours.
      If you've never experienced it, looking back at the event it is an incredibly unsettling feeling.

  • @Bill23799
    @Bill23799 Před 4 lety +704

    The boilers had to release steam pressure building up or they would explode.
    It made a very loud shrieking noise and that's what the radio operator means
    when he says can not hear you because of steam noise.

    • @Halalhurricane
      @Halalhurricane Před 4 lety +2

      I thought can hear nothing of noise of steam mentioned the steam being fine

    • @QuintinKerby
      @QuintinKerby Před 4 lety +35

      For those of you not acquainted with history, the steam he was referring to was actually high pressure, high temperature water vapor, and not the gaming platform.

    • @John-bx2vm
      @John-bx2vm Před 4 lety +21

      @@QuintinKerby Are you sure? that note that plays when tf2 launches is kinda loud

    • @Bananoker
      @Bananoker Před 4 lety +20

      THIS IS TITANIC, CAPTAIN IS BROWSING STEAM. OLD COMPUTER NOISES TOO LOUD. CQD CQD CQD

    • @Bananoker
      @Bananoker Před 4 lety

      I know there was no computers in 1912

  • @AlmaMarie333
    @AlmaMarie333 Před 4 lety +1740

    Frankfurt is the definition “a bit confused but got the spirit”

    • @savantianprince
      @savantianprince Před 4 lety +84

      The Frankfurt was a German ship. Using German technology of the day. Titanic used Marconi telegraphy which is different from what the Frankfurt was using.

    • @AlmaMarie333
      @AlmaMarie333 Před 4 lety +22

      Kim Lowe
      I’m aware. It’s a joke.

    • @Feliday
      @Feliday Před 4 lety +45

      lol.
      but to be serious, there might have been a language barrier and the messages were too complicated to understand. especially at night where everyone is tired.

    • @AlmaMarie333
      @AlmaMarie333 Před 4 lety +5

      Feliday
      Yeah I know, I just said it for the sake of the joke.

    • @tlabang83
      @tlabang83 Před 4 lety +29

      I wonder which person had to live with being called a Fool in this tragedy. Dang.. self esteem killer:/

  • @DKrueger1994
    @DKrueger1994 Před 2 lety +96

    Wireless Call Signs:
    MGY - Titanic
    MPA - Carpathia
    MCE - Cape Race
    MWL - Californian
    DYA - Ypiranga
    DFT - Frankfurt
    SPCJ - Mount Temple
    MKC - Olympic
    SBA - Birma
    MRA - Caronia
    MBC - Baltic
    MGN - Virginian
    MKL - Asian

  • @Valz_niK
    @Valz_niK Před 2 lety +181

    1. Jack Phillips and Harold Bride were relieved of their duties by Captain Edward Smith by 2 a.m. Titanic time,
    Knowing that the power to the Titanic was almost *COMPLETELY* out.
    They were told that they've done all they can and should start saving (or bracing) themselves.
    But Phillips stayed despite their spark was almost out, that's why he's testing out "V" (51:13)
    2. While this man was frantically communicating sending out CQDs and SOSs,
    Another crew member sneaked in and tried to steal Phillips' life-vest,
    But he's struck and foiled by Bride.
    3. Only by 2:17 a.m. Titanic time when the water flooded his post,
    Phillips and Bride get out of their post and split up, with Bride heading forward and Phillips heading for the aft.
    That was the last time Bride ever saw Phillips.

    • @thecomedypilot5894
      @thecomedypilot5894 Před 2 lety +10

      Now I've heard that the two men evacuate the Marconi room around 2:10 am, and that no water was flooding into their room because I think the ship was at it's final plunge at that point.

  • @jflsdknf
    @jflsdknf Před 5 lety +1878

    The way Titanic and Carpathia called each other Old Man, the two operators must have been friends :'(

    • @drwmink
      @drwmink  Před 5 lety +1358

      You're absolutely correct. Harold Bride, the junior operator on the Titanic was friends with Harold Cottam, the operator on the Carpathia. Harold Bride survived by holding onto an overturned, unlaunched lifeboat. He was reunited with his friend on the Carpathia and assisted survivors getting messages to loved ones.

    • @CodexArgenteus
      @CodexArgenteus Před 5 lety +322

      I loved that - added so much realism to it! It was a sweet moment in an otherwise terrible experience. You could tell it's just two buds chatting.

