[4k, 50fps, colorized] (1898). The first tragedy ever filmed. The launch of HMS Albion.

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  • Опубликовано: 5 дек 2021
  • Try the ultimate tool to upscale the quality of vintage video to 4K: tinyurl.com/AIu... She was launched on 21 June 1898, after Mary of Teck, The Duchess of York christened her, a wave created by Albion's entry into the water caused a stage from which 200 people were watching to collapse into a side creek, and 34 people, mostly women and children, drowned in one of the worst peacetime disasters in Thames history.
    Filmed by Robert W. Paul.
    Music: Frederic Chopin
    Cello Sonata in G Minor, Op. 65 - III. Largo
    Join as a member to support this channel:
    / @xixbacktolife
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Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @XIXbacktolife
    @XIXbacktolife  5 месяцев назад +13

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    • @C.I...
      @C.I... 4 месяца назад +6

      Where's the original? This looks horrible.

    • @theendoftheline
      @theendoftheline 26 дней назад

      @@C.I... well, it is advertising a rip off chinese ai converter instead of Topaz.

  • @NerdOutWithMe
    @NerdOutWithMe 2 года назад +5272

    It's interesting to think, another 100 years from now or more, someone will see these films and it will be the equivalent of us getting a glimpse into the 1700s. How odd it will be for someone 200 years from now to look that deep into the past. To see life before the technology we have and will have by then. So fascinating to me.

    • @mada1241
      @mada1241 2 года назад +100

      Me too, deep history is always really good. If you like fantasy, and deep history check out The Malazan Empire

    • @VHSRarities
      @VHSRarities 2 года назад +8

      @Adrain Serrano breh

    • @waspsallows2437
      @waspsallows2437 2 года назад +48

      Hmm 200 years into the future, very long time, perhaps planet of the apes or planet of the something

    • @ChrisTopher-gu8gf
      @ChrisTopher-gu8gf 2 года назад +48

      They'll be like look! Daft sods are wearing masks again 🤪

    • @ssherrierable
      @ssherrierable 2 года назад +83

      Our technology will not advance as much in the next 100 years as it did in the past 100 years. Things get harder and more complicated. They don’t get easier to figure out.

  • @hermisadventures8142
    @hermisadventures8142 2 года назад +4394

    Although sad, this video is absolutely remarkable and fascinating. The closest we might ever get to time travel or a time machine. Please keep doing this work, it is so necessary, thank you.

    • @androhyper9485
      @androhyper9485 2 года назад +18

      Oh so u copy comments huh?r u a bot? I hv literally seen this before many times 😕

    • @buckzz___
      @buckzz___ 2 года назад +4

      @@androhyper9485 they aren’t a bot

    • @Man-cv5ws
      @Man-cv5ws 2 года назад +9

      It’s a film not a video

    • @batman-cw2hd
      @batman-cw2hd 2 года назад +3

      wen you practice witchcraft spiritualism and occult divinition and demonic practices the result is that these kinds of accidents are bound to happen.

    • @batman-cw2hd
      @batman-cw2hd 2 года назад +3

      @Ricky Moore yes its real and so are witches iv burned a few of them along the way.

  • @jangroom2719
    @jangroom2719 Год назад +1182

    My great grandparents were there and were thrown into the water when the jetty collapsed. They were rescued , but my great grandmother died a few days later and is buried along with all the others. She left 6 children, my grandmother the eldest at 15 and the youngest only 2 years old. My grandmother told me the story when I was 15.

    • @jamesbehrje4279
      @jamesbehrje4279 Год назад +8

      It is my thinking her grandmother was one the children that survived. That would make her somewhere between 15 and 2 yrs old. She didn't specify who the children belonged to but Im going to assume that she was the mother of some of the children.

    • @kykykyykykyk2851
      @kykykyykykyk2851 Год назад +41

      yes i can confirm, i was there and saw everything

    • @EikoHolic
      @EikoHolic Год назад +35

      @@kykykyykykyk2851 I can confirm your confirmation. I was renting the eye of Sauron and saw everything too!

    • @CANNAskrix
      @CANNAskrix Год назад +11

      @@kykykyykykyk2851 lol me too

    • @toxy3580
      @toxy3580 Год назад +7

      Was also there and can confirm this.

  • @TheGoobler
    @TheGoobler Год назад +236

    That over the shoulder shot @ 1:57 is something I’ve never seen in old footage before. It feels so modern and imperfect, not all properly set up and sturdily shot. Super cool to see

    • @TheGoobler
      @TheGoobler 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@77thTrombone​​⁠​​⁠ ​​⁠ That’s why I said *“It feels.…”*
      To me, the viewer with an opinion, it *felt* modern. It *felt* imperfect. It didn’t *feel* properly set up. And it didn’t *feel* sturdily shot.

    • @jock2128
      @jock2128 11 месяцев назад +1

      also the shot of the woman 0.57

    • @Sceolawylie
      @Sceolawylie 6 месяцев назад

      Agreed.

    • @konrad7086
      @konrad7086 4 месяца назад +2

      There are a few channels on here, like @films by the year, who try and upload as many surviving 19th century films as they can find, and a there are many which are surprising and seemingly out of place for the time compared to what we typically see in as stockfootage in docus

    • @TheGoobler
      @TheGoobler 4 месяца назад

      @@konrad7086 I’ll have to check that out, thanks!

  • @danportillo2694
    @danportillo2694 2 года назад +2523

    It took me a while, but I finally spotted the disaster. At 1:08, you can see the area right next to the ships's starboard side is a nice and organized audience in chairs, but by about 1:48, when that area becomes visible again, suddenly it is replaced mainly by water, and much of the dock is empty.

    • @madmanmapper
      @madmanmapper 2 года назад +294

      *Port side. Ship's launched backwards.

    • @danportillo2694
      @danportillo2694 2 года назад +136

      Thank you for that input.

    • @kevinbergin9971
      @kevinbergin9971 2 года назад +588

      Hey folks, left and right side work for me. But thanks.

    • @simonebu
      @simonebu 2 года назад +174

      @@kevinbergin9971 on a ship left and right depend on where you're looking, hence why port and starboard

    • @52down
      @52down 2 года назад +324

      I can't see shit there

  • @jaminova_1969
    @jaminova_1969 2 года назад +422

    It is almost as if a history book has come alive. I was once a shipbuilder and we launched ships the same way. I've read about turn of the century steamship design, I've seen pictures, and maybe some in a museum, but this film is truly an experience. The people, the places, and the technology. I'm sorry it was tragic day, but I'm happy to have been witness to some of it.

    • @respecthanz9685
      @respecthanz9685 2 года назад +6

      Maybe in the future we will have history books that will show the stuff in video about what is happening

    • @TigerRose246
      @TigerRose246 Год назад +1

      Well-said. I feel exactly the same - never thought I'd ever see something like that. Eerily fascinating.

