Who Sank The Titanic? - The Secrets Behind the History | Free Documentary History

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  • čas přidán 26. 11. 2020

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  • @Luke-qs1yc
    @Luke-qs1yc Před 3 lety +4926

    Is it just me or is the titanic like an anomaly in your brain? I never get tired of hearing about it.

    • @ihrtaehyung
      @ihrtaehyung Před 3 lety +94

      same

    • @paulanthony5274
      @paulanthony5274 Před 3 lety +183

      It's so fascinating,the disaster was terrible but it's also left something with us,the most incredible story and the greatness of the ship will never be surpassed,she's more than just a ship,there's something very special about it all.

    • @MrSavinafresh
      @MrSavinafresh Před 3 lety +76

      I watch the movie titanic countless times lol

    • @chooubutdiff4729
      @chooubutdiff4729 Před 3 lety +31

      Same I watch the movie everyday

    • @tasminking4692
      @tasminking4692 Před 3 lety +23

      U couldn’t have said it any better lol

  • @Exodus-sb8so
    @Exodus-sb8so Před 3 lety +1644

    The scariest part of the sinking of the titanic is when the lights go out and the sound of the metal breaking in the pitch darkness of the Atlantic Ocean.

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Před 3 lety +130

      Can you imagine what that must have been like? Shivers.

    • @clarenceboddicker6679
      @clarenceboddicker6679 Před 3 lety +114

      What a way to die, trapped in the pitch darkness of the ship as it sinks beneath the waves.

    • @Chaseful
      @Chaseful Před 3 lety +17

      there is no evidence of that actually happening, they just put in the movies to make it look cool. ships are not made of metal, they were made or iron and steel

    • @donnix768
      @donnix768 Před 3 lety +173

      @@Chaseful Didn’t happen huh? My great grandfather was a crewman who survived the sinking. The sound of that monster breaking apart sending funnels crashing down was a noise so terrifying he said it could not be replicated by anything else. It was a sound that he would hear in his mind for the rest of his life.

    • @Chaseful
      @Chaseful Před 3 lety +13

      @@donnix768 But you dont know that for sure. People lie to make things more dramatic.

  • @wearequeens4698
    @wearequeens4698 Před 3 lety +1280

    I can't get enough of documentaries or stories about Titanic.

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 Před 3 lety +12

      Me, neither!

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Před 3 lety +18

      Around the time the movie came out there were tons of shows & docs on it. I definitely OD'd. Books too.

    • @techtech2333
      @techtech2333 Před 3 lety +4

      Ain't that the truth ✨🙏✨

    • @donnix768
      @donnix768 Před 3 lety +3

      @@techtech2333 My great grandfather survived the wreck. Albert Horswill, look him up on encyclopedia Titanica. He was accused of accepting a bribe from a wealthy couple along with some of his fellow to not return to the wreck to pick up passengers in the water.

    • @Gracekeys5
      @Gracekeys5 Před 3 lety +6

      I am a travel advisor and I believe we will have a Titanic 2 hitting the waters sometime between 2022 - 2024. A Transatlantic Cruise Ship ladies and gentlemen. There has been some talk about it. If so, that’s going to be so amazing.

  • @victoriahowe3190
    @victoriahowe3190 Před rokem +282

    i still can’t believe the titanic was inspected and approved with 16 lifeboats out of 48, that’s insane

    • @ideasboutique
      @ideasboutique Před rokem +20

      They didn't have time to fill 2 of the lifeboats, so more wouldn't have necessarily helped.

    • @Geoplanetjane
      @Geoplanetjane Před rokem +5

      She was supposedly unsinkable

    • @dianawardrip5171
      @dianawardrip5171 Před rokem +39

      Due to greed, even in 1912.

    • @yvonnethomas5118
      @yvonnethomas5118 Před rokem +3

      FACTS 💯

    • @davidrotter3862
      @davidrotter3862 Před rokem +8

      Alexander Carlyle had specialized davits made to accommodate 4 life boats each! 4 x 16 is 64! It was a 14 month long battle to get the intended 64 down to 16! There is a “late 19th century” complacency written all over this story. E J Smith was not a great captain. He wrecked the Olympic, the Coptic, the Baltic and then he ignores warning after warning about a massive 80 mile long, 30 mile wide field of Ice 🧊 directly in his path. April 12th 9:00 am SS Coronia sent out the first message with the critical MSG heading (Master Service Gram intended for the Captain or an officer on the Bridge.)
      For the lookouts, it would have been painful to stare into 25 mile per hour, 25 degree Fahrenheit wind. Their eyes would have been tearing up nonstop. Without binoculars to block that icy wind, it would have been incredibly hard to peer into a moonless night and see what most people in this community know to be a “Blue Berg” or Black Berg” which is when an Iceberg is in its melting stage and has flipped and gone “turtle” so instead of white glistening edifice shining in the night, you have crystal clear glass like Ice that you can see right through. Then there was the weather. The capper is that from the day the Titanic left Belfast she was on Fire.
      White Star had to commission coal from other vessels just to make the one way crossing of the Atlantic. So many warnings, included the last one she would get, from Evans on the Californian around 11:00 🕚 pm the night of the sinking. From choosing ordinary steel to choosing 16 lifeboats to ignoring hazardous ice warnings, it would have been a miracle had they not sunk! All souls involved deserve to rest in peace, but this tragedy was so utterly avoidable that it is almost manslaughter. No boats, no one to look after them, no multinational linguistic system, no public address system. How 3rd class passengers were treated was rather bad in critical areas. The Titanic did give birth to the International Ice Patrol so this wouldn’t happen again. It also gave birth to a multibillion dollar industry with the exploiter class at the very top. Of the 1500 innocent men, women and children who lost their lives to the frozen depths, not a cent of movie or book, music and merchandise money ever went to their families. It is these 1,500 people that paid the ultimate price for this “blood money” so now the best thing to do is have the titanic society start to seek out the relatives of these victims so that a wrong being committed for the last 111 years can start to be made right.

  • @TangoOne
    @TangoOne Před 3 lety +575

    It's crazy that for 2 years as the Titanic was being built, the iceberg was moving into position to unbuild it.

    • @pauljosse
      @pauljosse Před 2 lety +30

      Yeah 100 metres to the right no worries. So many things went wrong it's unbelievable

    • @mimato
      @mimato Před 2 lety +50

      It took two years to build her, but took only two hours to snap in half and sink. 😢

    • @indridcold8433
      @indridcold8433 Před 2 lety +23

      All the iceberg had to do was tare along the dotted line.

    • @savantianprince
      @savantianprince Před 2 lety +8

      Devine justice for it's ungodlyness.

    • @MrChickennugget360
      @MrChickennugget360 Před 2 lety +9

      Ironically Titanic is in much better shape than her sister Ship Olympic. Which is nothing but razer blades and who knows what else these days- Scrapped in 1930's while Titanic has a cozy place at the bottom of the ocean.

  • @Objection_23and1
    @Objection_23and1 Před rokem +673

    OceanGate has literally taken me back to my Titanic obsessed era…. Rest in peace to each and every soul lost.

    • @porschamarie1446
      @porschamarie1446 Před rokem +18

      Me too!!

    • @donsharma6136
      @donsharma6136 Před rokem +20

      yes i am revisiting the horrible tragedy of the titanic..it has claimed 5 more souls..

    • @n7shepart461
      @n7shepart461 Před rokem +8

      me too

    • @ameliaricafort5556
      @ameliaricafort5556 Před rokem +4

      Me too

    • @jaelkalashnikov3833
      @jaelkalashnikov3833 Před rokem

      Once again, the ARROGANCE of one man cost the lives of others. Stockton Rush was as arrogant as this so called captain if not even MORE, as he laughed or got angry when safety and his reckless regard for others was addressed. It makes me angry to hear his "friends" call him an explorer or brave when in fact he was a narcissistic madman hellbent on cutting corners and firing anybody who dare call him out on his Madness! He's a MURDERER. A DEAD MURDERER but still a MURDERER and no HERO!!!!!!

  • @jerriedenham2320
    @jerriedenham2320 Před 3 lety +675

    Who is watching in 2021? 109 years after the sinking? I am still intrigued by the titanic. Sad sad tragedy and so many innocent lives lost over greed of Whitestar lines.

  • @DaveAllen85
    @DaveAllen85 Před rokem +97

    “The last lifeboat leaves with over 1600 people left onboard.”
    Absolutely bone chilling 😞

    • @Harley08
      @Harley08 Před rokem +8

      It’s pathetic that they were concerned about Luxury and not equipped with enough safety equipment for the passengers. I heard that 64 boats was needed, but there was only 16 boats.

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před rokem +6

      Lifeboat No 1 left with only 12 people, 7 of them crew. The other 5 were members of the Duff Gordon party.

    • @shawnkeith1164
      @shawnkeith1164 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Additional lifeboats wouldn't have helped. They didn't have time to launch all they had aboard.

    • @b.williams9473
      @b.williams9473 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@Harley0848 boats were needed, per the original order.

    • @b.williams9473
      @b.williams9473 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@shawnkeith1164No, they launched them all, the lifeboats. They were not filled, though. There were a couple collapsible boats that was launched by Lighrtower, but one turned over. That was the one that Lighttower was on when he rescued the communications guy.

  • @stellarwind1946
    @stellarwind1946 Před rokem +287

    The lesson here is to never call a ship unsinkable

    • @nikolemacon5254
      @nikolemacon5254 Před rokem +23

      Remember on the movie when that man said , not even God Himself can sink this ship

    • @nikolemacon5254
      @nikolemacon5254 Před rokem +37

      You don't play with God. I have respect for God and the water

    • @koyamma9575
      @koyamma9575 Před rokem +6

      Once again the word unsinkable has taken 5 lives more close to 111 year old unsinkable

    • @larryhoey9250
      @larryhoey9250 Před 11 měsíci +4

      I don't the ship was ever called unsinkable buy the builders.. more like that it was almost unsinkable..

    • @giarc888
      @giarc888 Před 10 měsíci +12

      No such thing as a unsinkable ship.

  • @THiSGuYJeFFeRY
    @THiSGuYJeFFeRY Před 3 lety +947

    It's amazing how this tragedy is still heavy on our hearts. We never get tired of hearing about it.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před 2 lety +26

      SHAME THEY MURDERED ALL THOSE PEOPLE.

    • @antonypelling9194
      @antonypelling9194 Před 2 lety

      You mean;We never get passed being fooled by it ! This was an insurance scam & backed as a fait acomplie by British Gov.

    • @michellealinateague9892
      @michellealinateague9892 Před 2 lety +14

      Its still present because the mystery of its sinking was so profound it scared the world.

    • @toxiczombiewolf5692
      @toxiczombiewolf5692 Před 2 lety +16

      @KiLDiG Horror Movie Archive its still tragic as it could have been avoided yes people die but when disasters can be prevented its devastating that all those people died to many poor choices. I too love to hear about stories like this but it's still sad knowing lives are lost in so many sinkings and other disasters natural or not.

    • @peterpaul669
      @peterpaul669 Před 2 lety

      The problems we are facing today, is coming from that point, WHO Order to Crash the Titanic.? That happen in 1912, months before the Federal Reserve came to America, and who was in the Titanic? The very rich millionaires that oppose the Federal reserves. So connecting the dots, by 1913 the feds stablish themselves in America, is the same people that invented the quantitive banking, base on all compound interest. In 1912, if you borrow $50K, you pay back $50K, but with the compound interest you pay $150K back. So the feds, pay the congress, the judges and put agencies like HUD, the Division of Mortgage Lending, even the Bar Association, all agencies suppose to work for us, but they are there to protect the banks.

  • @napalmstickylikeglue
    @napalmstickylikeglue Před 3 lety +673

    Disaster rarely occurs over one event. Often it's a series of poor decisions, or lack of action that causes it.