    • @hopel4822
      @hopel4822 Před 5 lety +206

      Old Man was common wireless slang at the time since it was tapped out as only "OM"

    • @TheEmeraldMenOfficial
      @TheEmeraldMenOfficial Před 5 lety +198

      stirling OM is a normal greeting in Morse code. It’s their equivalent to “buddy” or “pal” or “dude”.

    • @shizu-chan3942
      @shizu-chan3942 Před 5 lety +176

      @@drwmink thank God he survived. Thank god. He worked so hard and selflessly. Thank GOD.

  • @cosmonautg1430
    @cosmonautg1430 Před 5 lety +2706

    Titanic: *WE HAVE STRUCK AN ICEBERG. SINKING. REQUEST IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE. WOMEN AND CHILDREN ONBOARD. COME AT ONCE.* (message sent 20 times)
    Frankfurt: _What's the matter with u?_

    • @Diego-zz1df
      @Diego-zz1df Před 5 lety +329

      For what I heard:
      1) Frankfurt was among the first ships to signal Titanic that they were comming at full speed.
      2) It was a german ship and had trouble understanding messages in english.
      3) There were lots of problems getting messages across ("OLYMPIC: STOP TALKING").
      4) The technology was still new and problematic.
      5) They did come, but were too far away to be of any assistance.

    • @cosmonautg1430
      @cosmonautg1430 Před 5 lety +101

      ​@@Diego-zz1df I didn't address as they were stupid or unprofessional or anything like that, it's just funny how the message also contained CDQ and SOS signal sent over 20 times and the Frankfurt still couldn't recognize the criticality of the situation. It's like calling 911 after getting stabbed 30 times and the Dispatcher still asks you if you could hold the blood over and over, even when they probably have sent assistance as soon as receiving the call, as well for Frankfurt but it's just irritating to see that as an outsider sometimes.

    • @abloogywoogywoo
      @abloogywoogywoo Před 5 lety +37

      @@Diego-zz1df What good did they do? Showing up the next day, long after the ship and many lives were lost, again, *what good did they do?* Except piss off a man who is about to die, with stupid fucking questions long after the CQD was repeatedly issued. How high and mighty of them - or just plain incompetent. They merely added to the miscommunication and delay. Now, the Carpathia, on the other hand....

    • @abloogywoogywoo
      @abloogywoogywoo Před 5 lety +22

      @@cosmonautg1430 Exactly. Its almost like they were trolling Titanic in its plight, at that point.

    • @herauthon
      @herauthon Před 5 lety +47

      @@abloogywoogywoo - becareful not to cast yourselfs in the fire .. made for others you do not know.
      as stated - there where language barriers - and the technique was new and not yet developed..
      What have you instagrammed today... what you will deny in 10 years ?

  • @CFLsurfr
    @CFLsurfr Před rokem +179

    It's very emotional knowing that once all the other ships were fully aware of Titanic's state, they all raced to her as fast as they could. Some being able to go much faster than others, and especially Olympic deperately trying to get to her sister but far, far away. Everyone that could do something, did something, and risked hitting icebergs themselves doing it. It's easy to pick on Frankfurt, but they were also one of the earliest to respond and there was confusion and shock not to mention the language gap. It's just extremely unfortunate that nobody was closer at the time, and those that were, weren't manning their radios at midnight. What was going through Captain Smith's mind as his quarters filled with water. A lifetime of admirable service to the navy and WSL and he was to retire the next day and raise his daughter in the States. Unreal.

    • @ashleyl3699
      @ashleyl3699 Před 11 měsíci +20

      well, except the californian, which literally watched titanic sink from 20 miles away and did nothing to help.

    • @piiinkDeluxe
      @piiinkDeluxe Před 11 měsíci +17

      Frankfurt even started baking bread for the suvivors as soon as they were on their way. 😢

    • @Negs42
      @Negs42 Před 10 měsíci +4

      ​@@ashleyl3699the Californian was not 20 miles away. There was a weather phenomenon at work that day which interfered with the spotting of the horizon

    • @katie-oo4li
      @katie-oo4li Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@ashleyl3699that’s literally not true at all

    • @teresas8173
      @teresas8173 Před 9 měsíci

      @@ashleyl3699… on the Californian there wasn’t anyone on the radios at night. So the Californian received messages far too late. After this occurred it was mandatory that radios be manned around the clock. Also there was some unusual weather phenomenon that happened that evening and the Californian could not see the Titanic, although I think they saw flares. Idk, I want to research about the response or lack thereof of the Californian. They had warned Titanic about icebergs earlier that day. They were reprimanded ( the Captain fired, I believe) by both the the US and the British for not responding. I don’t think we’ll ever really know. It’s difficult to think they did or didn’t do anything purposely to help the Titanic, but I do not know.

