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The Story of Franz Reichelt | A Short Documentary | Fascinating Horror

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  • Опубликовано: 15 авг 2024
  • "On the 4th of February, 1912, tailor Franz Reichelt arrived at the foot of the Eiffel Tower in a car, accompanied by a few close friends..."
    As always, THANK YOU to all my Patreon patrons: you make this channel possible.
    / fascinatinghorror
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    CHAPTERS:
    00:00 - Intro
    00:37 - Background
    04:57 - The Eiffel Tower Jump
    07:19 - The Aftermath
    MUSIC:
    ► "Glass Pond" by Public Memory
    SOURCES:
    ► "L'inventeur d'un parachute se lance de la tour Eiffel et s'ecrase sur le sol" published by Le Petit Parisien, February 1912. Available via: gallica.bnf.fr...
    ► "L'inventeur Reichelt s'est tue hier" published by Le Petit Journal, February 1912. Available via: gallica.bnf.fr...
    ► "Experience tragique" published by Le Matin, February 1912. Available via: gallica.bnf.fr...
    ► "Chute mortelle d'un inventeur de parachute" published by Le Temps, February 1912. Available via: gallica.bnf.fr...
    ► "The Silken Canopy: History of the Parachute" by John Lucas, published by Airlife Publishing, June 1997. Link: www.google.co....
    ​​​​​​​#Documentary​​​​ #History​​​​​​​​​ #TrueStories​

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @jasper3042
    @jasper3042 Год назад +966

    I think the fact that he had a heart attack on the way down gives us some insight into how quickly he realized how badly this was going to end. Yikes, poor fellow.

    • @nathanlong8295
      @nathanlong8295 Год назад +8

      The old days right?

    • @cainprescott4937
      @cainprescott4937 Год назад +59

      It's like he realized as soon as he jumped that his parachute would not save his life but would rather extend his death, at which point his heart suffered a shock-induced heart attack.
      If that knocked him out, it would've been a mercy, but if it didn't, then for a few seconds he would've been in both mental AND physical pain before he hit the ground and abruptly ceased to be.

    • @moonytheloony6516
      @moonytheloony6516 Год назад +25

      That and the fact that he didn't have someone at the base of the tower with a Wet-vac to clean up his mess, which is technically littering...which is a fine and possible jail time...I'd have a heart attack to if I realized that on the way down...fines are expensive and jail time is unpleasant.

    • @141poolplayer
      @141poolplayer Год назад +14

      I actually find that hard to believe. I've got to call bullshit.

    • @sherimcdaniel3491
      @sherimcdaniel3491 Год назад +5

      @@moonytheloony6516
      Well said, Moony!! You are, quite likely, right.

  • @lcolsen22
    @lcolsen22 Год назад +1671

    You're the first person I've seen that treated this man's death with respect and for that you have mine.

    • @get2dachoppa249
      @get2dachoppa249 Год назад +37

      Then you should listen to the Cautionary Tales podcast episode of this very incident from 2022.

    • @lcolsen22
      @lcolsen22 Год назад +26

      @@get2dachoppa249 I'll take a look. Thanks for the recommendation :)

    • @sekhmara8590
      @sekhmara8590 Год назад +169

      This channel is always very respectful regarding all the disasters they cover. One of my favorite things about it.

    • @royriley6282
      @royriley6282 Год назад +39

      Very objective and fact based channel. However doesn't stop me from calling the guy what he was: a moron. We meet people all the time in life who have inflated opinions of their intelligence and are incapable of listening to others. They are almost universally disliked, but apparently when their stupidity ends in their death, we must now treat them with respect. An odd human superstition. You may keep it.

    • @jankaant
      @jankaant Год назад +25

      Exactly ! He could have shown the video of the jump but he didn t . That shows the respect and delicacy .

  • @sleeming88
    @sleeming88 Год назад +1827

    It's important to understand the context behind Reichelt's actions in order to fully understand his reasoning. Paris during the Belle Epoque/Edwardian era was a magnet for all sorts of inventors, pioneers and cranks. If you wanted to make a name for yourself then Paris was the place to be and there'd be no shortage of people to encourage you. There's little wonder he felt so confident.

    • @dawnstorm9768
      @dawnstorm9768 Год назад +38

      Thank you for the background info.

    • @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley
      @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley Год назад +73

      Given the recent build of thr Eiffel Tower, I could surmise as much, but his inability to see that there could be any defects to his inventiom was the definition of stubborn. He should've at least had something to brace his fall. Especially as he must've been rather scared and had a heart attack on the way down (probably in the milliseconds it took to realize his parachute suit didn't work).

    • @aJazzcat
      @aJazzcat Год назад +37

      I was wondering if he possibly was convinced that death was better than failure

    • @Kai-ky6tf
      @Kai-ky6tf Год назад +19

      Bro was just crazy

    • @jarrodbarker5050
      @jarrodbarker5050 Год назад +4

      It's not important. The past doesn't exist. - Science

  • @victoriaeads6126
    @victoriaeads6126 Год назад +498

    Considering the time and place, if Reichelt hadn't jumped, someone else probably would have. It feels like one of those nearly inevitable historical moments, especially considering the push at the time to succeed in inventing a practical parachute.