    • @loveywilliams4276
      @loveywilliams4276 Před 3 lety +27

      Yes they didn’t care to put in more safety measures so they could set sail sooner. Some people forget that there were stowaways and a few others aboard without tickets but not stowaways so they were overpacked. They used the wrong metals for the rest of the titanic, they didn’t report the iceberg soon enough, they didn’t stop to replace some metal for special machinery that was melting and overheated because they didn’t want to stop and delay, they didn’t use the right signals when using radio and they didn’t use the right flares to signal for help. Yeah there was so much that went wrong in the making of the Titanic.

    • @lozzylols
      @lozzylols Před 3 lety +17

      There is a list a mile long of little errors all of which could play a part. Even something like Olympics accident causing the delay of Titanics Maiden voyage.... If that hadn't happened she would have sailed when there was less danger of ice!
      It's as if a lot of special forces put her in that position at that time, in that condition. This is when I believe some things can not be avoided. Sometimes, sadly, major things need to happen to ensure changes for the future!

    • @k1ng319
      @k1ng319 Před 3 lety +9

      wrong way if saying it. disaster is not coused by an accident. its a series of chains of events that lead up to the collision

    • @timothyreed8417
      @timothyreed8417 Před 3 lety

      @@loveywilliams4276 could you clarify please. What machinery was melting and overheated. What should have been the right flares? What safety measures were not put on?

    • @flametitan100
      @flametitan100 Před 3 lety +5

      @@loveywilliams4276 Er... What?
      There may have been stowaways, sure, but when the total occupancy of known occupants puts her only 2/3 full, you'd need a _LOT_ of stowaways to be "overpacked." I'd think someone might notice she was overbooked at that point.
      The metal is subpar compared to modern metallurgy, but was of standard quality for shipbuilding in 1912. The only people who remarked on it was the Board of trade asking if the ship used any special metals like the Lusitania class did (as this would affect certain stress equations) to which WSL said, "Nope, this is the normal stuff, use the normal calculations"
      I'm not sure what you mean by "Didn't report the iceberg soon enough."
      The only instance of anything possibly overheating is a coal fire that warped some metal of a bulkhead. It was unlikely to have caused any significant effect on the ship sinking, as this would have been the bulkhead for compartment 6
      They used the Marconi standard of CQD and later on switched to the relatively new SOS for their distress calls. Ships in the area knew exactly what it meant; the problem was distance, not confusion.
      The Socket Signals launched were regulation signals; Just because the Californian crew didn't bother to double check what was going on didn't mean they were.
      A lot of the bad decisions that led up to the sinking were mostly on the front of inadequate regulations (that were known to be inadequate for over a decade at this point) and an industrywide cavalier attitude to ice, problems that I should emphasize were _not_ unique to the Titanic or her crew. If the Titanic didn't hit the berg we'd be hearing about how the Mauretania struck an iceberg with massive loss of life instead.

  • @robroy488
    @robroy488 Před rokem +78

    Since I was 6-7 years old and first read about it in a book on my parents bookshelf, I have been absolutely fascinated by the story. I'm 40 now and my youngest girl has been fascinated by it since she was 6 years old, it's a truly timeless, magnetic tale, the size of the ship, the opulence, the fact it was on its maiden journey, the fact it was considered "unsinkable" the speed of the sinking, the hubris in fitting it insufficiently with lifeboats, the depth and temperature of the water it sank in, the Captains terrible decision making etc etc. Its something that, once aware of, it's extremely hard to not be fascinated by.

    • @davidhill4141
      @davidhill4141 Před 11 měsíci

      The real story is worse! The Titanic didn’t even go down! There was a switch before the maiden voyage. The Olympic was sunk . She had been damaged twice. They pulled an insurance scam. Captain Smith was in on the scam . That’s why he ran through the berg field so fast. So Morgan’s plan worked. He killed Astor and robbed America of a just money system ! And got paid for sinking a damaged ship! Win win!!

    • @jenniferparks3567
      @jenniferparks3567 Před 7 měsíci +5

      I adore this. I was same age when I watched a Titanic movie that was made in the '50s.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      Don't die as a disbeliever

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@jenniferparks3567s suicide not allowed

    • @robroy488
      @robroy488 Před 5 měsíci

      @@jenniferparks3567 "a night to remember" I think that was called. Great film!

  • @ewoloubamaeric2721
    @ewoloubamaeric2721 Před 3 lety +389

    Honestly I thought I was the only one who just couldn't get the Titanic off my conscience. It's like a magnet that draws me to watch it's doom everytime.

    • @Cunning.Stunt7
      @Cunning.Stunt7 Před 3 lety +13

      I'm the same. Titanic, Jfk, Marilyn Monroe, 911, UFO disclosures.... its because its all absolutely riddled with controversy and pain, yet who got away with it....

    • @caseyoakes4789
      @caseyoakes4789 Před 3 lety

      I believe it was sunk by a German sub probably wrong though

    • @Xeno1001
      @Xeno1001 Před 3 lety +3

      @@caseyoakes4789 everyone said it was an iceberg, the time it sank match when icebergs flowed down from the northern ice caps, WW1 didn’t start for another 2 years, probably not a U-Boat, no war was declared between the UK and Germany, so… why would a German sub sink a liner, also, the torpedo explosion would have left a huge hole in the side of the ship, so why is there none visible on the wreck.

    • @caseyoakes4789
      @caseyoakes4789 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Xeno1001 you know we had a war ship that saw the distress lights from the Titanic our ship was looking for the u boat

    • @Xeno1001
      @Xeno1001 Před 3 lety +3

      @@caseyoakes4789 I stay on my point, why is there no visible torpedo damage on the Titanic, and what warship, do you have any idea how vague that is, what was its name, was it a destroyer, cruiser, what was it, I know there were other ships in the area but no “warships” to my knowledge, and certainly no U-Boats.

  • @chadmccoy8032
    @chadmccoy8032 Před 3 lety +760

    It seems no matter how many docs I watch about the Titanic, I always Learn sometimes new.

    • @nstl440
      @nstl440 Před 3 lety +16

      You probably just forget a lot;) the positive side is that docs stay interesting

    • @katiemaige4275
      @katiemaige4275 Před 3 lety +3

      Same

    • @0mally13
      @0mally13 Před 3 lety +14

      True, I'm getting to the point where I know everything, well not everything. I want to visit a titanic museum soooooo bad!

    • @donnix768
      @donnix768 Před 3 lety +15

      @@0mally13 My great grandfather was a crewman on the rms titanic. He survived on lifeboat one. His name is Albert Horswill, you can read about him on Encyclopedia Titanica and you can read about the controversy with his lifeboat on wikipedia under the page “Titanic Lifeboat No.1.”

    • @0mally13
      @0mally13 Před 3 lety +5

      @@donnix768 incredible, God bless his soul with what he saw that night, and all those lives he probably put before his own.🙏🏼

  • @garyhillman4993
    @garyhillman4993 Před 2 měsíci +16

    My neighbour in Leeds had a pass for the Titanic she was to work as a hairdresser onboard . She was taken ill at the time and didn’t board the ship .Then in 1977 in her early 80 s both her and her husband still alive showed me the boarding pass and paperwork showing her wages . She said she was so upset at the time not boarding then the news came through of the sinking she started crying still in shock some 60 + years on . We moved across the City in 1977 that was the last time seeing her, Mrs Proctor and Husband

    • @HayleyGardening22
      @HayleyGardening22 Před 18 dny

      That would have made her a young teenager at the time. So how did she have a husband? Also how was she a hairdresser so young? A hairdresser from the early 20th century earning enough for a ticket on the Titanic, okay 😂. She must have had to be severely ill not to go seen as the trip would have been at least a week so plenty of time for her to get better while sleeping in her cabin. For her to still have the boarding pass is weird, as surely she would have sold her ticket. There were only 112 passengers who didn’t make it on. Most of those were first class passengers (which she wouldn’t be as a hairdresser) and crew (who had gotten drunk in Southampton the night before and didn’t make it to the ship on time. There was one woman called Maude Powell who was meant to be on the ship but couldn’t go due to being ill but it can’t be her as it’s a different sir name. Basically, what I’m trying to say is your story is bollocks!

  • @paulinegauthier1867
    @paulinegauthier1867 Před rokem +69

    My friend's grand-father was on the Carpathia when they picked up the surviving Titanic passengers. I would have loved to have spoken to him about that...

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před 10 měsíci

      Could have asked what they were doing in an ice field when they were headed from New York to the Mediterranean.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Don't die as a disbeliever

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      Suicide not allowed

    • @BassJunky-music
      @BassJunky-music Před 2 měsíci

      @@aj6954it wasn’t it was headed to New York from Southampton

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před 2 měsíci

      @@BassJunky-music She is talking about the Carpathia not the Titanic. Carpathia was going to what is now Rijeka in Croatia when it picked up the Titanic survivors.

  • @Nicolemarieee13
    @Nicolemarieee13 Před 2 lety +377

    Wow. Anything that COULD have gone wrong, WENT wrong. Rest In Peace all those lost. ❤

    • @appletile2887
      @appletile2887 Před rokem

      Would be passenger in New York
      Well, now how do I get a refund for these tickets???

    • @scottwarren4998
      @scottwarren4998 Před rokem +2

      There is no one to blame for the disaster.
      Slag is weaker than iron. However, the slag-rivets was punched into titanic in a wrong way, making the slag even weaker.
      But you can't blame the one/ones who ordered titanic to be built that way, they didnt know that slag-rivets got weaker by being punched that way. in laboratory, the
      slag-rivets built in a wrong way failed at about 10 000 oif pressure. However, even iron-rivets built in a right way, couldn't take 14 000 of pressure in the laboratory.

    • @applemauzel
      @applemauzel Před rokem +14

      This is why you never call something unsinkable... there's always someone who takes up on the challenge.

    • @jimp9151
      @jimp9151 Před rokem

      Anyone that believes the official narrrative of what happened is a fool. Look into the history of who was on that boat, what they believed, and why very powerful men would want them out of the way. It's no coincidence that the Federal Reserve was formed the next year in 1913. Do the research and THINK.

    • @thoji215
      @thoji215 Před rokem +6

      ​@@applemauzel White Star never actually called the ship unsinkable. The news had used the term "unsinkable" and this was taken further in the movie saying that "God could not sink the ship" which was never actually said. This leads to people believing such a thing.

  • @GrnArrow092
    @GrnArrow092 Před 2 lety +78

    In the years after this documentary, Millvina Dean died on May 31, 2009. She was the youngest passenger to survive the sinking of the Titanic.

  • @JaiShreeKanha
    @JaiShreeKanha Před 3 lety +30

    Am I th only one who just can't seem to hv enough of seeing and hearing every lil detail of titanic stories, movies n everything. There is something very wonderful about it.

  • @Still-Shorty
    @Still-Shorty Před 24 dny +4

    Anyone watching this and remain obsessed with anything/everything Titanic 2024?

  • @kevinhartwell5249
    @kevinhartwell5249 Před rokem +411

    It's amazing what a perfect Cascade of events had to take place in order for the ship and the iceberg to arrive at the same point at the same time. Like most disasters it's not one single thing that causes the catastrophe, it's a chain of events.

    • @carolynwarner1469
      @carolynwarner1469 Před rokem +45

      a perfect storm on a perfectly calm sea

    • @generalgrant3189
      @generalgrant3189 Před rokem +23

      And that is usually the case when a commercial airliner crashes - not one thing only its often a series of things that happen when put together can cause a disaster... usually.

    • @MamaofaWrestler
      @MamaofaWrestler Před rokem +14

      ​@@generalgrant3189 Not in the case of Boeing. All they care about is money. Don't fly on a Boeing plane.

    • @generalgrant3189
      @generalgrant3189 Před rokem +18

      @@MamaofaWrestler You are correct which is why I don't fly on ANY plane.... I refuse to fly - period. I have ZERO trust i human beings.