  • @LostProxyNevermore
    @LostProxyNevermore Před 11 měsíci +48

    Jack Philips had just turned 25… The amount of bravery all of these men had on the Titanic was insane. It makes you cringe so hard at “Captain” Schettino, who wrecked the Costa Concordia

  • @Tmccreight25Gaming
    @Tmccreight25Gaming Před 5 lety +2203

    This is sobering...
    But the Olympic telling the other ships to shut up was hilarious

    • @yoshistar100
      @yoshistar100 Před 5 lety +70

      @Gappie Al Kebabi 31:34

    • @gordonilaoa1275
      @gordonilaoa1275 Před 5 lety +93

      When you have more then five people in the party chat

    • @Spyrika
      @Spyrika Před 5 lety +166

      What's even funnier in a way is that the Olympic is the sister ship to the Titanic. So it's like "shut up randoms, let me help my sister!"

    • @Historyfan476AD
      @Historyfan476AD Před 5 lety +84

      You know i'm actually surprised how "quiet" Carpathia is though all of these messages. as the rescue ship you would have thought she would have talked a lot more than she did.

    • @Sphynxle
      @Sphynxle Před 5 lety +85

      HistoryFan476ad I think at that point there wasn’t much more to say to her. They’d located their position and told her they were heading at full speed twice. What else could you do?

  • @yummyEnchilada
    @yummyEnchilada Před 5 lety +585

    Olympic to Titanic:
    Hey! what weather have you been having?
    Titanic to Olympic:
    OUR ENGINES ARE BEING FLOODED

    • @CodexArgenteus
      @CodexArgenteus Před 5 lety +37

      Probably wanted to know the reason for the flooding; probably Olympic assumed maybe a major swell or something? Olympic was a fair ways away at the time and Titanic was considered unsinkable so to then say the weather is calm and clear would have definitely freaked everyone out!

    • @midnightstar4066
      @midnightstar4066 Před 4 lety +24

      yeah also they would need to know what the weather was for when they got there so they could take necessary measures to keep their own passengers safe during the rescue attempt.

    • @TheKonga88
      @TheKonga88 Před 4 lety +5

      @@CodexArgenteus Oh right, after Titanic had said a hundred times we've hit a berg.. 😂😂😂😂😂😂⛴️⛴️⛴️⛴️⛴️🏃🏃🏃🚢🚢🚢🚢This why when I travel, only drive or take my bike so I don't have my life in the hands of incompetent retards. 🏃🏃🏃

    • @ThatDangerousWolf
      @ThatDangerousWolf Před 4 lety +1

      Kunta Kinte They would need to know if it were storming so they could be prepared.

    • @shawnk8685
      @shawnk8685 Před 4 lety +6

      @Kunta Kinte so instead you put your life in the hands of the highway designers

  • @felixculpa9303
    @felixculpa9303 Před 3 lety +248

    I love how the distress call was sent out and everyone who heard it endeavoured to help.
    Sadly they couldn’t but they all wanted to.

    • @eastbow6053
      @eastbow6053 Před 10 měsíci +7

      california: *i sleep* 😴

  • @CatherineAaBb
    @CatherineAaBb Před 11 měsíci +71

    I know some things in Morse code and learned a lot about it but I've never guessed about the high level of Morse code skills and knowledge radio operators should have just to type simple phrases
    They're very fast, wow

  • @winter0710
    @winter0710 Před 4 lety +887

    Titanic: *sending messages about sinking for hours on end*
    Frankfurt: do ya’ll hear sumn?

    • @Adamdidit
      @Adamdidit Před 3 lety +5

      that was actually the exact issue......titanic's messages werent getting through for long periods of time

    • @senatorarmstrong8960
      @senatorarmstrong8960 Před měsícem +3

      The Frankfurt was a small steamboat with a shitty reciever, which is why the operator had no fuckin idea what was happening. They could barely hear anything

  • @flargmuffin92
    @flargmuffin92 Před 4 lety +515

    Legend has it "Frankfurt" is still out there, aimlessly searching and wondering "What's the matter?!"