  • @trouaconti7812
    @trouaconti7812 2 года назад +1119

    When the HMS Albion launched on June 21st, 1898, it produced a wave that swept hundred of onlookers in the water, drowning dozens, many of them children who’d been brought to the front of the pier by their parents to get a better view of the warship. There are at least two surviving films of the Albion launch-both intrinsically interesting, because they represent one of the first times that the boundlessly creative new technology of cinema faced a boundlessly destructive one.
    The first, The Launch of HMS Albion at Blackwall, was filmed E.P. Prestwich. It consists of a single breathtaking bird’s eye view of the launch, with the ship lurching into the water from the top right corner of the frame.
    This is the second film, shot by R.W. Paul-a remarkably modern-looking record of the chaos and commotion around the launch, often framed over and around the shoulders of onlookers.

    • @donny9078
      @donny9078 2 года назад +72

      Your single comment holds more intelligence than all the comments I've seen on RUclips combined.

    • @Mikeofindy
      @Mikeofindy 2 года назад +1

      Damn your brain is hott. And your face ain’t so bad either 🥸

    • @jpcodnia9133
      @jpcodnia9133 2 года назад +11

      Thank you cutie
      Now I can delete my comment asking for info on what happened

    • @eddybutternoodles5934
      @eddybutternoodles5934 2 года назад +13

      Doesn't the lady wearing that hat look like Pee Wee Herman?

    • @randalldavis9495
      @randalldavis9495 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for sharing.

  • @rongendron8705
    @rongendron8705 Год назад +144

    I'm 76 & my grandfather was a Spanish-American War naval veteran, who served from 1898-1904!
    Seeing this short film, (made the same year that he joined the Navy), makes me realize that 124
    years ago wasn't that long ago!/ R.I.P. to all those who died in this needless & unnecessary tragedy!
    ,

    • @Praise___YaH
      @Praise___YaH Год назад +1

      Guys, HERE is The Savior
      YaH The Heavenly FATHER HIMSELF was Who they Crucified for our sins and “HERE IS THE PROOF”
      From the Ancient Semitic Scroll:
      "Yad He Vav He" is what Moses wrote, when Moses asked YaH His Name (Exodus 3)
      Ancient Semitic Direct Translation
      Yad - "Behold The Hand"
      He - "Behold the Breath"
      Vav - "Behold The NAIL"

    • @clintdavies491
      @clintdavies491 Год назад

      @@Praise___YaH keep takin the attention seeking juice nobber

    • @st4rfuls
      @st4rfuls Год назад +14

      @@Praise___YaH that wasnt needed bruh

    • @ADreamingTraveler
      @ADreamingTraveler Год назад +7

      Yeah the passage of time is a really weird thing. Honestly 1898 wasn't really as long ago as we think it is. Especially when you look back at the years before you were born seem way older and longer ago than they really are. Like for example there's people alive today that were born in the 1920s and 1930s walking around and talking with us still.

    • @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991
      @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991 Год назад +1

      ​@@ADreamingTraveler That's true, 1898 is over a century ago (5 score and 4 years), but some of us probably knew people who were alive in 1898, even if they were quite young. All of my great-grand-parents were alive in 1898; the one I remember best was 3 years old that year, and died at 87, when I was 15; 40 years ago.

  • @Rodriguez934
    @Rodriguez934 2 года назад +810

    Very sad for those who perished. These 19th century films are fascinating.

    • @johnbarrert3732
      @johnbarrert3732 Год назад

      I didn't find it sad personally,just another reminder of how human beings take things for granted and indulge in moronic practices, like building a stage out of wood next to a ship launch,I repeat moronic human behaviour.

    • @indridcold8433
      @indridcold8433 Год назад +6

      Including those that died in the accident, everyone in the video is now dead. Soon, we will be dead as well. All of us spend more time dead than alive. It rather makes life pointless.

    • @seansy59
      @seansy59 Год назад +6

      @@indridcold8433 life itself isn't pointless. What it has become because of society has become pointless. We have 100 years to live if we are lucky enough. But everything in this world is so money relied on, we have to give up 90% of our life just to live. Taxes, credit scores, fees, mortgages, licenses, registrations, the list goes on forever. Long ago it used to be full barter, now everyone and everything wants money the minute you wake up each day. For a measly 100 years on Earth, it should be barter and enjoying life nature and hobbies as when we are all gone none of what we did comes with us

    • @beamboy14526
      @beamboy14526 Год назад +5

      @@seansy59 5000 years ago you would also have to spend your entire life hunting or gathering berries. Today, instead of hunting, most people work in extremely specialized jobs. Basically like a tool maker who makes weapons for their tribe to hunt/gather berries more efficiently and receives food/clothing/shelter in exchange. But instead of bartering, we use money to facilitate the exchange of goods/services.

    • @indridcold8433
      @indridcold8433 Год назад +1

      @@seansy59 I barter for almost everything, save the necessities. Money truly has no value. When I repair a vehicle for someone, I will trade for parts, a repair on something I have that the person can do. I do not even use credit. If I can not barter for something or pay cash, I do not get it. It sounds very antiquated. However, I have no debt, save for my mortgage that is paid in full in five years.

  • @mikestyles499
    @mikestyles499 2 года назад +673

    To be able to watch history unfold over 100 years ago is truly phenomenal. Thank you for what you do.

    • @mogadon7
      @mogadon7 2 года назад +4

      Need to get ye camera closer to thou action.

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous 2 года назад +10

      @@mogadon7 Why are you talking like a Mormon in 1844

    • @Dr.KarlowTheOctoling
      @Dr.KarlowTheOctoling 2 года назад +1

      @@mogadon7 Say again?

    • @snoopyalien24
      @snoopyalien24 Год назад +1

      In the future, they'll be able to see videos of us now. So 500 from now, they'll be able to see us! And read these comments! And watch our dank memes!

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад

      @@Praise___YaH What video comment sections would Jesus spam?

  • @carloscollomps1552
    @carloscollomps1552 2 года назад +99

    At 1:22 you can see the wooden rubble coming afloat from under the ship. It's the remains of the structure where people were sitting just seconds before. I saw some drawings from the time this disaster happened and viewing from the front of the ship you could see the collapsed structure at the left of the image (right side of the ship in this footage).

    • @bruceccorwin
      @bruceccorwin 2 года назад +17

      The description said a wave collapsed the stage, but the way everything got pulled under the ship makes it seem more like some lines got snagged and pulled the stage under. Hard to say for sure.

    • @Yolaeth
      @Yolaeth 2 года назад +35

      Ships are sometimes launched atop a wooden structure that floats away as the new ship enters the water, not sure if that applies here

    • @lutzderlurch7877
      @lutzderlurch7877 2 года назад +13

      @@Yolaeth I'd second Yolaeth's comment here. To keep the ship upright un the slipways, a form of cradle is built from wood, that slides into the water with it.
      As the hull begins to float on it's own, it no longer needs that support and the cradle seperates from the ship.

    • @tregoboing
      @tregoboing Год назад

      @@Yolaeth That makes a lot of sense now, The large wood pieces definitely looked like they came from underneath the boat.

  • @feellucky271
    @feellucky271 2 года назад +245

    The Frederic Chopin sonata which accompanies this beautiful sad short film was more contemporary to this disaster than anyone alive today as he died only 49 years previously whereas 123 years have passed since.
    Franz Lizst,also a friend and contemporary was probably the first "rock star" along with Chopin seemingly similar with all of the trappings...alchohol,drugs,many women(and men) it's been said and all of the excesses that go with it.Chopin died at 39 years oldof tuberculosis.