    • @robertsandberg2246
      @robertsandberg2246 Před rokem +2

      @@generalgrant3189 Give the Antonov AN 2 a chance. In the words of Skyships Eng; "It would take quite an effort to crash one." Someone else has even said that "They are so slow you probably wouldn't get injured even if it did crash" in response to my comment that they are impossible to spin.

  • @frankiev116
    @frankiev116 Před 3 lety +266

    What intrigues me so much is just how surreal such a circumstance of the sinking of the Titanic was. And it just feels like a movie, because of how dramatic it is. And also I love historical things that changed how things were done in the future; as this is certainly one of them.

    • @kimberlyjohnson1371
      @kimberlyjohnson1371 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes

    • @ChickenLiver911
      @ChickenLiver911 Před 2 lety +6

      It wasn’t anything particularly extraordinary, the sinking. The actions of the engineers and radiomen, sure, but other than that it was just a sinking ship, without enough lifeboats.

    • @frankiev116
      @frankiev116 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ChickenLiver911 Yea but 1,500 people dying in one day? And it was just an “ordinary” sinking of a ship? That’s what makes it crazy. This amount of loss is what makes it something to remember

    • @audrahike112
      @audrahike112 Před 2 lety

      @@ChickenLiver911 “Historic Travels” on CZcams explains how even if there was enough life boats it wouldn’t have saved all the passengers and they did start to launch the boats around 12:40 am. They barely released the last two life boats as the ship increased in the sinking

    • @MrMisanthrope84
      @MrMisanthrope84 Před 2 lety +10

      @@ChickenLiver911 wasn't just any old ship though, it was a record breaking technical marvel and a hand crafted artistic masterpiece that got sunk on its maiden voyage. The immense sense of tragedy and the sheer waste of such a beautiful vessel is unparreleled. It's also the truly horrific nature of the majority of passenger deaths straight out of your worst nightmares that make it so dramatic. It wasn't a military vessel going to war or a crew only ship on a risky journey, it was carrying families to new lives on a well travelled path. For it to go from a voyage of hope and joy to such horrific doom is what hooks people in I think. The fact it also had people of every background also makes it a universal tragedy.

  • @thomaskipfer1008
    @thomaskipfer1008 Před 2 lety +141

    Since learning of the disaster in elementary school in the 1960's I have been captivated by the disaster. I've tried to read, view, and take as much information as I can about the tragedy. This documentary is the best I've ever seen on the subject. Thank you for the research and making this vast information available to us in this format.

    • @TheRelger
      @TheRelger Před 2 lety +5

      You’re likely my age, I’m 60. I heard about Titanic as a kid because people would gossip about an old lady that lived in the neighborhood who had survived the sinking of Titanic. I never met her but that would have been mid sixties and I’ve been fascinated ever since.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab4502
      @ibrahimghibihisab4502 Před 2 lety

      India don't burn dead body not allowed

    • @ibrahimghibihisab4502
      @ibrahimghibihisab4502 Před 2 lety

      XX XXX not allowed

    • @ibrahimghibihisab4502
      @ibrahimghibihisab4502 Před 2 lety

      Only husband wife

    • @ibrahimghibihisab4502
      @ibrahimghibihisab4502 Před 2 lety

      Fire 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 never ends for disbelievers

  • @Cazz8203
    @Cazz8203 Před 11 měsíci +68

    There's been a lot of horrific events in the history of mankind. For me, personally, this is the scariest. As someone who has never been a strong swimmer, and who almost drowned as a kid.....the story of the Titanic scares the hell out of me. I simply can't imagine what all those people were going through in their final hours. But I can't stop watching documentaries and whatever else when made available. 😔

    • @lsrose
      @lsrose Před 11 měsíci +4

      As someone who had swim lesson for 12 years and who became a strong swimmer, I could float and never sink, this event scares me. I can’t imagine what those passengers experienced. I can imagine being pulled under water with no way to get to the surface. Truly horrifying.

    • @Sate12
      @Sate12 Před 10 měsíci +8

      IDK how much it helps, but very few people actually drowned. Most of them were stuck in their cabins and the air pressure got to them before the water did. A majority of the people in the water froze or had heart failure from the cold.

    • @boogitybear2283
      @boogitybear2283 Před 10 měsíci +3

      It’s never too late nor ever too old to take swimming lessons. I highly recommend it. That and always have a life jacket available.

    • @davidlaya939
      @davidlaya939 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Lol you just think it is sad because of the passengers. If the ship was like, a cargo ship, people would not care in the slightest

    • @lsrose
      @lsrose Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@Sate12 that’s even worse to
      Think about.

  • @nickdesanto6119
    @nickdesanto6119 Před 2 lety +180

    When I was a kid they always said the titanic saw a closer ship that did not help. Always found that interesting. Now finding out the reason that ship didn't help was because they shut off the telegraph after the titanic operator cussed them out has to be one of the biggest blunders I ever heard from both parties.

    • @luanaspa4400
      @luanaspa4400 Před 2 lety +64

      The California was blocking the poor boy's signal which was hindering his deadlines to send out messages on time for Titanic spoiled, rich guests who wanted their boastful notice sent out quickly of their early arrival. He was under stress to get this out which shows how the entitled rich can be a pain in the a$$ to work for, since it's all about what they want. Too bad they forgot to mention that in this documentary.

    • @ALX65
      @ALX65 Před 2 lety +36

      Also california saw titanic's distress rockets but thought titanic was saying hello lol like what the heck

    • @MrChickennugget360
      @MrChickennugget360 Před 2 lety

      in all likelihood he would have gone to bed either way. the Issue was not Phillips. Ironically most people don't know but Jack Phillips stayed up all night the previews night fixing his wireless set- against instructions from his employers. Had that not been done Titanic would have sent out no signals at all.

    • @ashnadewar8420
      @ashnadewar8420 Před 2 lety +41

      @@ALX65 because the flares they sent out were of the wrong colour...apparently, they shot party flares instead of the distress signal...

    • @myke5696
      @myke5696 Před 2 lety +26

      Actually the wireless operator on the Californian, Cyrus something, was not at fault. He signed off because it was his normal sleep time, not for being cussed out. Philip on the Titanic definitely screwed up there though.

  • @jayfelsberg1931
    @jayfelsberg1931 Před 2 lety +181

    A splendid example of why we learned in the naval service that there is no such thing as an "accident." There are incidents that have a cause - mechanical, natural, and/or personnel cause incidents. A natural event, mistakes made by personnel, and mechanical/design failures doomed the Titanic. An excellent presentation.

    • @jaredpatterson1701
      @jaredpatterson1701 Před 2 lety +8

      Exactly! I feel the same for people who say "I didn't know we were pregnant" like man c'mon

    • @chilliecheesecake
      @chilliecheesecake Před rokem +9

      Right, and those events were completely unintended. Meaning it was an accident. Talk about pedantic. 🙄

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před rokem +2

      Supposing it was not unintended, if he is so pedantic he should have considered that one.

    • @salt27dogg
      @salt27dogg Před rokem +7

      This is why we hey have SOLAS now. Safety of Life At Sea and protocols in case of an incident . Lifeboats must be enough to cover all passengers and crew

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před rokem +4

      @@salt27dogg Shutting the stable door after the horse has bolted. There always has to be a disaster before they actually do something, saying anything beforehand does no good. This whole sordid affair however may have brought SOLAS forward.

  • @vinayakpatil355
    @vinayakpatil355 Před 3 lety +134

    Been in those pitch dark Atlantic's. Abandoning a vessel in such waters is just like a worst nightmares come true. Even thinking of it send chills down the spine.

    • @michellealinateague9892
      @michellealinateague9892 Před 2 lety +10

      I had similar thoughts about a trans atlantic flight i took in my youth. Imagining being stranded in those waters, in the cold and dark with little to no hope. Terrifies me even today in memory. I cant imagine the sheer horror that night had

    • @scottwarren4998
      @scottwarren4998 Před rokem +2

      There is no one to blame for the disaster.
      Slag is weaker than iron. However, the slag-rivets was punched into titanic in a wrong way, making the slag even weaker.
      But you can't blame the one/ones who ordered titanic to be built that way, they didnt know that slag-rivets got weaker by being punched that way. in laboratory, the
      slag-rivets built in a wrong way failed at about 10 000 oif pressure. However, even iron-rivets built in a right way, couldn't take 14 000 of pressure in the laboratory.

    • @jpj65
      @jpj65 Před rokem +1

      It's horrorfying like the grim reaper watching pulling the ship to its water grave deep inside the north Atlantic Ocean my god 😮

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@jpj65tattoo not allowed

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      Don't die as a disbeliever

  • @AC-wp7tl
    @AC-wp7tl Před rokem +23

    Titanic tested fate and God, by ignoring warnings and ignoring safety and calling the ship unsinkable I believe the Titanic is the lesson that keeps on teaching. No matter our fascination with the wreck we must remember these were real people who died and it’s a massive gravesite and honestly should be left alone. Over a 100 yrs later and this ship continues to take lives simply because we haven’t learned to let it be

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Don't die as a disbeliever

    • @ezealijonas5060
      @ezealijonas5060 Před 21 dnem

      In that sense if what your acclaimed God can do is to sink a ship with many not considering the children on it then he is a foolish God. The sinking was due to happen and the captain all knows what they were doing

    • @ezealijonas5060
      @ezealijonas5060 Před 21 dnem

      No one is getting out alive on this planet so always have that in mind

  • @mattpakula3727
    @mattpakula3727 Před rokem +31

    It's amazing how I never get tired of Titanic. I can watch the same documentary a hundred times. Read the same article over and over again. Spend countless hours on encyclopedia titanica.

  • @markmitchell450
    @markmitchell450 Před 3 lety +98

    Really doesn't matter what the reasons for its sinking
    Human arrogance to think any ship is unsinkable was enough to seal its fate

    • @florese4804
      @florese4804 Před 3 lety

      How?

    • @omarmasoud5808
      @omarmasoud5808 Před 3 lety

      Using that word "unseakable "made it to sink.. Allah first 🙏🙏

    • @rogerpattube
      @rogerpattube Před 3 lety

      Warped comment. The two don’t follow and in any case no one thought it was literally unsinkable rather it was designed to stay afloat for enough time to ferry the passengers to rescue ships.

    • @emmanicole1234
      @emmanicole1234 Před 3 lety

      I don’t think anyone at that time knew that there is no such thing as an “unsinkable ship”

    • @dingd0ll171
      @dingd0ll171 Před 2 lety

      @@omarmasoud5808 boi there’s 3948 Gods in this world :))))))))

  • @merin797
    @merin797 Před 2 lety +119

    My Grandmother was born same year T was made, and she was 3, when it sailed. I always think of her because just a few years later she came to Ellis Island on a Scandinavian ship called Hellig Olav. There is a photo of it in Ellis Island museum. She said it was rough seas. She lived to be 2 weeks shy of 101.🙏Kram min lilla Mormor❤️

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 Před 2 lety +7

      I feel that way about my dear German grossemutti who came to America on the Moltke in 1907 with her husband and their two daughters. Ich liebe dich, Grossemutti. 💘 🙏 🌼

    • @bobboscarato1313
      @bobboscarato1313 Před 2 lety +2

      Great story!

    • @scottwarren4998
      @scottwarren4998 Před rokem +2

      There is no one to blame for the disaster.
      The Slag-rivets they built into Titanic are a little bit weaker than iron-rivets. However, the slag-rivets were punched into titanic in a wrong way, making the slag even weaker.
      But you can't blame the one/ones who ordered titanic to be built that way, they didnt know that slag-rivets got weaker by being punched that way.
      in laboratory, the
      slag-rivets built in a wrong way failed at about 10 000 of pressure. However, even iron-rivets built in a right way, failed at about 14 000 of pressure.