  • @patrickmurphy3632
    @patrickmurphy3632 Před rokem +102

    The fact that they all worked so hard (all of them) makes me cry. Especially to the ships trying to stay in contact and telling Titanic to stay with them.
    Lots of people tried to help. They were just too far.

  • @darthkahn45
    @darthkahn45 Před rokem +173

    He may have lost his life that night but we are here all these years later remembering him and his last acts. Well done Jack you were clearly scared to die but stayed at your post even after the captain relieved you. Good show OM

  • @brandonfeng3780
    @brandonfeng3780 Před 4 lety +513

    Titanic SOS for several hours
    Frankfurt: VOT EEZ EET
    Titanic: fOoL

    • @CarolineForest
      @CarolineForest Před 4 lety +32

      actually very accurate, there was a language barrier and the Frankfurt operator only knew German morse, so he litterally only understood the "CQD and SOS" and nothing else, and this was before the time where CQD was 'need immidiate assistance' ment urgent. It could just have been a fault that needed fixing but could wait until morning, and not urgent, just 'we have issues'.

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety +5

      @@CarolineForest CQD and SOS are international distress calls. Germans would understand what it means

    • @CarolineForest
      @CarolineForest Před 4 lety +14

      @@joshuazero2277 it was because of the titanic incident that it became as urgent as today. Back then CQD could be a minor thing that can wait until morning... in 1912 it was a bit diffrent and after that they adjusted the rules to try and prevent this from happening again

    • @joshuazero2277
      @joshuazero2277 Před 4 lety +2

      @@CarolineForest CQD and SOS are not even used anymore. Now it's "mayday"

    • @CarolineForest
      @CarolineForest Před 4 lety +13

      @@joshuazero2277 I am litterally from a fisher-family, fishermen for generations, grown up on sea to boat, I was taught how to call for help on sea. we most deffinatly still use other things than 'mayday'. But seems like you are just here to argue because you are bored so I wont induge you. Have fun

  • @Taketheshot56
    @Taketheshot56 Před 4 lety +1524

    Man the most heartbreaking part is when the Olympic told everyone to shut up and tried to talk to her sister ship for a final time. Unable to help being just too far away.

    • @yuliap4135
      @yuliap4135 Před 4 lety +2

      What time is that at?

    • @amvanime3556
      @amvanime3556 Před 4 lety +48

      Peanut Butter 31:00

    • @yuliap4135
      @yuliap4135 Před 4 lety +6

      @@amvanime3556 Thank you

    • @cloud.zero.
      @cloud.zero. Před 4 lety +20

      @@amvanime3556 was actually 32:00

    • @goodshipkaraboudjan
      @goodshipkaraboudjan Před 4 lety +63

      Yeah that hit hard, the Captain would have been stoked that another company ship was on the way so they might have at least some co-ordination.

  • @MajoradeMayhem
    @MajoradeMayhem Před rokem +30

    Titanic to Olympic: "Sis, come quick!"
    Cape Race to Californian: "Why the hell aren't you helping?"

  • @lightclawwdum4163
    @lightclawwdum4163 Před rokem +83

    the ending is absolutely terrifying, the last distress signal sent by the titanic wasn’t even finished and it was sent at 2:17 AM, keep in mind that 2:17 AM was approximately the time when the titanic was starting to split apart

  • @JayDeeDonuts
    @JayDeeDonuts Před 4 lety +573

    the last 20 mins kinda got me sad the man spent his last moments typing. even though he was offered a life boat. this is a true man.

    • @KCU_Unfiltered
      @KCU_Unfiltered Před 4 lety +77

      He was bout the only means for communication for help. All those people needed help. True hero indeed.

    • @PrinceJes
      @PrinceJes Před 4 lety +40

      Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one's life for one's friends. John 15:13

    • @edenburger5847
      @edenburger5847 Před 4 lety +20

      Miguel Torres no the person who survived was Harold Bride, the person typing and in charge was Jack Phillips he made it to the boat but died of hypothermia

  • @EliottSontot
    @EliottSontot Před 4 lety +2824

    The end is absolutely terrifying when you realize the last message ever sent by the Titanic wasn't even completed - they probably didn't have time to finish the message as water was coming inside the wireless room.