    • @Supreme_321
      @Supreme_321 2 года назад +3

      Instead of Chopin and Lizst shouldn't that be Brahms and Lizst...

    • @lokmanmerican6889
      @lokmanmerican6889 2 года назад +4

      The 3rd movement of the Chopin Cello Sonata, here in vivid sound, captures the sense of unfolding tragedy in this video only too well.
      Written in 1845/6, it heralded the composers own untimely death.

    • @writeract2
      @writeract2 2 года назад +2

      never knew about chopin or liszt.

    • @Laszlo-b8k
      @Laszlo-b8k Год назад +3

      Franz Liszt, Hungarian composer, pianist and teacher

    • @Thilindel
      @Thilindel Год назад +9

      Chopin was NOT involved with men...that's something that is poorly translated by so-called 'modern' historians. I speak Polish and he does not in any way cite such feelings towards men. If this were the case, in the past 170+ years, it would have been obvious.

  • @kevinw9073
    @kevinw9073 2 года назад +496

    These vintage movies are priceless. A+

  • @blackcellagent
    @blackcellagent Год назад +83

    While tragic and very sad, I can’t help but wonder what each individual was doing during before or after this. How their lives were. What it was like to live in that time. It looks like everyone was dressed in their best and it’s so different from now. Incredible video.

    • @ADreamingTraveler
      @ADreamingTraveler Год назад +5

      This was a special event so people were dressed in their best. But styles change all the time. The style before and after this were completely different as well.

    • @JohnDaubSuperfan369
      @JohnDaubSuperfan369 Год назад

      It wasn't any different, people just smelled worse, but you probably wouldn't have even noticed since everything smelled like shit. Poor people were poor, rich were rich, priests were predators and everyone was racist and depressed, sounds a lot like Britain today, eh?

    • @blackcellagent
      @blackcellagent Год назад

      @@JohnDaubSuperfan369 The more things change, the more they stay the same.

    • @alphinmesa9945
      @alphinmesa9945 Год назад

      I mean life is still the same but different in its own way

    • @BrisLS1
      @BrisLS1 Год назад +2

      No radio, no television, no electricity at home, no cars, possibly no flushing toilets at home, basically a hard dirty life. Disease could take you out quite easily, if not drowning while watching a boat launch. I would not want to live it for even a minute.

  • @AmiraSmyrna
    @AmiraSmyrna Год назад +7

    Your restoration of these clips are remarkable to say the least. Fascinates me, to rewind and watch the different people and their clothing , expression imagining what they were saying who they were etc etc. Blows my mind.

  • @TSZatoichi
    @TSZatoichi 2 года назад +149

    I'm so glad there are people out there restoring/preserving these old films and digitizing them for all of us to study. Rich people of the world, THIS is the kind of thing you should be using your money for, what would be peanuts for you would be a fortune for these people.

    • @VHSRarities
      @VHSRarities 2 года назад +2

      Check my channel. I am a forensics expert. I might intrigue you.

    • @BiscoitoGrobo
      @BiscoitoGrobo 2 года назад +1

      Well, it could be better restored. The stains were not removed.

    • @blogengeezer4507
      @blogengeezer4507 2 года назад +10

      'Rich people' are historically the root source of gainful employment, education, technology, prosperity for the vast majority.
      Without the investments from Rich', absolutely nothing would happen.
      The entire world of humanity would return to day by day, battling the elements, and each other, foraging for enough sustenance to barely survive.... one more day..
      note; Education systems, with dreams of imagination prevalent, tend to leave that part out.. ;}

    • @bobcastro9386
      @bobcastro9386 2 года назад +1

      @@blogengeezer4507 Well put sir.

  • @fortboy66
    @fortboy66 2 года назад +53

    The ship building company paid for the funeral costs and for a large memorial to be erected at a east London cemetery, seen it, it has a large anchor at its centre. Also, didn't the workers at the company form West Ham United football club, the club badge had a pair of riveting? Hammers on it.

    • @JK360noscope
      @JK360noscope 2 года назад +1

      Of course it'd be an east London cementary... lol

    • @harry2.01
      @harry2.01 2 года назад +10

      West Ham United, previously known as Thames Ironworks IIRC.

    • @daniellinehan63
      @daniellinehan63 19 дней назад

      Did more than the owners of Chicago's 1915 Eastland Disaster which killed 800+ in 15 ft.of the Chicago River

  • @GizmoRob176
    @GizmoRob176 2 года назад +17

    Amazing that there were two angles this was filmed from. It's remarkable there was one moving picture camera at all.

  • @StrangeScaryNewEngland
    @StrangeScaryNewEngland 4 месяца назад +2

    I am not entirely sure what they expected with a ship that large. What a shame and preventable.

  • @JohnMartin-ux2rm
    @JohnMartin-ux2rm 2 года назад +75

    Another amazing trip back in time . Thank you !!

  • @werewally3156
    @werewally3156 2 года назад +110

    Looks like a dream.
    Crazy, right about that time my great grandfather was on a ship bound for Ellis Island.

    • @majadito1985
      @majadito1985 2 года назад +1

      From where?

    • @oldyeller6518
      @oldyeller6518 2 года назад +9

      Mine too! From Italy

    • @werewally3156
      @werewally3156 2 года назад +7

      @@oldyeller6518 yup. My pops told me that he was a minor and got deported twice before he got it right.

    • @oldyeller6518
      @oldyeller6518 2 года назад +4

      @@werewally3156 oh my goodness, he was determined!

    • @ezekielbrockmann114
      @ezekielbrockmann114 2 года назад +4

      Mine too, from Sweden.

  • @trevorbrown6654
    @trevorbrown6654 Год назад +19

    June 21st 2023 will be the 125th anniversary of this tragedy and therefore the age of this film. Speeding up the frame rate like has been done here really makes a difference more than the colorization as it brings the film to life and draws the viewer into the drama. Incidentally HMS Albion was a battleship that was layed down in December 1896, launched 21/6.1898 but wasn't actually ready for active service until June 1901(by which Queen Victoria was dead and Edward VII was now the monarch) due to constant delays in the manufacture and installation of her guns and other machinery. She saw active service in WW1, in both the Mediterranean (where she received some serious damage from Turkish land based cannons) , and off the African coast. She was patched up enough to stay in service and finished the war as a sentry ship off the coast of Queenstown (now known as Cobh) in Ireland. She became a mobile barracks for about a year but was finally cut up for scrap in Morecambe, Lancashire at the beginning of 1920 (the same time as her sister ship HMS Canopus was also scrapped).

    • @Praise___YaH
      @Praise___YaH Год назад

      HERE is Our Savior
      YaH The Heavenly FATHER HIMSELF was Who they Crucified for our sins and “HERE IS THE PROOF”
      From the Ancient Semitic Scroll:
      "Yad He Vav He" is what Moses wrote, when Moses asked YaH His Name (Exodus 3)
      Ancient Semitic Direct Translation
      Yad - "Behold The Hand"
      He - "Behold the Breath"
      Vav - "Behold The NAIL"

    • @JohnEltinAhern
      @JohnEltinAhern Год назад

      @@Praise___YaH is nowhere safe from religious fundamentalists peddling their superstition?