    • @CATSWITHKYLA
      @CATSWITHKYLA Před rokem +6

      @@scottwarren4998 There are people to blame. They shouldn't have been going 21 knots. They should've had glasses in the tower. The Californian could've help. And so on.

    • @alberthamel6039
      @alberthamel6039 Před rokem +2

      Didn’t they switch names on two ships Titanic and Olympic ? If this is so then it was the Olympic that was hit by the iceberg that sank !!! SO the Titanic lives on !!!

  • @proudmarinemomma827
    @proudmarinemomma827 Před rokem +157

    Who’s here now, after seeing the Titan sub go down, after the 5 died from viewing the titanic?!

    • @effie-montreal
      @effie-montreal Před rokem +1

      I just realized about icebergs breaking loose from over 100 years ago DID WE HAVE GLOBAL WARMING THEN???????

    • @M_Star007
      @M_Star007 Před rokem +4

      I am! And as a recently Retired Navy Vet, I’ve done tours on 2 Aircraft Carriers, so this Documentary was very interesting. (Btw, Marines were always with us when the Ship deployed, we love Marines!) 😊

    • @n7shepart461
      @n7shepart461 Před rokem +4

      I forgot how much my childhood in the 80s and 90s was being obsessed with the titanic until the titan sank. This time I go down the rabbit hole I have internet.

    • @twistedtaurus1979
      @twistedtaurus1979 Před rokem +2

      I am again, but I’ve always love to hear about the titanic

    • @gordion1
      @gordion1 Před rokem +3

      In such a hostile environment with absolutely no room for error it seemed such a negligent waste of life due to self indulgence. RIP.

  • @buslady3705
    @buslady3705 Před 3 lety +65

    Tragic that so many poor Irish died on their way to a hopeful new life.

  • @indramani8888
    @indramani8888 Před 3 lety +62

    Imagine the feelings of Jack Philips and Caption Smith after the collision when it is declared that It will sink. How terrible they must be feeling

  • @tookymax
    @tookymax Před rokem +72

    This is an amazing documentary, probably made in 2008.
    There were about 12 conditons that cause so many people to die.
    If we could just eliminate one of these 12, many would have lived.
    1 More than 16 lifeboats
    2 Full height bulkheads, not just the first one.
    3 Not making the panic turn but instead just hitting the berg head
    on. Only the first bulkhead would have flooded because it had
    the full height bulkhead.
    4 Not ignoring the wireless message
    5 The 2nd wireless message no officer received
    6 The Californian switching off it's wireless because
    of the rude comment by Titanice operator
    7 Changing ship's direction
    8 Lack of binoculars on the crow's nest
    9 Being a dead calm moonless night making it hard to see bergs
    10 A abnormally large iceberg making it so far south.
    11 Using No. 3 rivets instead of the stronger No.4 rivets.
    12 Not going Full Speed
    What is the probability of having all 12 of these conditions?
    It is mind boggling to me to think of all those innocent people
    who died and what their lives could have meant to our world.

    • @dovetonsturdee7033
      @dovetonsturdee7033 Před rokem +10

      1). She carried more lifeboats than BoT regulations demanded.
      2). She was designed to stay afloat with four of sixteen bulkheads compromised. Six were actually compromised.
      3). No sea officer at the time would intentionally create a head-on collision. You are being wise after the even.
      4). Wireless messages were not ignored. As the testimony of several master mariners at the British Inquiry confirmed, they would have acted exactly as Smith did.
      5). What?
      6). Californian's operator switched off at his usual time. One operator did not work 24 hours per day. The supposed 'rude comment' actually DDD in morse shorthand, merely meant 'clear the frequency.' Californian's operator, in later testimony, even confirmed that he did not regard the signal as 'rude.'
      7). For what reason? Smith had taken the usual precautions (see 4).
      8). Irrelevant, and even contradicted by your own 9). Binoculars were used to identify items which had already been spotted.
      9). & 10). True.
      11). Olympic used exactly the same construction materials, and was a successful liner for almost 25 years. No ship was likely to have survived what happened to Titanic.
      12). She didn't. Five boilers were not connected.

    • @pimmagrimm
      @pimmagrimm Před rokem +9

      Even the Titanic's delayed maiden voyage due to the Olympics collision and needing repairs

    • @xen1255
      @xen1255 Před rokem +3

      Also if they didn’t do it in ice burg season

    • @SethHollingshead
      @SethHollingshead Před rokem +1

      The boat sank 14 loaded. 2 went with because there wasn't enough time.

    • @davidhill4141
      @davidhill4141 Před 11 měsíci +4

      The Titanic didn’t sink! It was the Olympic! The captain was in on the scam . JPMorgan did it! So if that ONE thing was different, everyone would have survived.

  • @mervynnel9267
    @mervynnel9267 Před rokem +49

    Probably the best documentary I have watched on the Titanic. Well done. Enjoyed watching,

  • @adonai7187
    @adonai7187 Před 3 lety +22

    I've never had enough of these documentaries on Titanic. I'm i alone?

  • @linsayspence7070
    @linsayspence7070 Před 3 lety +174

    Yes, I also feel that way about the Titanic disaster . It's such a terrifying, sad and enduring story,and I think it's because It was such a freak accident that was somehow destined to happen that affects people the way it does.
    Another eerie detail to the story is that about 14 years before the Titanic went down a book was written about a ship called the Titan that hit an iceberg in the North Atlantic and sank .

  • @nfindc
    @nfindc Před rokem +126

    111 years ago, as of this comment, and this still feels like a fresh wound in our hearts and minds. This tragedy touched so many different races and cultures that it was as if the world mourned in unison when the news broke. I still feel the sadness when I watch these documentaries. It's history, but it's a history we actually learned from.

  • @MarquelCherry-lv6bw
    @MarquelCherry-lv6bw Před rokem +103

    The captain of the ship was warned 12 times about icebergs in the area where the ship was headed, the captain ignored the warnings, there was time enough for them to re route had captain taken the warnings seriously. The captain was responsible for the lives of those on board the ship.

    • @jimmymakwega3872
      @jimmymakwega3872 Před rokem +11

      Absolutely true i igree with you

    • @StrangeHappening-iu4fu
      @StrangeHappening-iu4fu Před rokem +31

      He was under immense pressure to get the ship to NY as fast as possible and certainly paid the ultimate price. He probably didn't think the ship could sink so quickly and knew how many corners were cut in the design. He certainly had some responsibility, but there were many more people to blame as well.

    • @6ixlevelinitiation436
      @6ixlevelinitiation436 Před rokem +10

      You really think the ship was the Titanic and it hit an iceberg. Lol you just went with the story told to you and never bother to research

    • @jayantpandit100
      @jayantpandit100 Před rokem +13

      @@6ixlevelinitiation436
      What research have you done ?
      Please tell

    • @kaylyndecaire5400
      @kaylyndecaire5400 Před rokem +11

      Look into the Olympic ship. The titanics sister ship. It's alleged that the Olympic and titanic were switched as they were being fixed side by side and are nearly identical.
      Interesting how the Olympic kept getting broken while the titanic was being built so they would take parts from the titanic and put them on the Olympic. They say that the Olympic was unfixable and the owner couldn't get insurance because the Olympic was at fault so he switched them so that the Olympic would sink as the titanic and he would get the insurance money. The ships nearby were supposed to save everyone before it sank but the titanic sank to fast. Hence why the captain of the titanic did what he did

  • @ascent8487
    @ascent8487 Před 2 lety +135

    This is probably the first Titanic documentary I’ve watched from which I learned information I had not previously known. Thanks for posting.

  • @Red_Rebel
    @Red_Rebel Před 3 lety +50

    Anniversary of RMS Titanic. Rest In Peace to all the souls that voyaged with this beauty.

  • @themoviehub6679
    @themoviehub6679 Před rokem +111

    Just watched the 25th anniversary of the Titanic movie and now here watching the real story, still can't believe the ship that took more than 2 years to build and thought of as unsinkable only took about 2 hours to sink

    • @shawnd567
      @shawnd567 Před rokem +7

      On its maiden voyage nonetheless

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před 8 měsíci

      @@shawnd567 According to the official narrative. Some will say it was the Olympic that sank, in which case
      statistically it was its ninth round voyage.

    • @longdong3972
      @longdong3972 Před 8 měsíci

      derp@@aj6954

    • @nicoleskorupsky1007
      @nicoleskorupsky1007 Před 6 měsíci

      @@aj6954
      That’s actually a conspiracy theory, people have looked into it saying that they sunk the Olympic on purpose to get insurance. Is it true? We won’t know for years to come but saying it’s an official narrative isn’t true.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@aj6954tattoo not allowed

  • @57113
    @57113 Před rokem +47

    All this new information makes for such an amazing documentary, like many comments it was a culmination of events that led to the sinking of the Titanic. So very sad and heartbreaking loss of life. I really appreciate how those men dropped the wreaths in the water at the site of the sinking. The sinking of the Titanic never ceases to touch our hearts. I believe it's the loss of life that most likely could have been prevented but was not.

  • @historicstudios2708
    @historicstudios2708 Před 3 lety +199

    “The Greatest Maritime Loss In Modern History”
    The Wilhelm Gustloff: Am I a joke to you?

    • @sylvester9044
      @sylvester9044 Před 3 lety +38

      @Aeneas To say it was the "greatest loss in modern maritime history," is a generality.
      This is misleading to anybody who is not aware of other maritime disasters, be they in peacetime or in times of war, especially when the Wilhelm Gustloff went down with between 9,000 to 10,000 people losing their lives.
      Perhaps documentaries like this should check their facts more closely.

    • @erichheyde5953
      @erichheyde5953 Před 3 lety +21

      @@sylvester9044 I have found a lot of incorrect facts and very misleading statements in this film

    • @arohk1579
      @arohk1579 Před 3 lety +13

      During war or peace a ship going down with most or all people on board is tragic. Some are well remembered like the HMS Hood and Bismarck others like the Wilhelm Gustloff and the RMS Empress of Ireland are not as well known. As far as most tragic due to the loss of 1,012 people and the fact the RMS Empress of Ireland was so close to shore at the time is among the worse.

    • @seandobson499
      @seandobson499 Před 3 lety +3

      @Philip Matrix What a prime piece of humanity you are.

    • @SmackWaterJack001
      @SmackWaterJack001 Před 3 lety +6

      The Empress of Ireland

  • @kingcaesar865
    @kingcaesar865 Před 3 lety +160

    The TitanIc isn't the greatest maritime disaster, although over a thousand souls died aboard. It was the MV Wilhelm Gustloff, a German ship used in Operation Hannibal that was the worst. She was overloaded, overcrowded and steaming through a shipping lane with all lights turned off. In the area was a russian submarine, which ended up sinking her. The Gustloff turned her navigation lights on due to the fact another shop was reported coming the opposite way, and they wanted to avoid a collision. When spotted, she was fired at three times, with one torpedo jamming in it's tube causing it to retreat. When the other torpedos hit their mark, power went first, making it pitch black aside from emergency lights, the cold conditions of the Baltic Sea not helping. Her escort vessels dropped down boats, rings and lines to help survivors. One of the vessels, the Lőwe dropped depth charges incase the submarine came near, instead killing more and more survivors. In the end, the death toll reached upwards of 9,000.

    • @TheRimbaldine
      @TheRimbaldine Před 3 lety +24

      That's interesting, I didn't know. Thanks for the information.

    • @danuk2136
      @danuk2136 Před 3 lety +24

      Without sounding mean..its Russians attacking germans..that isn't more interesting than titanic is it

    • @paulanthony5274
      @paulanthony5274 Před 3 lety

      @Laugh Out Loud Studios And on its maiden voyage too.