    • @bloom9075
      @bloom9075 Před 4 lety +247

      the ship was starting to split after they sent that at 2:17 and it split in half completely at 2:20

    • @adamlopes9883
      @adamlopes9883 Před 4 lety +268

      It's unlikely that the radio room filling with water was the cause. At the time they used Marconi Spark Gap transmitters, which needed quite a bit of power to operate (and sounded nothing like the clean beeps you hear here). Most probably the electrical supply failed long before water reached the bridge.

    • @EliottSontot
      @EliottSontot Před 4 lety +86

      Doesn't seems unlikely when you consider water would have been rushing through the boat deck around 2:10am, making it logical the wireless room would be flooded around 2:15am or so. From the moment water flooded the upper decks (B, A and finally, Boat Deck), Titanic sank much faster, which is logical considering the amount of water that was inside the whole ship at this time. But it might also be an electrical supply failure as well for the same reasons too, in fact we'll never know for sure why this last message was never completed; either because of water or power decrease.

    • @Daag
      @Daag Před 4 lety +239

      Hello. There is a story about the two operators. The one that signalled for the most part died, and the other one survived. The surviving one recalled that he had to drag the other operator away from the communication system, because the main operator insisted on continuing to communicate to the other ships and send for help, which is probaby why the transmissions actually stopped. The one that died was named John George Phillips. I Recommend reading his wikipedia article, it's very interesting. Sorry if i type unclear, english is not my first language.

    • @Amperzand
      @Amperzand Před 4 lety +121

      @Tyler Jolly the marconi equipment was wireless. Because the transmissions crossed oceans ...without wires! Did you think there were wires across oceans thousands of miles long?!!

  • @AccountRemoved101
    @AccountRemoved101 Před 11 měsíci +51

    Everyone in it's range were ready to help. It's very distressful how it was basically inevitable fate for the ship, and everyone knew that all they would find would be scraps left to collect.

    • @DalekWindmill
      @DalekWindmill Před 11 měsíci

      Everyone except the Californian, which happened to be the closest by far. Woops.

  • @tedstriker7248
    @tedstriker7248 Před 3 lety +120

    Crazy to think that the messages at the beginning of the video were 12: 15 am, which is over 30 minutes after the ship hit the iceberg. The ship was sinking but the telegram operators were still working on passenger messages at first. Just shows how the drastic nature of the situation wasn't immediately obvious.

  • @TheCubicplanet
    @TheCubicplanet Před 5 lety +255

    Frankfurt. Trolling the high seas since 1912.

  • @litlpupup
    @litlpupup Před 4 lety +662

    *”Don’t you hear Olympic calling you?”*
    Why did that give me chills

    • @kobaltteal7139
      @kobaltteal7139 Před 4 lety +47

      Maybe Cos Olympic was Calling her younger Sister to see whats up.

    • @neilwiseman6129
      @neilwiseman6129 Před 4 lety +40

      @Abcity
      Phillips couldn't hear due to the roar of steam from the boilers being released.

    • @thebitsanpiecesman4423
      @thebitsanpiecesman4423 Před 4 lety +1

      Shocking that all of Olympics boilers weren't lit

    • @ph89787
      @ph89787 Před 4 lety +15

      @@thebitsanpiecesman4423 Even if they were. Olympic could have only sped up to 24 knots. Which was 2 knots slower than the Mauritania.

    • @brette6854
      @brette6854 Před 4 lety

      I don't know

  • @AsoGamer33
    @AsoGamer33 Před 10 měsíci +23

    31:37 olympic really said "everyone shut up" but in 1912 ship language

  • @rubblerage1101
    @rubblerage1101 Před 2 lety +65

    I'd like to see a movie told from Carpathia's perspective. Hearing these transmittions and dropping everything to help

    • @geofffikar3417
      @geofffikar3417 Před 2 lety +7

      There is a documentary on here about the Carpathia that tells the story.

    • @dysmissme7343
      @dysmissme7343 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@geofffikar3417oh?

  • @Uejji
    @Uejji Před 5 lety +702

    "We're abandoning ship! We're going to die!"
    "So, how's the weather?"
    "Pretty good."

    • @passionoflovers
      @passionoflovers Před 4 lety +44

      ITS ACTUALLY PRETTY NICE!!! A LITTLE ON THE CHILLY SIDE, BUT YOU KNOW... BEING ON THE ATLANTIC AND STUFF... HEHE.. GOTTA GO SINKING FAST!!!