    • @Praise___YaH
      @Praise___YaH Год назад

      @@JohnEltinAhern
      1. jesus is Lucifer, written by “THOSE” from Israel, who this “WORLD” bows to worship as “THEIR” god/savior and “THOSE” from Israel have deceived the world
      2. Salvation is so very Simple
      HalleluYAH translates “Praise ye YaH”
      YaH is The Heavenly Father
      YaH arrives via the TENT OF MEETING
      YaH was Who they Crucified for our sins
      ** NO FEMALE INVOLVED WHATSOEVER **
      - Hebrew Book of Isaiah
      Isaiah 42:8
      "I am YaH; that is my Name! I will not yield my glory to another or my praise to idols.
      Isaiah 43:11
      I, I am YAH, and there is no other Savior but Me.
      Isaiah 45:5
      I am YaH, and there is none else.

  • @kokoeteantigha389
    @kokoeteantigha389 Год назад +27

    This reminds me of a fairly similar tragedy in my hometown of Calabar in the early seventies. A naval vessel had berthed at the base and practically everyone was there to view this uncommon sight. Crowds were packed on a wooden pier when it collapsed under the weight and - it is believed - hundreds drowned. The occasion strikes me particularly because I could easily have been at the quay as well but for reasons I cannot now remember I decided against going. Some students from my primary school were among the fatalities.

  • @redpillsatori3020
    @redpillsatori3020 2 года назад +17

    "HMS Albion was laid down by Thames Iron Works at Leamouth, London on 3 December 1896. Tragedy struck when she was launched on 21 June 1898;[3] after Mary of Teck, The Duchess of York christened her, a wave created by Albion's entry into the water caused a stage from which 200 people were watching to collapse into a side creek, and 34 people, mostly women and children, drowned[4] in one of the worst peacetime disasters in Thames history.[5]
    Albion's completion then was delayed by late delivery of her machinery. She finally began trials late in 1900, during which she was further delayed by machinery and gun defects, and she was not finally completed until June 1901.[6] HMS Albion was commissioned on 25 June 1901 at Chatham Dockyard, by Captain W. W. Hewett and a complement of 779 officers and men, to relieve battleship Barfleur on the China Station.[7]"

  • @MusicEchos
    @MusicEchos 2 года назад +96

    What this reminded me of happened 20-25 years ago. I took a cruise on an older ship with no more than 500 passengers. There was a roof that was decorated like a much older ship. They played music such that would have been played in the 1920s.
    It was my best cruise ever.

  • @mindyourbusinessxoxo
    @mindyourbusinessxoxo Год назад +4

    I literally don't see anything. I just see a ship going into the ocean

  • @thomascolleur8873
    @thomascolleur8873 3 месяца назад +4

    It is hard to believe that the Martian Invasion of 1912 happened less than 15 years after this tragedy. Incredible.

  • @maddogmccoy3203
    @maddogmccoy3203 2 года назад +32

    Great video ....an awesome look back into history! .....Beyond the tragedy , we are seeing a glimpse of day to day life in the last years of the 19th Century....The Spanish American War was in full swing ....and the guy standing in the dingy at 2:44 is blowing the first Chewing Gum bubble ever caught on film!

    • @TheBetito123
      @TheBetito123 2 года назад +1

      Its probably just an artifact

    • @benmac1089
      @benmac1089 2 года назад

      I thought he was spitting out a whistle.

    • @nicolascalvache8102
      @nicolascalvache8102 2 года назад

      Could have also been tobacco, couldn't quite see what it was!

    • @ulissegarnerone
      @ulissegarnerone 2 года назад +2

      I spotted the exact same thing and searched for comments in that sense! Turns out chewing gum was invented in the 1860's decade so i believe it's not an artifact or something else, but maybe the first chewing gum bubble ever recorded on film, definitely one of the first, at least. Talking about a funny thing like this sounds disrespectful of that tragedy but that's History, even greek wars we talk about all the time must have been impossible to watch on film without getting sick. Amazing video, precious testimony, thank you.

    • @ulissegarnerone
      @ulissegarnerone 2 года назад

      Or maybe it is his tongue chewing tobacco or something? In every case great video.

  • @sabrinasjourney
    @sabrinasjourney 2 года назад +49

    What incredible angles the film was shot from...what kind of cameras used, I wonder? How are all these 1800s films popping up now...?

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 2 года назад +3

      Utterly fascinating! Seems like ever since photo and cine cameras were invented, everybody and their dog were filming something! ruclips.net/video/UaYfi-A7xY0/видео.html

    • @leeriches8841
      @leeriches8841 2 года назад +4

      @@maksphoto78 I own some incredible cine films from my family, some from 1950s/60s/70s Edinburgh, Scotland

    • @krashd
      @krashd 2 года назад +17

      People are beginning to digitise everything as it becomes cheaper and easier for people to do so, and it makes sense as digital content can't degrade - it can be destroyed, and that's why people have backups, but once something is digitised it can no longer deteriorate over time.

    • @sergeantbigmac
      @sergeantbigmac 2 года назад +13

      I think its because a lot more film was shot in those times than we realize, but because much of it is mundane (family home movies or city scenes and the like) therefore professional film preservers in the past might not have been motivated to. But now that home film to digital scanners are becoming more accessible and inexpensive to the general public people are motivated to scan those old reels in their attic, which combined with the recent advent of AI film coloring (also available to the public) and more niche historical film groups on the internet have created a demand for this content and therefore new motivation for preservation I would guess.

    • @VHSRarities
      @VHSRarities 2 года назад +2

      My whole family got boxes of reels from my granny and grandpa we never gone through. That’s why bro. They were like the cell phone in ur hand now. Everyone had one and even waking up was one of the most filmed things home movies of breakfast 1890s search it. Also these films since you’re working with negatives can be scaled to 4K or 1080p. eBay is our best source for these films. A box of 40 home movies reels ran me 400 bucks.

  • @tonybkent
    @tonybkent 2 года назад +10

    As an aside, I noticed "Cambria" in shot near the start. As a child in the 1970s I remember my grandmother taking me to see it moored up at Rochester in Kent as a tourist attraction. I probably went onboard but only vaguely remember, being so young at the time. Interesting to see it out on the water 124 years ago and at such a terrible event.

    • @RMS_Oceanic
      @RMS_Oceanic 2 года назад +2

      Thats a very awesome story!

  • @itsjustme9354
    @itsjustme9354 2 года назад +35

    It has an eerie feel to it, it's absolutely fascinating.

  • @AvyScottandFlower
    @AvyScottandFlower 2 года назад +123

    To me, the tragedy is to know ALL those people are dead
    RIP grandma, she lived for almost a century, and died just two months ago, last October.

    • @AvyScottandFlower
      @AvyScottandFlower 2 года назад +5

      @@exiletwin I hope one day humanity conquers digital/biological immortality, and then future humans/sentient beings could be able to afford rethinking their own mortality
      Or maybe that won't even be a desirable outcome.. it's a great existential question, perhaps for future generations to answer.