    • @mayafritz3144
      @mayafritz3144 Před 3 lety +8

      Not to mention, it was an infirmary ship. most of the people were injured and suffering, hoping to find safety. it's truly devastating

    • @foxesofautumn
      @foxesofautumn Před 3 lety +17

      You often hear Titanic referred to as the greatest Peacetime disaster perhaps partly because war involves actively trying to bring about deaths and so it has to be looked at differently.

  • @maya-vf8zd
    @maya-vf8zd Před 3 lety +195

    I can't help but feel that when they said "not even GOD can sink it" had something to do with this tragedy

    • @jeffreybarrow7930
      @jeffreybarrow7930 Před 2 lety +13

      ya good point

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před 2 lety +10

      GOD in this case was J P Morgan. You mess with him, he`s gonna mess with you.

    • @alexrompen805
      @alexrompen805 Před 2 lety +11

      it was no god that did this, it was human arrogance. Overconfidence in the ship lead to a series of bad decisions that ended up costing thousands of lives.

    • @herbertgarrison6548
      @herbertgarrison6548 Před 2 lety +11

      @Derrick Bridges reading your comments hurt my brain

    • @JJay770
      @JJay770 Před 2 lety +3

      God....hold my beer.

  • @jasontempest4233
    @jasontempest4233 Před rokem +77

    Having experienced hypothermia myself, I can honestly say that it wasn't too bad. I was about 12 or 13 at the time and remember feeling very tired but not cold. Just wanting to go to sleep. I actually felt very comfortable and remember laying in the snow and it feeling like a soft blanket. I became so very tired I just could have gone to sleep very easily and there was also a feeling of great calm that came over me. Fortunately, people around me keeping me moving. So if I had a choice I think dying of cold and hypothermia wouldn't be as bad as actually drowning.

    • @StephenMiller2001
      @StephenMiller2001 Před rokem +15

      As an EMT ive always understood hypothermia as the most peaceful way to go of them bc of exactly what you just said. I'm wondering if he just meant that initial shock is painful but he also said that it was a terrible way but i think your experience is more accurate and is definitely not as painful as being burned or drowning which all could have and probably did happen on the titanic

    • @adamm8136
      @adamm8136 Před rokem

      Choosing between drowning or freezing to death in the middle of the Atlantic in the dead of winter experiencing the absolute terror those ppl went thur I'd say it's no choice at all....F drowning. Ur body forcing u to inhale water and that pain & horror of drowning...no ty , pls NO 🙏

    • @MamaofaWrestler
      @MamaofaWrestler Před rokem +13

      Drowning wasn't the primary cause. When immersed in freezing/below freezing water, B/P drops extremely low, resps and heart rate increase to overcome it, which overburdens the heart. The heart rate increases so high that the heart muscle can no longer receive the electric conductivity it needs to beat rhythmically. Heart muscle quivers instead of beating, is not receiving enough blood flow, causing a heart attack.

    • @paulis7319
      @paulis7319 Před rokem +2

      You were probably pissed at people waking you up from death/sleep.

    • @gtxoiltastebad
      @gtxoiltastebad Před rokem +3

      @@MamaofaWrestler okay but if this true . why aren't ice baths we see celebs doing causing increase in heart attacks ? surley its the same shock to body. Except they do it without the layers of clothing !

  • @AshleyHarleyman
    @AshleyHarleyman Před rokem +53

    I am intrigued by a number of things raised in this documentary. Firstly, the cast iron rivets being held as the cause of her sinking “so fast”. Titanic took 2 1/2 hours to sink, and calculations made estimate a hole roughly the size of a house door being of the size needed to introduce water into the ship in a quantity needed to sink the ship in that time. Open portholes and a cargo door would have hastened things as she went down, but that’s how big a hole would be needed. Her sister ship Britannic struck a mine in the Kea Channel in WW1 - her build incorporated a double bottom and watertight bulkheads extending much higher than those on Titanic, but she sank in only 55 minutes. And Cunard liner Lusitania sank much more quickly than that again, after being struck by a single torpedo.
    Then there’s the lack of binoculars. Could that have made a difference? The ship was travelling at 40 kph into freezing air - whether the lookouts had binoculars or not, it is unlikely they’d be able to prevent eyes from watering or squinting. The berg itself was apparently a “black berg”, a berg that had recently turned over in the water and therefore much darker in colour that icebergs are often pictured. Then there was the mirage effect that existed that night due to the odd weather conditions and abnormally flat calm, making the berg almost impossible to see until it was extremely close. And then there is Murdoch’s bridge order to put the rudder “hard a-starboard” and reverse both engines; had he reversed only the port engine and left the starboard at full forward, the ship might have turned more quickly and missed the berg. Reversing both engines effectively negated the effect of the (admittedly too small for a ship that size) rudder, causing the “slow response” many people have noted.
    And Californian? The officers on both ships clearly saw each other, although the officers on Californian effectively did nothing. The radio on Californian was of a type powered by clockwork, and once the radio operator finished his shift at midnight and went to bed, the clockwork wound down and efforts to use it by others who did not know to wind it up were fruitless. But even if Stanley Lord had been awakened and realised what was going on, the ship had hove to earlier that day in pack ice. Her boilers were cold. It would have taken over an hour, and likely more, to have restarted her engines with enough steam pressure for her to move, meaning she would have arrived slightly after Carpathia. As it was, Californian reached the scene just as Carpathia was preparing to depart in late morning (pics taken by passengers on Carpathia show this).
    Titanic was as strong (if not stronger than) many ships afloat today. She remained afloat for 2 1/2 hours after the collision. The huge loss of life was contributed to by the ship’s officers not ensuring all lifeboats were filled before lowering. Many more could have been saved if not for that. And most who died that night died of hypothermia, not drowning; the water was only 2 degrees above freezing, so 15-30 minutes is all anyone could last if unable to get out of the water.
    Arguments may be made on many things; there are many excellent books on the subject published over many years. Among the best are two by Walter Lord - A Night To Remember and The Night Lives On. His study of the two investigation findings and transcripts, interviews of eye witnesses, and examination of evidence is excellent.

    • @dovetonsturdee7033
      @dovetonsturdee7033 Před rokem +2

      A good try, but you need to be aware that the half-baked conspiracists who infest these sites are not interested in facts or reason. They have simply watched a video or two, have appointed themselves experts, and are impervious to discussion or debate.

    • @proudmarinemomma827
      @proudmarinemomma827 Před rokem +10

      I loved what you had to say about this. I’d looked at that too and it was a chain of events that took place, that caused this. Had they had enough life boats for every passenger, they could have saved almost everyone, if not everyone. Those life boats being dropped 1/2 full was awful. 😢

    • @sarasanic
      @sarasanic Před rokem +5

      I agree with everything you said except the steering around the berg part. One couldn't be sure of the width of the berg so trying to steer around it to avoid the impact was a bad decision anyway. Had the captain heeded to the earlier warnings and not be heading into the ice full-throttle (though not an uncommon practice during the time in ordinary circumstances, but the situation was not ordinary here) there was a possibility to effectively slow down the ship enough and take the berg head on. There are ships that collided with bergs head on and acquired minimal damages, certainly didn't sink. But the speed was the limiting factor to pull this one off. So now we're only looking at the minimizing the casualties factor, which as you pointed out, boils down to the untrained crew with their pathetic job at lifeboats managing. Re Californian: this nasty ship and its captain can't be forgiven, they saw everything and did nothing. Bastards

    • @sanaaa7539
      @sanaaa7539 Před rokem

      It's wrong,the eyewitness has said that the ship sank the next day at 2.30 afternoon,they were told by the crew that they could have breakfast & then take the lifeboats

    • @AshleyHarleyman
      @AshleyHarleyman Před rokem +2

      @@sanaaa7539 Titanic struck the iceberg at just after 11.30 pm, shortly before midnight. She sank at 2.20 am. It took about 2 1/2 hours for her to sink. I’m not sure what ship you’re referring to, but it clearly isn’t RMS Titanic.

  • @edithhaze4610
    @edithhaze4610 Před 2 lety +175

    I’m glad milveena was willing to give interviews, it’s amazing to see new age survivor testimony, like she was just a baby and had one of the most intense near death experiences a person could
    Edit: not to mention her poor mother having to witness all of it, I’m not surprised she wouldn’t even speak about it

    • @scottwarren4998
      @scottwarren4998 Před rokem +13

      There is no one to blame for the disaster.
      Slag is weaker than iron. However, the slag-rivets was punched into titanic in a wrong way, making the slag even weaker.
      But you can't blame the one/ones who ordered titanic to be built that way, they didnt know that slag-rivets got weaker by being punched that way. in laboratory, the
      slag-rivets built in a wrong way failed at about 10 000 oif pressure. However, even iron-rivets built in a right way, couldn't take 14 000 of pressure in the laboratory.

    • @randycarey7487
      @randycarey7487 Před rokem +27

      as a INFANT she would not have known anything of the actual sinking or such..all she did know was what she could extract from her mother and ide say that aint much

    • @shawnsmith9275
      @shawnsmith9275 Před rokem +2

      Yea l

    • @anarchistatheist1917
      @anarchistatheist1917 Před rokem +18

      American Survivor Lilian Asplund who passed away on 6th May 2006 at age 99 was the last titanic survivor with memories of the titanic. Milvina dean was only 10 months old at the time of the sinking and didn't remember the titanic at all. Nonetheless may them both and all the titanic survivors and victims rest in peace they will never be forgotten.

    • @francishuddy9462
      @francishuddy9462 Před rokem +10

      Milveena was aged only 2 months on the Titanic. Ludicrous to believe she had the slightest idea what was going on. No, she was merely recalling what her mother told her for years afterwards. And what she has read and seen over the years.
      My earliest memories start at the age of about 4.

  • @CaptainFalcon07
    @CaptainFalcon07 Před 3 lety +72

    My interest in this ship will never go away and I don’t know why

    • @bessiebell6218
      @bessiebell6218 Před 3 lety +1

      That's how I feel....I wonder if maybe we had family aboard this beautiful ship and maybe that's what it is...but since I was young and knew about her I've been in love with this srory..such a sad tragedy that happened to all them innocent ppl.....

    • @curoseba5363
      @curoseba5363 Před 3 lety +5

      For me it’s because it represent the most clear example of human pride away from God.
      They thought they could do only with human power and disregard God’s protection.
      Big fail! That ship was cursed even before it hit water. I can tell you that.
      God is the Power behind every element that surrounds us. Water, wind, fire, you name it.
      Hope you have found yourself under His Grace.
      If not, perhaps this is your moment to reflect on your actions driven by human pride and come to His path. He is waiting for you with open arms. 👍

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@curoseba5363suicide not allowed

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@bessiebell6218tattoo not allowed

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      Suicide not allowed

  • @luciellegeorge4285
    @luciellegeorge4285 Před rokem +19

    Even to this very day the Titanic causes tragedy. In memory of those who perished on board the Titan submersive.

    • @foxymetroid
      @foxymetroid Před 10 měsíci +1

      Don't blame the Titanic. That CEO believed he knew better than the engineers that understood carbon fiber. He wanted to make millions and prove the experts wrong at the same time. Unfortunately for him, the bottom of the ocean leaves no room for error. One tiny flaw in the hull and everyone inside is obliterated.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      Don't die as a disbeliever

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@foxymetroiddog not allowed ect

  • @p_nk7279
    @p_nk7279 Před rokem +20

    The mechanic and historic details are indeed fascinating, but they do not excuse the Captain being careless. There’s a reason you have the Captain, to make decisions and adapt. He ignored warnings, did no drill and kept speed high. In short, he hit an iceberg.

  • @elidNow
    @elidNow Před 2 lety +48

    As someone who has been completely obsessed with all things Titanic and watched way too many documentaries for some reason i always hope the end is different

    • @annacansdale226
      @annacansdale226 Před rokem +1

      Same here💔

    • @LanceSolo72
      @LanceSolo72 Před rokem

      Do you have an opinion as to what happened or do you generally agree with the official story?