    • @jalapenochomper
      @jalapenochomper Před 4 lety +19

      Seriously, everyone bagging on the Frankfort but they had a language barrier (read the post, much of the Marconi slang is edited out in this video).
      Almost every message from the Olympic is clueless. Sister ship. Same White Star Line. Same language. Same slang. "Are you coming to us". Clueless!

    • @MC-bo6ql
      @MC-bo6ql Před 4 lety +3

      CLEAR AND CALM

    • @Brandon3060
      @Brandon3060 Před 4 lety +34

      It would actually make sense to ask how the weather was in the area you were racing to.

    • @luisantoniohernandezdauaja6961
      @luisantoniohernandezdauaja6961 Před 4 lety +35

      For a ship rushing to assist another ship in an emergency situation, that is actually a very opportune question.

  • @orangesquirrel1408
    @orangesquirrel1408 Před 5 lety +557

    you have to understand the Frankfurt was under the impression the Titanic was a lighthouse

  • @Strelnikov403
    @Strelnikov403 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Love the contrast between the shrill beeps of the tiny shipborne transmitters and the powerful, booming voice of the shore station at Cape Race. You can bet all the operators at sea sat up straight when the Cape came on the net!

  • @jospenner9503
    @jospenner9503 Před rokem +77

    Cheers to the person who not only typed up all of the transcriptions, but also created the Morse code. To imagine that these sounds could communicate all the action that happened in the Atlantic ocean that dreadful night.

    • @Commander_Koyke
      @Commander_Koyke Před 11 měsíci +11

      Be like Samuel Morse:
      - Receives a letter telling him his wife has gone ill
      - He comes home
      - Realizes that he was too late and her wife died
      - Frustrated he then invented the morse code which is the greatest invention of all time

    • @eastbow6053
      @eastbow6053 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@Commander_Koyke universe: oki sir your wife died before you can reach her, it is what it is
      morse: *creates morse code*
      universe: bruh that is cheating
      morse: *middle finger as he joins his wife in the afterlife*

  • @Arkeze
    @Arkeze Před 4 lety +1644

    Went in thinking, this looks mildly interesting but there’s no way I’m going to sit through almost an hour of this, I’ll just watch first few minutes then skip to end. I watched the entire thing.

  • @minecraftkid50978
    @minecraftkid50978 Před 4 lety +127

    Those first messages "dining with you in spirit!" Oh how terribly right he was

  • @nickb5229
    @nickb5229 Před 11 měsíci +292

    I know you made this a long time ago, but if you ever felt like making a part 2 I’d be interested to hear the communications in the hours after she sank too.

    • @kobodas
      @kobodas Před 11 měsíci +9

      yeah

    • @ms.550
      @ms.550 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Yes please

    • @leluthor5357
      @leluthor5357 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Maybe he missed the messages like the californian😅

    • @justanotherhappyhumanist8832
      @justanotherhappyhumanist8832 Před 10 měsíci +7

      I’d be interested to hear the ones before as well! Just to see how they spoke to each other casually.

    • @KingThrillgore
      @KingThrillgore Před 10 měsíci +8

      Most of it is probably that old chestnut the Frankfurt going "What is the matter Titanic" and the other ships like "dude, if you're not going to show up, read the room"

  • @philoshaughnessy906
    @philoshaughnessy906 Před 11 měsíci +28

    Once I started watching it was impossible to look away. Gripping and heartbreaking. All one can think is: "If only"

  • @Gideon_the_Seraph
    @Gideon_the_Seraph Před 4 lety +4651

    This is actually incredibly haunting. Scarier than any dramatisation I've seen.

    • @Gideon_the_Seraph
      @Gideon_the_Seraph Před 4 lety +12

      @@j.s.2620 yeah exactly

    • @mitchjames8384
      @mitchjames8384 Před 4 lety +149

      Yeah i agree, knowing that theemres one or two blokes in a room frantically trying to call for help while people are running around screaming outside

    • @narumaki6674
      @narumaki6674 Před 4 lety +6

      Not as good as the rumbling, isnt it, my fellow compatriot.

    • @Gideon_the_Seraph
      @Gideon_the_Seraph Před 4 lety +7

      @@narumaki6674 Hail Eldia.