    • @grahampaulkendrick7845
      @grahampaulkendrick7845 2 года назад +15

      It's hardly a tragedy to live a long and hopefully happy life. Some of the children could have lived until the 1980s. To die before your time, that is a tragedy, tho'.

    • @RapidCycling07
      @RapidCycling07 2 года назад +14

      We will all die one day. Our souls exist forever though. Hopefully we will go to Heaven and not to Hell for all eternity.

    • @Cola82
      @Cola82 2 года назад +12

      @@AvyScottandFlower personally, I’m not interested in living forever. I used to think I’d like a very long life, like, 1,000 years. But the older I get the more content I am with the time I have. We need to make way for new minds and the ideas they will have. We need to let our species grow and change. It would be a tragedy indeed if the people living today were to completely control the future of the human race.

    • @kevinbergin9971
      @kevinbergin9971 2 года назад

      @@AvyScottandFlower For my friends that are N.Y. Knicks fans, "immortality" means an amazing amount of bad teams to try and root for. 🤣

  • @garymorris1856
    @garymorris1856 2 года назад +67

    It's remarkable to watch this footage from almost 125 years ago !

    • @eucliduschaumeau8813
      @eucliduschaumeau8813 2 года назад +3

      When I was born, this would have happened only 63 years ago.

    • @garymorris1856
      @garymorris1856 2 года назад +5

      @@eucliduschaumeau8813 When I was born, it would have have only 53 years before. (1951).

  • @sunkissG
    @sunkissG 2 года назад +11

    I have watched this 3 times and I can’t make out anyplace that was swamped

    • @CineRocco
      @CineRocco Месяц назад +1

      You probably already have found it but just in case: Watch from 1:04 to 1:55. If one is on the ship facing forward, it occurs on the right side (I think they call that starboard)

    • @sunkissG
      @sunkissG Месяц назад +1

      @@CineRocco I went back and rewatched and what I saw was thip is launched then it switched to the people in boats and going to shore.

    • @Smedley1947
      @Smedley1947 Месяц назад

      I have watched it 10 times at 0.25 speed and still can't figure out what happened. I have to take it on faith that something DID happen❗😱

  • @scottnyc6572
    @scottnyc6572 2 года назад +9

    It’s incredible that for this being the first tragedy caught on film the photographer knew to keep rolling with the camera.

    • @farhanatashiga3721
      @farhanatashiga3721 2 года назад

      Whoever they are they're probably just as shocked as everyone else that the thought of stopping didn't occured to them until much later

  • @jsldj
    @jsldj 2 года назад +22

    What genius put the reviewing stand THAT CLOSE to the launch!

    • @martabachynsky8545
      @martabachynsky8545 2 года назад +11

      You would think they never heard of water displacement.

    • @vesseleightyseven
      @vesseleightyseven 2 года назад +4

      Idk but he was probably unemployed after this lol

    • @misspeach3755
      @misspeach3755 2 года назад +6

      According to a report, the police had warned them.

    • @Jackaljkljkl
      @Jackaljkljkl 2 года назад +3

      It was a stand for launch workers, and was not designed for viewing.

    • @ashsomers1
      @ashsomers1 27 дней назад +1

      Who let them on the stand, viewing or otherwise and 2 angles filmed it? I'm smelling a satanic ritual rat. I'm guna check out dates times etc.

  • @SamTimelapseMan
    @SamTimelapseMan 2 года назад +128

    To be fair, the audience was ridiculously close to the dock and launch site. I wouldnt be even twice as far as they were

    • @shawnbottom4769
      @shawnbottom4769 2 года назад +16

      Just goes to show that people who think "common sense" died in the modern Era are wrong. It never existed in the first place!

    • @Vscustomprinting
      @Vscustomprinting 2 года назад +12

      To be fair they were a much more arrogant lot. The era called for daring and to embrace danger... Of course there were accidents, but they were also hardy and spirited, even if that only adds up to climate change and the end of the day 😂

    • @eliasvonbrille
      @eliasvonbrille 2 года назад +22

      Because today we know better.
      Don't forget that this technology was new back then. They had no idea of the dangers and risks involved.
      It was always like this in Human history. Testing out stuff until it goes wrong and then learning from it with reducing the dangers.

    • @SamTimelapseMan
      @SamTimelapseMan 2 года назад +6

      @@eliasvonbrille of course and that's true, I just meant personally(and not from a point of marine knowledge) that I wouldn't feel safe that close to something that big

    • @eliasvonbrille
      @eliasvonbrille 2 года назад

      @@SamTimelapseMan So you wouldn't drive on it either?

  • @frankmanola3443
    @frankmanola3443 2 года назад +55

    This event is described at the beginning of the book “Down to the Ships in the Sea” by Harry Grossett. The book relates Grossett’s career as a deep sea diver, but he began as an apprentice shipwright at the Thames Ironworks. One of his jobs on that day was to help put up “Danger - Keep Off” signs on the gangway these spectators were sitting on (which had been built for use by workmen on an adjacent slipway, not for spectators to this launching). The backwash from the launch was much bigger than usual, about 10 feet high according to Grossett, and it swamped and destroyed the gangway.

    • @loftonrudolph7586
      @loftonrudolph7586 2 года назад +6

      That is so tragic. One wrong decision is all it takes.

    • @tregoboing
      @tregoboing Год назад +1

      Thats interesting, thank you. Had a quick look for the book but is obviously hard to come by now.

    • @sallyire1
      @sallyire1 Год назад +2

      Very interesting! So spectators were not even supposed to be on the gangway as it had not been built for that purpose. That is relevant information...thank you!

  • @pacolet2994
    @pacolet2994 2 года назад +33

    It's still a cool video, but if you didn't tell me I'd have no idea this was a disaster. Another version with still images or pauses to point out details would be appreciated.

    • @arturocevallossoto5203
      @arturocevallossoto5203 Год назад +2

      The last bit at the end shows some guys on the small boats completely soaked, so maybe they were being pulled out of the water?

  • @kevinpyne5808
    @kevinpyne5808 2 года назад +98

    I missed the actual tragedy. RIP.

    • @michaelportone2915
      @michaelportone2915 2 года назад +2

      Where did you watch it from?

    • @JuanSolo-ln8yq
      @JuanSolo-ln8yq 2 года назад +4

      Look at 1:11 then 1:48 notice the chairs neatly organized are completely wiped out

    • @MrPhife333
      @MrPhife333 2 года назад +6

      @@JuanSolo-ln8yq What chairs? Where are the chairs?

    • @terryallen9546
      @terryallen9546 2 года назад +8

      I can imagine engineers and scientists warning of disaster...and ship owners and politicians telling everyone, there was nothing to worry about...and later blaming someone else.

    • @sonnyday6830
      @sonnyday6830 2 года назад +1

      @@JuanSolo-ln8yq wanna pinpoint it a bit more as I see no chairs

  • @satireofcircumstance6458
    @satireofcircumstance6458 2 года назад +103

    The 1890s is my favourite decade in many ways: the fashions, the art, the literature, the new technologies coming online, the first filmed images. It was the cusp between the old world and the new, and therefore, with hindsight, it may have been the peak of Western civilization.