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před rokem +1

      @@LanceSolo72 The way your question is worded gives the impression you don`t agree with it.

    • @LanceSolo72
      @LanceSolo72 Před rokem

      @@aj6954 remind me what my question was... I only see my wreath comment here

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před rokem +1

      @@LanceSolo72 Eli says he`s completely obsessed with all things Titanic, you asked him if he has an opinion as to what happened or whether he generally agrees with the official story. I suspect many don`t even know there is an alternative version.

  • @robinj.9329
    @robinj.9329 Před 2 lety +147

    Such a horrific tragedy!
    And completely avoidable!
    It hurts just to watch this, even a full century later.
    REST IN PEACE !

    • @russell9378
      @russell9378 Před 2 lety +3

      Stop shouting

    • @Rand0m0bs3ss10ns
      @Rand0m0bs3ss10ns Před 2 lety +1

      ...but how avoidable is nature, really?

    • @michelles2299
      @michelles2299 Před 2 lety +2

      Just like the nasa tragedy that was as bad and due to penny pinching

    • @peggypasson8794
      @peggypasson8794 Před rokem +2

      I just can't get enough of it .it's so horrendous an unreal very sad . I still ask how could it happen ? We may never really know ......

    • @vodaredhill1704
      @vodaredhill1704 Před rokem +2

      Was it an insurance job ?

  • @nathanwalsh3028
    @nathanwalsh3028 Před 10 měsíci +7

    I still get teary eyed at the end... I'm 51 And I've been obsessed with this ship since my mother turned me on to the story when I was 10. I don't know what it is but it still leaves me Speechless @ 2:20am.😢😢😢

  • @donnix768
    @donnix768 Před 3 lety +183

    My great grandfather albert horswill was a crewman on rms titanic and survived the wreck on lifeboat one along with the Duff Gordons who the press accused of bribing him and six other crewmen on to not return to site and pickup passengers in the freezing water. This was not true , it was a kind gesture to the men to compensate them for lost wages. White Star quit paying the crew the moment the ship went down.

    • @toddkurzbard
      @toddkurzbard Před 3 lety +3

      Correct.

    • @Beals007
      @Beals007 Před 3 lety +7

      Why didn't they try to trow more wood from the cabbins in the water so more people could have survived floating on the wood or used the lifeboats as a fairy to the iceberg unload the boat and go for more people in the water🤔🤔🤔🤔😪😪😪

    • @furryp2402
      @furryp2402 Před 3 lety +2

      @Casey Gabriel actually that particular iceberg was photographed the next day by someone on the Carpathia when they went back to the area where Titanic sank. It would have been a very cold wait on that ice.

    • @ixlr8677
      @ixlr8677 Před 3 lety +11

      not to mention they were shooting flairs and the clowns on cali thought they were partyin.

    • @flametitan100
      @flametitan100 Před 3 lety +4

      @@furryp2402 Well... We don't actually know that. There's been a _lot_ of iceberg photos claimed to be that of the one which dealt the fatal blow, but almost none of them can be verified to be *the* iceberg.

  • @annaalbanese3702
    @annaalbanese3702 Před 3 lety +72

    Rest in peace to all the people that lost their lives on the Titanic 😪

    • @BalboaBaggins
      @BalboaBaggins Před 2 lety +1

      95% were men but that's not something today's media wants to hear.

    • @daviddowns2317
      @daviddowns2317 Před 2 lety +1

      You mean float in pieces

    • @scottwarren4998
      @scottwarren4998 Před rokem +1

      There is no one to blame for the disaster.
      Slag is weaker than iron. However, the slag-rivets was punched into titanic in a wrong way, making the slag even weaker.
      But you can't blame the one/ones who ordered titanic to be built that way, they didnt know that slag-rivets got weaker by being punched that way. in laboratory, the
      slag-rivets built in a wrong way failed at about 10 000 oif pressure. However, even iron-rivets built in a right way, couldn't take 14 000 of pressure in the laboratory.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@scottwarren4998dog not allowed ect

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@daviddowns2317dog not allowed ect

  • @abby-we5tb
    @abby-we5tb Před 3 lety +38

    "if there's a message for the captain what do you do with it?"
    "Bring it...to the...captain?"

    • @felixculpa9303
      @felixculpa9303 Před 3 lety +5

      Cos the surviving officers were really about to admit they got that warning and stood by and did nothing.

    • @2012farfar
      @2012farfar Před 3 lety +1

      No they blamed it on the dead guy Philips.. who is gonna disprove their lies!

    • @mwat22
      @mwat22 Před 2 lety

      @@2012farfar and that's why people are usually charged as co-conspirators in any case involving a group of people

    • @JoseReyes-rh9fw
      @JoseReyes-rh9fw Před 2 lety

      Of course captain let's go and see what's the problem capiche may god bless us all

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@JoseReyes-rh9fwfear Allah

  • @viggyvlogs9706
    @viggyvlogs9706 Před rokem +8

    I am here in 2023 after the Ocean Gate submersible incident.. the titanic is a graveyard and should be left alone

  • @thomasjensen6243
    @thomasjensen6243 Před 3 lety +64

    Just like today.....In 1912 "money" was what makes a person's life important.

    • @williamdougie6213
      @williamdougie6213 Před 3 lety +5

      True but very unfortunate

    • @danielhughes396
      @danielhughes396 Před 3 lety +2

      Won't matter in afterlife. But I want to be buried with a silver coin just incase. 😂😂😂😂

    • @castle_novelist
      @castle_novelist Před 2 lety +1

      What are you on about? Did you not watch it?
      A lot of women and children from third class made it to the lifeboats. One of them is still the last living survivor in early 2010s. Still alive. 55:30.
      Stop bringing class here.

    • @thomasjensen6243
      @thomasjensen6243 Před 2 lety

      @@castle_novelist ignorant

    • @castle_novelist
      @castle_novelist Před 2 lety +1

      @@thomasjensen6243 You're triggered easily.

  • @deborahpercy6809
    @deborahpercy6809 Před 3 lety +11

    Titanic is one story i can't seem to get enough of

  • @jadsmvs8651
    @jadsmvs8651 Před 3 lety +40

    "Trapping hundreds of men below" what? What are you talking about? In every boiler room there was a number of ladders for getting in and out. How do you think they got down there in the first place? Closing the water tight doors doesn't matter to them because they could literally just climb a ladder to Scotland Road. The doors were just used for easily moving between compartments.

    • @Gameboy-Unboxings
      @Gameboy-Unboxings Před 3 lety +10

      Thanks for stating that because that made me sad.

    • @jadsmvs8651
      @jadsmvs8651 Před 3 lety +14

      @@Gameboy-Unboxings All good. A lot of documentaries were hastily made around the 100th anniversary of the sinking to cash in on the hype. Unfortunately this means a lot of them are heavily dramatised and/or inaccurate yet passed of as fact.

    • @richardcline1337
      @richardcline1337 Před 3 lety +3

      That's what sank the Britannic....portholes and water tight doors all left open and then attempted to close too late. Obviously, the loss of the Titanic taught the crews NOTHING!

    • @jadsmvs8651
      @jadsmvs8651 Před 3 lety +3

      @@richardcline1337 The Britannic was doomed because It had 5 compartments blown open by a massive explosion. It was sinking regardless. You also need to remember the technology at the time. Back then, watertight doors couldn't be automatically opened. There was no way to open them with a switch, so you had to manually crank them open. This could take up to 2 minutes per door. The doors could be shut automatically. It would have been incredibly restrictive for crews with time-critical tasks like stokers and trimmers to have to wait 2 minutes at every door for 2 guys to manually and back-breakingly open each door. This is why doors were always left open unless they needed to be shut.
      These days our electric hydrolic doors can be opened and shut with a lever so they are always left shut. But remember, 100 years ago, that wasn't possible.

    • @joeldavila8655
      @joeldavila8655 Před 3 lety +1

      @@richardcline1337 The watertight doors on the Britannic were closed most of the time in compliance with wartime standard operating procedures. However, the ship struck the mine during a crew change, hence why the watertight doors were open. The open portholes are a different story. They weren't supposed to be open, but the lack of air conditioning and the "it won't happen to me" mentality combined to increase the rate of sinking.

  • @a.d.clarke4990
    @a.d.clarke4990 Před 8 měsíci +3

    56:32 Murdoch allowed men on though (after getting any women and children on in the vicinity). He also launched all the life boats on his side and DID NOT shoot himself or kill anybody. He died a hero.

  • @Woodman-Spare-that-tree
    @Woodman-Spare-that-tree Před rokem +11

    The main issue for me is that they didn’t have enough lifeboats and that rescue ships ignored the SOS.

    • @lorrietsaoussis5168
      @lorrietsaoussis5168 Před 6 měsíci

      Some of the ships in the area told the captain of the titanic that there was icebergs in the area he ignored it and the wireless person on the titanic sent out a SOS and a rival ship answered but the wireless person told him to stay out of it if he hadn't of done that those poor people would of been saved and the carpathian or some other ship was close by but had to stop for the night cause of the icebergs

    • @iDislikeAlotofThings
      @iDislikeAlotofThings Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@lorrietsaoussis5168Carpathia did not stop. The Captain of Carpathia was racing through the night to get to Titanic. In fact Carpathia was going too fast for its own engines to handle. Lookouts were put in strategic locations as well, which helped with navigating through the ice field.

  • @Autobot_Megatron
    @Autobot_Megatron Před 3 lety +45

    "Nobody pays to see lifeboats."
    And with that, their fates were sealed. They were all DOOMED.

    • @Argentum2115
      @Argentum2115 Před 3 lety +1

      It is fair to point out that in hindsight this is easy to see, at the time the thought was that (since lifeboats themselves could be quite hazardous) with radio along such a busy shipping route that help would be able to arrive very quickly (look at the sinking of the RMS Republic 3 years prior). Another point to make is that the crew barely had time to launch the lifeboats they had. I do think that they should have had enough lifeboats for everyone, but we have the benefit of hindsight.

    • @rowindownstream
      @rowindownstream Před 3 lety +3

      He didn't say that. It never happened.

    • @Bella.216
      @Bella.216 Před 3 lety +3

      Honestly the California could have gotten to them saving everyone but because the Jerk was rude saying stop sending iceberg messages while I finish the passenger message's. So California turned off the wire and sit for the night. But yes they needed more boats and that morron who thought the captain says to only save women and children. Good lord. It was a mix of horrible mistakes I put the blame on the captain and the owner of that ship for moving to fast. Had they just slowed down in beginning it could have been avoided. But at some point that 🚢 would most likely sink because of its needing to look pretty versus being built safe

    • @MyNameIsWes
      @MyNameIsWes Před 3 lety +8

      Not really. It took the crew 2 hours and 30 minutes to launch 18 lifebaots. Can you imagine how much time it would have taken to launch even half that number if they had to deal with extra lifeboats on deck?

    • @rowindownstream
      @rowindownstream Před 3 lety +5

      @@MyNameIsWes Exactly. They could have had hundreds of lifeboats, and they still wouldn't have been able to save everyone.
      I estimate only several dozen more would have been saved, if the passengers had been made aware of the severity of the situation from the beginning. They may have been able to fill the first several lifeboats to capacity then.
      But the chaos in that scenario would have probably slowed the lowering too though.
      What a weird situation to be in.
      Edit: in hindsight, most of those crew members, engineers and boiler room employees deserve damn medals for what they managed to pull off that night.

  • @patrickzahirniak5453
    @patrickzahirniak5453 Před rokem +12

    When the Titanic was first discovered, they sent an ROV to examine the gash made by the iceberg. They didi find the ruptured plates, but no gash just as reported in this video. What they did find, and I remember watching this on TV, they found a 20 foot circular hole that they could drive through to the interior. They surmised that a large piece of iceberg had penetrated then broke off inside the ship. But there were no inward caving metal plates. All the plates around the hole were pushed outward as if by a blast from inside the hull. Not covered in this documentary are the accounts of survivors who swore they heard and felt a muffled explosion at the moment of.impact

    • @dovetonsturdee7033
      @dovetonsturdee7033 Před rokem +2

      I suppose you can remember the name of this programme, as it contradicts the reports from every actual expedition team?