    • @mellowhateseverybodyandals1289
      @mellowhateseverybodyandals1289 Před 4 lety +16

      its rlly scary when the old man doesnt FUCKING UNDERSTAND YUO

  • @agantmaruta4014
    @agantmaruta4014 Před 4 lety +440

    The fact that we could only listen to flat monotone morse code make it somehow really really haunting

    • @ThatChester
      @ThatChester Před 4 lety +33

      No words spoken. Just texts of pure distress in an attempt to seek immediate help.

    • @agantmaruta4014
      @agantmaruta4014 Před 4 lety

      @@ThatChester exactly '-'

    • @theguylivinginyourwalls
      @theguylivinginyourwalls Před 4 lety +21

      @@agantmaruta4014 Then: CQD THIS IS TITANIC. CQD THIS IS... then *silence.* I feel like everybody they contacted who knew what was going on _knew_ what happened then. No more words need be said. It was over. All that was left was to try and save whoever was left.

    • @agantmaruta4014
      @agantmaruta4014 Před 4 lety +1

      @@theguylivinginyourwalls mhm yep

    • @RB01.10
      @RB01.10 Před 2 lety +2

      @@theguylivinginyourwalls I feel that was either the moment the power failed or the ship broke in half.

  • @shobhitsingh6330
    @shobhitsingh6330 Před 3 lety +65

    Is it just me who feels the horror emanating from these musicless, wordless sounds, they contain the message of death.

    • @geofffikar3417
      @geofffikar3417 Před 2 lety +2

      I bet everyone of us who watched this felt that and some people here
      said they were crying.

  • @lalmuanpuiamizo
    @lalmuanpuiamizo Před 10 měsíci +14

    All they have is dot dash, yet every capable operator trying their best to help their friend in distress. This thing gets me so emotional, much more than the movie itself

  • @jajai6377
    @jajai6377 Před 6 lety +2118

    Imagine calling 911 and having the Frankfurt's wireless operator on the other end
    -"I've been shot, please send help"
    -"What's the matter with you?"
    -"I just told you, i've been shot, please send me an ambulance"
    -"oh ok, will do"
    -"Thanks, good god"
    ...
    -"What's the matter with you?"

    • @TheFattHatt
      @TheFattHatt Před 6 lety +56

      Underrated comment

    • @FriedrichHerschel
      @FriedrichHerschel Před 6 lety +76

      Those are not the complete logs, but all the maker could find. The Frankfurt did change course to the Titanic, but was 140 miles away and arrived ~ 10 hours later.

    • @uncleruckus9670
      @uncleruckus9670 Před 6 lety +22

      LOL Holy fuck,comments like these is why CZcams is amazing.

    • @unocnco
      @unocnco Před 6 lety +15

      Also you had a bit of a language barrier with the Frankfurt which was a German Liner.

    • @cynderfan2233
      @cynderfan2233 Před 5 lety +32

      Titanic probably couldn't hear Frankfurt's signal properly, so the radio operator on Frankfurt kept getting CQDs with no further info or direct message return. So he kept signalling what the matter was?

  • @QuantumShock1
    @QuantumShock1 Před 5 lety +171

    29:36 [Multiple simultaneous transmissions] - The 1912 equivalent of *several people are typing...*

    • @_VictorGrantz_
      @_VictorGrantz_ Před 4 lety

      Quantum Shock lmaoo

    • @Roytulin
      @Roytulin Před 4 lety +5

      The difference being simultaneous wireless transmissions render all of them unreadable. This remains an issue in radio communications today in aviation and sailing.

    • @xandercreates6766
      @xandercreates6766 Před 4 lety

      Except it jams when they try to send

  • @jackiekreutzer166
    @jackiekreutzer166 Před 10 měsíci +24

    This is one of the most heartbreaking, haunting, yet fascinating things I've ever seen. The timestamps of the lifeboats being launched is chilling to me.

  • @thetherrannative
    @thetherrannative Před 2 lety +49

    No one could ever possibly match Jack Phillips' professionalism and heroism. To put aside the terror he must have been feeling to stay on the line for that long took a steel soul.

    • @chrisinnes2128
      @chrisinnes2128 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I'm quite sure that another wireless operator in Halifax about 4 years later could and did

    • @sirboomsalot4902
      @sirboomsalot4902 Před měsícem

      @@chrisinnes2128 “Stop the trains. Munitions ship afire in port. This will be my last message. So long to you boys.” I believe it was something like this.