    • @changopardomuzik4953
      @changopardomuzik4953 2 года назад +30

      Yeah but they didn't understand that then. They were just living life, it's like someone analyzing our lives in 100 years. We just watch life pass by very few of us like yourself are bright enough to see the big picture.

    • @patschamps
      @patschamps 2 года назад +21

      A tragic event.
      I can’t help but notice the fashion back in these times. I wonder how long it took for them to get dressed back then. Especially the women.

    • @hybridShinx
      @hybridShinx 2 года назад +4

      Dont forget about the cowboy culture slowly dying

    • @Dirtbag-Hyena
      @Dirtbag-Hyena 2 года назад +15

      @@hybridShinx
      I'm from Texas and I can tell ya, it ain't dead.🤠

    • @hybridShinx
      @hybridShinx 2 года назад +5

      @@Dirtbag-Hyena the cowboys today got heavy weapons, kinda ruins the vibe :v

  • @johngalactus4014
    @johngalactus4014 Год назад +9

    This is incredible, the closest we can get to a time machine. Wish we had a way to see footage from like ancient Egyptian times.

  • @ginomorris4873
    @ginomorris4873 2 года назад +9

    This was astonishing it’s incredible and very sad all rolled into one historical film that’s thankfully been preserved for all to see.I’ll be interested to see what you present to us next .Thank you for sharing this.

  • @bunnygirl2448
    @bunnygirl2448 2 года назад +49

    I can’t tell when it collapses. Am I looking in the right place? Where/when is it?

    • @dertery8724
      @dertery8724 2 года назад +25

      I think that footage is either missing or destroyed. All we appear to have now is the launch and the aftermath of the sinking.
      Still very impressive though and the uploader deserves much credit.

    • @ivok9846
      @ivok9846 2 года назад +5

      crucial question is "what wave!?!".

    • @lunchbox1553
      @lunchbox1553 2 года назад +1

      I don't believe the news was true

    • @david9783
      @david9783 2 года назад

      It looks to me like it just rolled backwards and then a lot of lumber started appearing, along with what appeared to be big roof, maybe the stage, then lots of flotsam on the starboard side. No big wave was visible.

    • @nokomarie1963
      @nokomarie1963 2 года назад +3

      Watch carefully from 1:06 to 1:13 on the lower right side of the screen. The packed stands are there, and there is a lot of spray or mist, and everything wiggles, but it is really a wave and then a second one, and then the stands are gone, and a bunch of little heads and large spars are floating in the water.

  • @kevinbergin9971
    @kevinbergin9971 2 года назад +14

    Two quick thoughts: 1) Love the women in those hats! 2) Nice attempt at colorization too.

    • @proudblack9453
      @proudblack9453 2 года назад +2

      Much classier than their contemporaries in crop slops with blue hair.

  • @justincase2281
    @justincase2281 2 года назад +10

    This is something you never hear about. I've never heard about it. Just goes to show tragedy happens to all people in all times and if it weren't for photography, we would never really see it as it happened. Can you imagine how present day peoples' view of history would change if still, and motion picture photography, were developed say, 3000 years ago. Imagine seeing the Crucifixion of Jesus!! OMG!! Incredible footage here. Thanks much!!

    • @Smedley1947
      @Smedley1947 Месяц назад

      There's been a lot of tragedies since 1898 and only 34 people died. Near Trinidad Colorado in the US there was a massacre of coal miners who were trying to strike, killed by the combined forces of the Colorado National Guard and the private army of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company who mined coal to feed their Coal Fired electrical generation station and Iron Works. 25 workers killed just for trying to make a better life for themselves. You'll never ever hear of that. It was called the Ludlow Massacre. The struggles of working people are never allowed to see the light of day in our history books anymore. But it was in Colorado history books when I was in junior high school in the very early 60s. People now just wouldn't believe how bloody the struggle was to just get decent wages. Apparently they don't want you to know this has been going on for a long time. Businesses are still trying to crush unions daily.

  • @1971ironmike
    @1971ironmike Год назад +10

    Worst tragedy ever filmed also happens to be the worst filming of a tragedy. Nothing to be seen here.

  • @flash_channel2161
    @flash_channel2161 2 года назад +64

    Fascinating film, more late 1800s films please.😊

  • @offthewallsurfer1
    @offthewallsurfer1 2 года назад +3

    @2:37 the very first Wifi icon was filmed as well, stern of row boat to the right.

  • @christianlewis7055
    @christianlewis7055 2 года назад +12

    Every single person that existed while this was filmed, is no longer alive. A whole world of people has perish and been replaced since then.

    • @defftlingo4803
      @defftlingo4803 2 года назад

      I say that everytime I see an early 70s porn. They all dead (nearly) now.

    • @LeClusterFunk
      @LeClusterFunk 2 года назад

      @@defftlingo4803 aight den

    • @kattihatt
      @kattihatt 2 года назад

      Innovative comment. Did you simply just copy paste from another video?

    • @christianlewis7055
      @christianlewis7055 2 года назад +4

      @@kattihatt no, it’s just a genuine thought of mine that I found quite profound. Why are you being so pessimistic about it? Do you not grasp the gravity of such a notion? There’s so many implied existential thoughts to sprout from the idea. There’s only currently alive, people who have experienced the past 115-ish years at most! Every other occurrence and experience that’s ever been observed by a human in the previous thousands of years is gone. We can mostly only read about it. Being able to watch it in a video like this brings it so much more alive and is valuable for us to be able to reference our past as clearly as possible. As well as fascinating.

  • @vindolanda6974
    @vindolanda6974 2 года назад +4

    And to make the waste of life more useless, this ship would be obsolete in 7 years. The launch of the revolutionary British battleship HMS Dreadnought in 1905 immediately made all earlier battleships like this inadequate.

  • @robbleeker4777
    @robbleeker4777 2 года назад +28

    That is just something nobody could have predicted... I would think that is was probably a combination of an overcrowded stage and the wave, that caused it to collapse

    • @georgial6398
      @georgial6398 2 года назад +4

      it was easily predictable, the stage was not meant for spectators

    • @slwgekte
      @slwgekte Год назад

      So what happened? I cant really make out what the tragedy was from the video

  • @xxMary89xx
    @xxMary89xx 2 года назад +12

    It's incredible to think that the parents of the older peorple in this video were probably born in the 18th century.

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 Год назад

      Just about a century before this event, yes. Not many people survived beyond 70 in that era, the average being 65.

  • @peterfeltham5612
    @peterfeltham5612 Год назад +2

    The choice of music is so fitting.

  • @jpturner171
    @jpturner171 Год назад +2

    Wow so powerful and sad. Thank you for all the hard work putting this together!👍🏽

  • @bojangles2492
    @bojangles2492 2 года назад +6

    It's like the first LiveLeak video ever.

  • @RKWWWW
    @RKWWWW 2 года назад +6

    Nothing says tragedy like the mellow notes of the cello.