    • @aj6954
      @aj6954 Před rokem +1

      Could be one of those Brightside videos that the Historic Travel guy is getting all worked up about.

    • @jasonduncan7733
      @jasonduncan7733 Před rokem

      False

    • @davidhill4141
      @davidhill4141 Před 9 měsíci +1

      That sounds like a bomb.

  • @patriciajanemcgrath627
    @patriciajanemcgrath627 Před rokem +18

    I watched 'Raise the Titanic' that was panned by press and public. But when you hear that music and see her rising from the sea it's hard not to think ..."IF ONLY ..." But she will rest with the other souls she could not carry to their proposed destination. She was indeed a glorious vessel and deserved so much better.

    • @dianawingate8887
      @dianawingate8887 Před rokem +1

      I have the book & watch the movie whenever it is available. I know exactly what you mean about the music & seeing her rise from the waves. I must admit I alway shed a few tears for the "what if's" & "if only's".

    • @mindbodyyou724
      @mindbodyyou724 Před rokem +1

      @@dianawingate8887 So true. Thanks for sharing - nice to know I'm not alone🙏

    • @francishuddy9462
      @francishuddy9462 Před rokem +2

      I saw "Raise the Titanic" at the Odeon cinema, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Back in about 1977.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@francishuddy9462don't die as a disbeliever

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@mindbodyyou724don't die as a disbeliever

  • @lisaendress724
    @lisaendress724 Před 3 lety +20

    the thoughts of the all those children and moms shatters my heart!!!!!!!

    • @mysterycomment1553
      @mysterycomment1553 Před 3 lety +3

      That’s basically all that survived was children and moms. As men just had to accept death.

    • @befrugalwithus
      @befrugalwithus Před 2 lety

      @@mysterycomment1553 Yeah it was the thing to do back then. Men were suppose to go down with the ship. Why the captain Smith and many other did.

    • @mysterycomment1553
      @mysterycomment1553 Před 2 lety

      @@befrugalwithus men didn’t have to go down with the ship. Just the captain is last to leave the ship.

    • @sodamncutestud2
      @sodamncutestud2 Před 2 lety +2

      @@befrugalwithus not true. The message from smith was misinterpreted. Some thought he meant women and children only so only let women and children and sent off lifeboats with space for men if no more women and children could be found to board. Others allowed men to get on the boats after women and children.

  • @metoo7557
    @metoo7557 Před 2 lety +37

    The Titanic had 3 of the wealthiest oppositions to the Federal Reserve.
    When the Titanic sank, the Federal Reserve came into power, and people have been financially enslaved ever since.

    • @Einnor084
      @Einnor084 Před 2 lety +11

      Ron Beckz, BEST COMMENT AWARD!

    • @luanaspa4400
      @luanaspa4400 Před 2 lety +7

      Very suspicious indeed.

    • @ll-nm4fw
      @ll-nm4fw Před 2 lety +2

      desire is the university of suffering. desire less and suffer less. that simple

    • @tula1433
      @tula1433 Před 2 lety +1

      Very difficult to find much info on this they always claim it’s “debunked” which is code for “coverup” lol

    • @priwncess
      @priwncess Před 2 lety

      Who?

  • @Olivermegginson
    @Olivermegginson Před rokem +13

    Anyone else been to the Titanic museum in Belfast? Absolutely amazing I tell you. The museum is built right next to wear the titanic and Olympic was first constructed. They also have the original little sister ship SSS Nomadic that you can go inside. If you are ever in Northern Ireland please visit it.

  • @caseyowen17
    @caseyowen17 Před 2 lety +11

    “To my mind the world of today awoke April 15th, 1912."
    -Jack B. Thayer, Titanic Survivor

  • @jenolive7181
    @jenolive7181 Před 3 lety +5

    We were taught the Titanic story in school, as some of the graves are where I'm from. I still can't get enough of it.

  • @AT-yg4nk
    @AT-yg4nk Před rokem +62

    This entire film is the reason why documentaries exist! Amazing content! All things Titanic is just pure brain candy. This documentary is absolutely fascinating.

    • @Roger-hp1yg
      @Roger-hp1yg Před 11 měsíci

      Agreed I went in watching this as they are going to have actors over act their parts n made up stuff. But then I just finished watching now they did a pretty good documentary on it.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      Fear Allah

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@Roger-hp1ygfear Allah

  • @dyablobarajas
    @dyablobarajas Před rokem +11

    Who else is here after the Titan incident?

  • @Andione.
    @Andione. Před rokem +28

    I've made an airfix replica of the titanic several years ago & it's got it's pride of place in my display cabinet. I've been to Liverpool maritime museum to see a larger replica of the titanic & the full history behind it. I'll never get tired of hearing about the titanic. May they all rest in peace.

  • @lozzylols
    @lozzylols Před 3 lety +111

    I love how time goes on new evidence contradicts any 'solutions' that came before. You need to be able to watch all the documentaries in chronological order to see how thoughts have changed and how new evidence has influenced this!

    • @bookemdanno5596
      @bookemdanno5596 Před 3 lety +11

      Wrong. The "bad metal" argument is very old and has been disproven.

    • @flametitan100
      @flametitan100 Před 3 lety +9

      @Michelle Rodriquez Not disproven, so much as the studies never said what pop media said it did. The metal is brittle in cold water, and is weak _compared to modern day steel._ This shouldn't be a surprise; metallurgy *vastly* improved after WW2. Compared to steel of 1910-1912 however, it was perfectly ordinary steel, and was of the quality most ships of the day would have used.
      However, "Metal of 1912 worse than metal of the mid 90's" is not a gripping headline.

    • @nastybigJim
      @nastybigJim Před 3 lety +1

      I this documentary came out in 2008-2009

    • @malecadam8182
      @malecadam8182 Před 3 lety +6

      The theory that they should've slowed down/reversed the ship & took the iceberg head on was the best theory imo. It would've held the ship up longer until the other ships arrived to help. And probably could've towed the Titanic in

    • @timothyreed8417
      @timothyreed8417 Před 2 lety +3

      @@malecadam8182 seamen are taught to try to avoid collisions. Turning and stopping the engines was the correct solution.
      Hitting the iceberg head on, the titanic would have crushed the first 80 to 110ft of the bow section and most likely survived. BUT the bow section contained the off duty firemen and trimmers (2/3 of the them) most likely killing most of them….

  • @traceyhardy2005
    @traceyhardy2005 Před 3 lety +10

    I've been obsessed with this tragedy since I was 13..im 38 now.

  • @PiscesRus
    @PiscesRus Před 10 měsíci +7

    So many ways this tragedy could’ve been avoided. Wow 😢

    • @davidhill4141
      @davidhill4141 Před 9 měsíci

      It was a big conspiracy! JP Morgan et al ! Captain was in on it,too ! And it was the Olympic that was sunk, not the Titanic . That is why the Titan submarine was done in. It would have blown the story up! Meaning that the conspiracy would have been exposed.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      Tattoo not allowed

  • @ascent8487
    @ascent8487 Před 2 lety +10

    I don’t think I ever knew the weight of the iceberg. That kinda just blew me away.

  • @pamthompson596
    @pamthompson596 Před 2 lety +25

    I find the story fascinating and haunting. Always interested to hear more about it.

  • @JohnDoe-yl9yh
    @JohnDoe-yl9yh Před 3 lety +12

    There is a book about conspiracy theories and one of the theories is about the titanic. My friend and I were in a store where this elderly gentleman was telling us about it. My friend looked the book up online while we were standing there, he showed me the price then said "bro they don't want people to read this book". Book cost over $900 dollars...

    • @denniswhite7736
      @denniswhite7736 Před 3 lety +1

      In 1967 the blackhat side of the CIA under Project Mockingbird created this plan of programing people to call the truths Conspiracy Theories. The families who own the Federal Reserve our responsible for videos like this, or more for removing videos about this ship being swapped with the Olympic because those coming back to stop the creation of the federal reserve went down with the ship. I just posted a summary above yours. You may find the comments below it interesting. To find truth in theories, it takes comparing everything on a subject. Google fact check is owned largely by our enemies & facts are disappearing. If your young you might find a way to save facts for your grandkids. I'm old enough to see the truths fit like a puzzle while what were told by media & schools do not.

  • @Nurtureddreams815
    @Nurtureddreams815 Před rokem +9

    I say everyone from the beginning should be held accountable. The one who gave the approval with no regards to safety; to the one who approved for cheap materials; to the builders who should’ve known the difference in the materials; to the captain who didn’t feel fear of the icebergs from the 1st few messages; to the one who never delivered the message when it was passed on to be given to the captain; to the wireman who pissed of the Californian crew & ignored the last message. I think i got it all right. If not, y’all should understand what all I’m talking about. I feel like they were all too anxious to get a classic built & boarded up with anxious passengers who were overwhelmed by luxury. I guess the minds back then weren’t wise enough to think of safety first, but only to have a good time.

    • @Torentino_Ian_no_channel_2006
      @Torentino_Ian_no_channel_2006 Před 8 měsíci

      To debunk this, the "rude" message wasn't actually rude at all. It was common on wireless operators at that time. The Californian stopped because they're in an icefield. Titanic wasn't poorly built. If so then explain why RMS Olympic, RMS Queen Mary, and RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 didn't sink? The CAlifornian wireless operator was asleep, but the crew had no idea at that time that the ship was sinking. Also it was pitch black, making it difficult to see bergs and growlers. Also Captain Smith did not ignore the warnings.

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      Suicide not allowed

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@Torentino_Ian_no_channel_2006tattoo not allowed

  • @margareta249
    @margareta249 Před rokem +11

    Sad that the little boy holding the newspaper banner about titanic sinking died in first world War when he was 17. Its also sad that so many ppl died. Especially the lower class ppl who could not get up from below because they were poor perish in the most horrible way. So many lives lost. Its heartbreaking 💔

  • @harlanabraham7772
    @harlanabraham7772 Před 2 lety +17

    The Titanic met or exceeded the safety standards for that time. Notice, after the Titanic disaster the rules for safety changed. Lightoller, had a boat and helped take British troops out of Dunkirk during WWll. Very good presentation.

    • @FreeDocumentaryHistory
      @FreeDocumentaryHistory  Před 2 lety

      Thank you! Thanks for the great comment too. Keep it up. We really appreciate informed smart comments from our subscribers

  • @falcon664
    @falcon664 Před 3 lety +32

    It should be noted that a ship's bow is designed to survive the ship striking something. A ship's sides are designed to BE struck by something. Since theoretically a side crash would open as many as two compartments, the Titanic was very well designed to be able to survive a four compartment breach. Five or more were just too much.

    • @titopuente6149
      @titopuente6149 Před 2 lety

      They say if it hit head on there wouldn't have been as much damage and everyone would've survived. Hard to make that call at a split seconds thinking.

    • @falcon664
      @falcon664 Před 2 lety

      @@titopuente6149 There are different theories on whether the ship would have survived. That everyone would have survived is definitely wrong. Immediately, all the crew and especially third class passengers housed in the bow section would have been killed. The force of the ship moving at 21 knots hitting an immovable object would have, without warning, thrown passengers and crew all over the ship with many more being injured or killed.
      That said, every officer sailing would do everything could to avoid a collision. Hitting the iceberg head on would have had to be purely accidental.