    • @Smedley1947
      @Smedley1947 Месяц назад +1

      As Lyle Lovett once said, "There's always room for cello".

  • @bidenadministrationischina5091
    @bidenadministrationischina5091 5 месяцев назад

    The music is really what allows me to immerse myself into the videos. Well done and bravo!

  • @misspeach3755
    @misspeach3755 2 года назад +4

    2:17 I like how that gentleman shoos away the camera. How very contemporary.

    • @MAINEVENT99
      @MAINEVENT99 10 месяцев назад

      he is like "stop bothering us, can't you see we are in some shit trouble around here"

  • @joynazarini5128
    @joynazarini5128 2 года назад +38

    Кости этих людей давно уже истлели, а мы смотрим их.
    Врят ли они думали, что через 132 года кто нибудь вспомнит о них
    👌👌👌

    • @sergionetwork4882
      @sergionetwork4882 2 года назад +4

      все тлен

    • @xChimkin
      @xChimkin 2 года назад +3

      you mongols got a way with words

    • @sergionetwork4882
      @sergionetwork4882 2 года назад +1

      @E123 Well of course it's Russian, he himself is Mongolian

    • @Icu-812-me2
      @Icu-812-me2 2 года назад +2

      Only you would leave the bodies to the elements. I am sure those unlucky enough were recovered were showed the proper respect in death

    • @joynazarini5128
      @joynazarini5128 2 года назад

      @E123
      Украина

  • @sladeb6036
    @sladeb6036 2 года назад +8

    Everyone always seemed to be dressed in their best even if the clothes were worn out.

  • @jeffreyraia5804
    @jeffreyraia5804 Год назад +2

    It's wild to think that just 30 years before this ship was launched, wooden sailing ships were being used. Such a remarkable leap in ship technology.

  • @Jolteon52
    @Jolteon52 Год назад +5

    "Stop filming and help us instead"

  • @pinkrose5796
    @pinkrose5796 2 года назад +24

    Most of the women probably drowned due to the clothes they were wearing. All those petticoats, and layers of clothes just dragged them down plus I'm sure they did their best to save their children if possible. Even little girls had petticoats which could make it difficult to swim😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

    • @Flips420
      @Flips420 2 года назад +5

      @Ricky Moore yet, somehow, you escaped the laws and theories of natural selection. I blame your parents for having you.

    • @vmm5163
      @vmm5163 2 года назад +1

      @Ricky Moore 👍👍👍

    • @misspeach3755
      @misspeach3755 2 года назад

      Back then, it wasn't common for women to know how to swim. Clothes certainly weren't the determining factor here. According to your theory, the men who jumped into the cold water to rescue the spectators and also wore layered clothes of natural fibres should've drowned, too.

    • @pinkrose5796
      @pinkrose5796 2 года назад +16

      @@misspeach3755 Woman wore layers of skirts which would make it more difficult to move your legs as they would've gotten entangled in all the skirt material. Men wore pants and would be able to move their legs to kick and stay afloat. Women also wore corsets,etc which would make it more difficult to take deep breaths whereas men wore shirts with nothing constricting their ability to take a deep breath.Go to the low end of a pool wearing pants and walk around; then put on a corsets, and ALL the layers of clothes, gloves, purse, jewelry, shoes, hats, etc that women wore and walk in the pool. Also try it after you've gotten you're entire outfit soaked. It's much more difficult and just about impossible to stay afloat.

    • @Jac70
      @Jac70 Год назад +2

      One statistic that suprised me was that one of the major causes of death for women in earlier centuries was drowning. Often these would be women who went down to rivers to wash clothes. The natural fibres such as wool and cotton that everyone wore in those days would become waterlogged and extremely heavy, to the point where people could not drag themselves out of the water.

  • @gasparocelloman9852
    @gasparocelloman9852 2 года назад +16

    Tragic circumstances indeed. Your choice of music is very apt. Are you able to share who the performers in the Chopin are, please?

  • @chrishumphreys3009
    @chrishumphreys3009 2 года назад +5

    For a full description of the event read the opening chapter of the book Down to the Ships in the Sea by Harry Grossett.

  • @xenotbbbeats7209
    @xenotbbbeats7209 Год назад +4

    It always makes me sad to realize that every person in that film is gone. So much for death denial.

    • @calmandharmony
      @calmandharmony Год назад +1

      It's sad to think nearly all their children are gone as well.

  • @backgroundmusik
    @backgroundmusik 2 года назад +6

    Imagine drowning and not being able to kick your boots off because you had to use a freakin button hook to put them on

    • @musicom67
      @musicom67 2 года назад

      On that note, I guess a bustle doesn't move like a big jellyfish

  • @ambientlightofdarknesss4245
    @ambientlightofdarknesss4245 2 года назад +5

    The internet itself will become a time machine in 100 years or so.
    Like imagine just going back 1900s and seeing a video your grandma posted of her taking a jog in new york in 1920.
    It'd be like that but just change up the dates

    • @danvincent2600
      @danvincent2600 2 года назад +1

      I can’t help but think that mega cities will look like they do in blade runner/Brazil. I mean huge skyscrapers linked by suspended walkways and (of course!) the obligatory flying cars!: ps. Hello the year 2568!

    • @vmm5163
      @vmm5163 2 года назад

      Facebook is deleting the pages of people who have died, so a lot of history is already being rubbed out ☹️

  • @zzzzxxxxxz6017
    @zzzzxxxxxz6017 2 месяца назад +2

    I guess I’m only one who missed the tragedy

  • @gsilva220
    @gsilva220 Год назад +2

    There was prehistory, where all was lost to time. Now we approach posthistory, where nothing will be lost to time.

  • @GreatGreebo
    @GreatGreebo 2 года назад +7

    Love what you’re doing…thank you ❤️

  • @notkimjong-un3019
    @notkimjong-un3019 2 года назад +5

    Just think, everyone in this video is dead, and the world has kept going on.

    • @JohnSmith-ff1rk
      @JohnSmith-ff1rk 2 года назад

      Hah, I thought I was the only one who thinks like that.

  • @bardo0007
    @bardo0007 Год назад +1

    1898 is very old footage, my grand dad was born in 1876 and died in 1942. My dad was born in 1914 and died in 2005. He was the youngest of 8 children. I was born a long time after my grand dad passed away.

  • @--ART3MIS--
    @--ART3MIS-- Год назад +1

    I'm really glad I've found your channel. fascinating stuff!

  • @ehayes5217
    @ehayes5217 2 года назад +17

    This is amazing, being able to watch this from so long ago! Thank you so much!🇺🇸

  • @ryanhruska6667
    @ryanhruska6667 2 года назад +10

    So let me get this correct. They new enough about water displacement and physics to build that large of a vessel. But didn't understand how much water it would displace and the resulting wave 🤔

    • @Rob774
      @Rob774 2 года назад +6

      Those who knew... had nothing to do with the seating area of onlookers. Not uncommon even today for one to not talk to the other.

    • @typeorulz
      @typeorulz 2 года назад +3

      @@Rob774 You speak the truth.

    • @timewave02012
      @timewave02012 Год назад

      Bruh. Water displacement, basic physics, and shipbuilding isn't something we just figured out in the last 100 years.

  • @ronnie7lambo
    @ronnie7lambo 6 месяцев назад

    Just found this absolutely amazing thank you so much. You are a legend!

  • @deleted5794
    @deleted5794 2 года назад +6

    How do people begin to make these colorized, and in 4k? It''s remarkable, and so is the video just in general

    • @MatthiasLehnen
      @MatthiasLehnen 2 года назад +1

      Deep learning makes it possible :)

    • @ADreamingTraveler
      @ADreamingTraveler Год назад

      The way black and white is done there are ways to figure out which gray scale color it uses represents the actual colors in the images. It's not always 100% accurate color reproduction but you can get it pretty close.

    • @manny4707
      @manny4707 Год назад

      this one is horribly done. when you zoom in and go frame by frame you can tell that they just threw it into a video editor and forced an ai to make it 4k and speed up the fps. There are shapes going everywhere, the boat sometimes doesn’t look like a boat, the dock which is meant to be the main focus in the video is impossible to see because the ai doesn’t understand what it is. Some videos are meant to stay in their normal fps. Especially old footage like this which was made with film which is extremely sharp. The details in this video would be extraordinary if not for the editing.

  • @eddieoi9444
    @eddieoi9444 2 года назад +24

    Even seeing a historic tragedy brings a lump to my throat..,

  • @brettk9316
    @brettk9316 2 года назад +11

    Wow amazing and sad at same time. This was a year before my first European ancestor even came to America.

    • @marbleman52
      @marbleman52 2 года назад

      Brett K...Why, your ancestors are mere youngsters...lol..! One of my ancestors showed up in America in about 1750. We fought for America in the American Revolution and in the War of 1812, and of course the Civil War and the later wars as well.

  • @thomasmint1761
    @thomasmint1761 Год назад +3

    It’s pretty amazing. This was taken 124 years ago. And, while video quality today has improved, it’s not that dramatically better

  • @RaptorJesus.
    @RaptorJesus. Месяц назад

    There's something so existentialy terrifying about watching old videos like this,
    Realising every single person in the video is dead, and in a century we too will be just forgotten shadows in random videos.
    We feel like we'll live forever, and then a video like this comes along to open our eyes to just how temporary and fleeting human lives are.

  • @pekingente88
    @pekingente88 2 года назад +10

    Can you imagine 10 years earlier Jack the Ripper doin his crime..

  • @androsstandley9195
    @androsstandley9195 2 года назад +6

    What respectable people. Soooo smart even the worker. Sadly this will not been seen again .

    • @vmm5163
      @vmm5163 2 года назад

      It won't be seen again? Good! That Victorian dress etiquette was emotionally restrictive and classist. We have to fight for our freedoms where expectations of dress is concerned.
      Btw, did you know that a man can walk round bare chested in today's society, yet a *completely* flat chested woman can't because her mere n*pples are considered a sex organ? Why do flat chested women have to wear a shirt? It's sexist in the extreme!

    • @corywiedenbeck1562
      @corywiedenbeck1562 2 года назад

      @@vmm5163 it is common decency,freedom fought here wasn't freedom to be degenerate as we have been

  • @aburninglandfillofbadmovie2930
    @aburninglandfillofbadmovie2930 8 месяцев назад +1

    The weird flexing wiggling shifting effect one sees in this video could be the camera picking up water vapor, but could also be a tell-tale clue that the video is a kinematographic piece of film.

  • @williamwiese9963
    @williamwiese9963 2 года назад +2

    Wow!!! How neat! Beautiful music to this as well

  • @brbhave2p00p4
    @brbhave2p00p4 2 года назад +26

    RUclips is the closest we will ever come to a time machine

    • @thegayestgoth
      @thegayestgoth 2 года назад +1

      I was watching these films on the History Channel in the 90’s.

    • @kevinbergin9971
      @kevinbergin9971 2 года назад

      @@thegayestgoth You're both wrong. I have a time machine.

    • @kck9742
      @kck9742 2 года назад +2

      ScrewTube are anti-free speech tyrannical commie c-suckers. It's the people who do the work of restoring and sharing these videos who should get credit.

    • @marbleman52
      @marbleman52 2 года назад +1

      @@kck9742 ...Yes, and along with CNN, MSNBC, The New York Times and many other Socialist platforms, they are the propaganda arm of the Socialist/Democrat Party.

  • @stone-coldsteveautism6986
    @stone-coldsteveautism6986 2 года назад +17

    Hmmmm...lemme see. She had a 26' draught (which should have been calculated by the engineers), a 74' beam, she was at least 500' long and had a displacement of 20,000+ tons.
    She was cast off from her building berth less than 60' from the Grandstand. (great seats folks, huh?)
    What could possibly go wrong? Stevie Wonder could have seen it coming.

    • @jsldj
      @jsldj 2 года назад +1

      ABSOLUTELY!

    • @JohnSmith-ff1rk
      @JohnSmith-ff1rk 2 года назад

      Perhaps you've learned that because of tragedies like this one. People don't simply just know things, they are learned by experience, and taught by those who have learned from tragedies like this one.

  • @BradleyWashburn1
    @BradleyWashburn1 Год назад +1

    At least no one had their smart phones out trying to record this.

  • @-Gunnarsson-
    @-Gunnarsson- 6 месяцев назад +1

    1900s was so different to 2000s.
    If you gonna look at a video from 2000 in year 2100. It will probably feel like yesterday.

  • @Terrapin22
    @Terrapin22 2 года назад +13

    The people on board were waving goodbye. They stopped when they saw what had happened.

    • @coloradostrong
      @coloradostrong Год назад

      They should have waved faster then, after seeing the peeps going down.

    • @spiritualhammer392
      @spiritualhammer392 4 дня назад

      Nobody is waving, you can't see any people hardly at all on the boat. The ones facing the camera did not see the disaster anyway if it was on the other side of the boat. ???

  • @lisakay1006
    @lisakay1006 2 года назад +16

    This is a Christmas 🎄 treat! Thank you so much. I love history! We’ll be next.

  • @MrCantStopTheRobot
    @MrCantStopTheRobot 6 месяцев назад +2

    This truly was the Golden Age of hats, I'm sure we can all agree.

  • @wolfhorschtdab5443
    @wolfhorschtdab5443 Год назад +1

    1:22 the frame rate is off the hook y'all... way better than the advertised 50 fps

  • @natemofield281
    @natemofield281 2 года назад +3

    Who ever set that up wasn't to bright.

    • @xianshep
      @xianshep 3 месяца назад

      The irony here is strong.

  • @Adxko
    @Adxko Год назад +3

    Thumbnail looks like Jon Tron

  • @celebrityrog
    @celebrityrog 2 года назад +2

    I saw no tragedy or stage or wave.

  • @TheAMVDJ
    @TheAMVDJ Год назад +2

    It took me a while to finally see what exactly happened. At first, I was looking to the right of the screen because when the ship was launched whatever that is at the right of the screen looks to get torn apart. But then I saw it. It's happening sorta behind the ship. There appears to be a huge elevated mass of people and when the video slows down you can make it out through the smoke all the people falling. Very sad to see!