    • @titopuente6149
      @titopuente6149 Před 2 lety +1

      @@falcon664 seen a doc on this before and as far as I remember there was no cabins toward the very front of the bow but you are right, the workers below deck would have been killed instantly and possible a number of passengers but she wouldn't have sank. Even if the worst damage imaginable happend to her bow she would've only flooded the very first front compartment and she could take on flooding in 4. I think it would have been far less tragic in terms of loss of life but then how do you explain at an enquiry you deliberetly rammed an ice berg not knowing the disaster you avoided. Hindsight is always 20/20.

  • @dannydillon997
    @dannydillon997 Před rokem +8

    Why would you go full steam ahead into an area with known icebergs? This tragedy could have been avoided. 😔

    • @edienandy
      @edienandy Před 7 měsíci

      That was standard practice for the time. The idea was to get through the danger zone and put it behind you as quickly as possible

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@edienandydon't die as a disbeliever

    • @ibrahimghibihisab8913
      @ibrahimghibihisab8913 Před 5 měsíci

      Don't die as a disbeliever

  • @erichheyde5953
    @erichheyde5953 Před 3 lety +113

    There are a lot of incorrect facts and misleading statements in this video. “ the ship was doomed to failure from the start “. Olympic titan is sister. Sailed for 38 years. Yes iron rivets are weaker than steel. But even steel rivets would have failed. Also, the test shown look at how much that steel plate bent before only one of the rivet heads failed. Another thing people fail to realize is the lifeboats. Even if titanic had enough there would not have been enough time to use them. There were 2 boats not used. This was because of several things. Untrained crew. And passengers not wanting to leave the ship at first. I’m
    Not saying this is a garbage film just. Check your facts and do your own research.

    • @chrishood2793
      @chrishood2793 Před 3 lety +14

      100% agree. The same steel was used on Olympic and it passed inspection in the 30's with flying colors. There was a stress test done on the rivets and plates. If one rivet popped out, the rest of the rivets took the load. It was really a great design. It's just that an iceberg will win against any ship. That's why the International Ice Patrol takes care of them.

    • @chrishood2793
      @chrishood2793 Před 3 lety +10

      You're right about the lifeboats. The collapsible boats were barely launched and they even needed the assistance of a passenger. Lowering lifeboats was a dangerous ordeal and the crew did it nearly perfectly.

    • @lindagoodswin9519
      @lindagoodswin9519 Před 3 lety +6

      i do agree with you about the life boats but i still think more people could of been saved that night, i think it took them to long to get the lifeboats ready, if they had a drll when they should of done, a lot more people would of been saved . i think they could of got more people of the ship if people new what they was doing but there was a lot of mistakes happend that night that coursed this not just lack of lifeboats, but that did not help

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 Před 3 lety +4

      @@chrishood2793 After some of the Titanic's steel was recovered, tests were run on it and it was found to be fine. I believe Timothy Foeke did the tests.

    • @chrishood2793
      @chrishood2793 Před 3 lety +6

      @@harrietharlow9929 Exactly, the consensus within the Titanic community is that the steel was of the highest quality. There's been many theories and legends that people take as fact. It feeds into people's curiosity.

  • @sitara2783
    @sitara2783 Před 3 lety +16

    Looking at those riveters, you can see that it really took skill to do their job.

  • @howieduin915
    @howieduin915 Před 2 lety +7

    I've watched at least 3 Titanic movies, dozens and dozens of documentaries. Every time.. the ship sinks. I know how it ends. But I keep watching them anyway. I must be obsessed.

  • @callumtaylor4132
    @callumtaylor4132 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Not gonna lie it gets some things wrong
    1. Titanic had 20 lifeboats in total not 16
    2. Binoculars wouldn’t have helped the lookouts that night
    3. Total lifeboat capacity was 1178
    4. Although the lifeboat drill was cancelled on the 14th, the crew were not unrehearsed a there was a lifeboat drill in Southampton

  • @angelahughes7524
    @angelahughes7524 Před 3 lety +18

    I agree I never get sick of it. I love it.

  • @TheDrRJP
    @TheDrRJP Před 3 lety +50

    The Titantic didn't "drift" into the path of an iceberg. It was going full speed ahead when it hit the iceberg.

    • @HufflepuffDaddy
      @HufflepuffDaddy Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah, like around 21 knots or 24 mph. That's fast enough to cause damage even by automotive standards.

    • @FrigginMossies
      @FrigginMossies Před 3 lety +6

      @@HufflepuffDaddy This is a poor documentary, Why can’t they tell the truth after 100 years

    • @elrjames7799
      @elrjames7799 Před 3 lety +1

      @TheDrRJP. Yes: of course you're right, it didn't drift, but full speed only in the sense of running in obedience to the telegraph, it wasn't racing flat out on a high speed run because not all her boilers were lit.

    • @HufflepuffDaddy
      @HufflepuffDaddy Před 3 lety +1

      @@FrigginMossies I don't know about what the "truth" is my friend. I just know that 50,000 tons of metal going 24-25mph and side-swiping a giant chunk of ice is going to do some damage, however minor. In Titanic's case the damage was six small gashes that opened up six "watertight" but roofless compartments. The rivets used on those sections would snap if forcibly moved a mere 1/4 inch (5mm) out of place. That's not much room at all but the iceberg collision did it. Those six small gashes added up to 12 square feet in total and enough to let in 400 tons of seawater per minute.
      Ignoring conspiracy theories, the simple truth to me is: Earlier ice warnings were ignored (fact) and she was going too fast (common sense). Whomever was at fault (Captain Smith and the main Telegraph Operator) drowned with the ship anyways while ship owner Ismay got away free on technicalities.

    • @paulanthony5274
      @paulanthony5274 Před 3 lety

      @@HufflepuffDaddy All good points although once the engines had stopped the ship would have slowed down some before hitting don't you think?

  • @Jopsyduck
    @Jopsyduck Před 3 lety +50

    I feel I should point out that the ship took two hours longer to sink than the man who designed her said it would. Also, a 46,000 ton liner colliding with a half million ton hunk of ice is going to cause significant damage. It is not possible to design or build a ship that wouldn't be hulled in that situation.

    • @kellymeggison9418
      @kellymeggison9418 Před 2 lety +1

      Jopsyduck, actually they'd have been far better off to have rammed the ice Borg head on! Its figured that they'd have crushed two forward compartments and flooded a third but it would've very likely stayed afloat and been towed in!

    • @Jopsyduck
      @Jopsyduck Před 2 lety

      You are correct, but that would still be significant damage. I never said what happened was the best sequence of events.

    • @kellymeggison9418
      @kellymeggison9418 Před 2 lety

      Jopsyduck, true, I agree, but if she'd stayed afloat certainly far more people would've survived the event!

    • @MrChickennugget360
      @MrChickennugget360 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Jopsyduck that is also not a 100% guaranty that it would be better. The risk then would be doing damage throughout the ship. Greatest danger would be creating water leaks in many different parts of the ship
      there is no telling what a head on collision with something that big would do- they would not have been able to slow down- as it happens they did not fully stop the engines until shortly before they struck which means they were probably doing around 20 knots. A massive iceberg vs a 46,000 ton ship at 20 knots might tear opening all over the ship

    • @Raid_3011
      @Raid_3011 Před 2 lety

      @@kellymeggison9418 this was debunked already

  • @chrispbacon3042
    @chrispbacon3042 Před rokem +8

    We do know that Kate Winslet went down a lot quicker than the Titanic ever did.

  • @WileyCylas
    @WileyCylas Před 3 lety +16

    The iceberg. End of story. Documentary’s over. Best character. Should’ve won an Oscar

    • @rmstitanic3386
      @rmstitanic3386 Před 3 lety +1

      Nice

    • @Meatislife
      @Meatislife Před 3 lety +2

      More like those that benefited from it.

    • @WileyCylas
      @WileyCylas Před 3 lety +1

      @@rmstitanic3386 wait a minute Madame!! Ain’t that iceberg supposed to b ur uh antagonist???!! 😹

    • @Chaseful
      @Chaseful Před 3 lety

      Stop being racist

    • @mafoo75
      @mafoo75 Před 3 lety +2

      every one blames the iceberg, but the titanic hit the iceberg? iceberg is not at fault.

  • @azadhussain8869
    @azadhussain8869 Před 3 lety +21

    To this day nobody knows the message was delivered !

  • @PeterOldschool
    @PeterOldschool Před 2 lety +93

    It's been proven that the materials used in the iron rivets were adequate and true to the time. The fact that this iron ship going 20kts hit an immoveable object and only popped a few rivets opening a total hole size of a kitchen table top over 300 ft scrape contact, tells you it did pretty well. 2:40hrs after collision it slipped into history. Many ships more advanced and safer even in modern times have sank in a fraction of the time.

    • @tula1433
      @tula1433 Před 2 lety +7

      Yes I loved reading how the hole has been shown to only be the size of two sidewalk squares ! Insane!

    • @Caz_2087
      @Caz_2087 Před 2 lety +13

      Yep, the fact it stayed afloat with how ever many tons gushing in constantly for over 2 hours is staggering

    • @SRW_
      @SRW_ Před 2 lety +14

      Also, that lady was using technology that wasnt availiable in 1912.
      Sure, lets say they used inadequate iron. Whatever company was selling those rivets never thought itd hit an iceberg. And whos going to look into the rivets.
      On the white star side, its “get the job done!” And the employees arent going to kick up a stink a out safety when there job is on the line.
      And on the rivet manufacturer they are thinking about selling the most rivets for a “bulk” package.
      Now, seeing as the titanic and olympic were built at relatively the dame time, we can propose these iron rivets are on both ships. Titanic hits iceberg, sinks. Olympic rams U boat AND nantucket light ship. Doesnt sink. Same rivets, same building style. 2 different outcomes.
      The truth is out there!!!
      Thanks for coming to my ted talk

    • @togowack
      @togowack Před rokem +2

      We need to return to rivet construction. It's far better in every way and we will live to see it make a big come back. Also we didn't design or build this ship; it's an Old World ship. They destroyed it just like every other Old World artifact and building just as fast as they can in order to re write history.

    • @kellymeggison9418
      @kellymeggison9418 Před rokem

      Mark_B AviaHunt, I agree with you, plus her "experiment" using only 2 rivers was designed to fail anyway. Aside from that, the area where iron rivets were used was surrounded by steel riveted areas which backed up the iron rivets, keeping them from moving! I Completely disagree with her findings!

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms727 Před 8 měsíci +4

    You’ll get your headlines Mr. Ismay

  • @TheSuperSaiyan4Gamer
    @TheSuperSaiyan4Gamer Před 3 lety +65

    My sympathy goes out to every passenger and crew member that lost their lives that night. However, the crew member that I feel the most sympathy for is radio operator Jack Phillips. That dude was up for almost 2 days straight, dealing with a backlog of passenger messages, and then, most likely exhausted to the point where he was going to pass out, had to frantically call for help, and even kept trying to call for help up until basically the very end, sacrificing his own life in the process.

    • @hardsam68
      @hardsam68 Před 2 lety +3

      So what he should have maybe had a rest or spoke out, in fact he was one of the main protagonists

    • @jillmarie3841
      @jillmarie3841 Před 2 lety +9

      @@hardsam68 not sure if it was that easy back then but he def shouldn’t have yelled at them for sending the ice warning

    • @lucywest1988
      @lucywest1988 Před 2 lety

      There’s a memorial cluster for him in godalming uk , it’s a lovely little area xxx

    • @TheSuperSaiyan4Gamer
      @TheSuperSaiyan4Gamer Před 2 lety +4

      @@jillmarie3841 I completely agree that he shouldn't have yelled at the Californian like that, but I can understand why it happened. He was very tired, when all of a sudden, he gets a sharp ring in his ear. That would piss anybody off when they're tired. I would most likely be angry as well.

    • @OMGemgc
      @OMGemgc Před 2 lety +5

      Not really. Philips received an ice warning yet he indicated it as 'non urgent' and did not give the message to the captain. Phillips giving that message to the captain could have made a big difference tho.