    • @casbyness
      @casbyness Год назад +15

      My great grandmother from my dad's side, and my grandmother from my mother's side, were both rescued from death by their respective older sisters, who were killed in the act of those rescues. If either of those extremely unlikely events hadn't occurred, my entire family line would not exist.
      Reichelt's death could indeed have not only prevented the demise of some other random inventor, but also all the good that then came from that person's survival. We'll never know.

    • @LadyVoldemort
      @LadyVoldemort Год назад +3

      @@casbyness
      I like the way you think. 👍❤

    • @godzilla928
      @godzilla928 Год назад

      Lol

    • @godzilla928
      @godzilla928 Год назад

      @@casbyness xd

    • @Hanz13171
      @Hanz13171 Год назад +1

      "it's a cannon event"

  • @Zenneuer
    @Zenneuer Год назад +723

    Since this story is so depressing, I'd like to imagine an alternate universe version where his parachute also fails but he was able to glide to safety using his magnificent mustache, Dumbo the elephant style.
    This then start a new age of mustache-powered aviation.

    • @frogosplayer1
      @frogosplayer1 Год назад +77

      This is so absurd it caught me off guard but I love it 😂

    • @sazzlepop321
      @sazzlepop321 Год назад +19

      Love this

    • @adamolupin
      @adamolupin Год назад +46

      My immediate thought was of the ends of his mustache turning into propellers like Yosemite Sam.

    • @rainey1987
      @rainey1987 Год назад +24

      Everything everywhere all at once fully supports this idea, and it most definitely happened in an alternate universe

    • @RobotacularRoBob
      @RobotacularRoBob Год назад +3

      @@rainey1987 The idea of a multiverse where anything and everything happens is preposterous. It doesn’t account for realism and the laws of the universe

  • @sunshineinabag1451
    @sunshineinabag1451 Год назад +441

    The only good thing about having insomnia is catching a new Fascinating Horror upload at 4:15 am

    • @JDLupus
      @JDLupus Год назад +6

      I sometimes wonder whether watching these at those times are contributing to the insomnia!

    • @Penuts911
      @Penuts911 Год назад +4

      east coast guy how’s the weather

    • @Jabba1625
      @Jabba1625 Год назад +5

      @@JDLupus Nah its more the stress of trying to survive and pay the bills for me.

    • @lilacDaisy111
      @lilacDaisy111 Год назад +2

      I hope you have a blue-blocker on your screen, or you'll never get to sleep

    • @davidmusiyenko4158
      @davidmusiyenko4158 Год назад +2

      No idea why I just woke up at 3am to watch this video.

  • @coloradohikertrash9958
    @coloradohikertrash9958 Год назад +354

    There's the strong possibility this was the first time a human death was ever captured on film. Strange thing to think about in these times...

    • @matgeezer2094
      @matgeezer2094 Год назад +14

      That's an interesting thought you might be right. The first in all our history

    • @richardhunter132
      @richardhunter132 Год назад +20

      it's rare to see deaths on film at all. the only thing I can think of is when they show some disaster and you know that people are being killed, but you never actually see the people

    • @31webseries
      @31webseries Год назад +24

      @@richardhunter132 They capture the deaths, they just don't show them.

    • @maxonite
      @maxonite Год назад +6

      @@richardhunter132 I mean they did record quite a lot of the World Wars didn’t they

    • @charlievanvlijmen1063
      @charlievanvlijmen1063 Год назад +7

      Factory accidents are commonly caught on camera too, often in countries with less worker safety

  • @chinchilla6547
    @chinchilla6547 Год назад +75

    I think this is a great example of the sunk cost fallacy as well. People everywhere telling him not to continue and him literally breaking bones but this was the one thing he’s worked on for years so it’ll work if I get a chance in Paris.

  • @culturebreath369
    @culturebreath369 Год назад +115

    Shout out to the guard giving it one last attempt to stop him. 💪 Good heart on that one.

    • @pinkyuzu
      @pinkyuzu Год назад +8

      Yeah, I thought so too.

    • @culturebreath369
      @culturebreath369 Год назад +10

      @@pinkyuzu You don't normally hear those details even if they happened. Especially these days. We film eachother die within feet of eachother.

  • @Fallassa
    @Fallassa Год назад +42

    Reichelt was also incredibly passionate about *safety* and protecting the people who would, hypothetically, use his inventions. A huge motivating factor in his work to design a parachute suit was his desire to create a piece of safety equipment that would protect people’s lives.
    I deeply respect his desire to do good and his ingenuity, even though he ended up dying due to his invention.

    • @coconutsmarties
      @coconutsmarties Год назад

      He ended up dying due to his spectacular arrogance, not his invention.

  • @trevormillar1576
    @trevormillar1576 Год назад +377

    Ad a security guard myself, I can assure you, this is not the stupidest person a security guard has had to deal with.

    • @ClaimOfRightMuso
      @ClaimOfRightMuso Год назад +8

      Do tell.

    • @fullshark09
      @fullshark09 Год назад +8

      As a regular civilian, an average security guard/bouncer is way dumber than this guy.

    • @godzilla928
      @godzilla928 Год назад

      @@fullshark09 indeed xd

    • @gurtelrosen9801
      @gurtelrosen9801 Год назад +6

      @@fullshark09 I doubt it. None of them would have jumped.

    • @SaraNightfire1
      @SaraNightfire1 9 месяцев назад +2

      As a person who had to take business law and see how liability works and how lawsuits can come from anything.
      Yeah, I know what you’re saying.

  • @Slikx666
    @Slikx666 Год назад +111

    I didn't know about the heart attack. But he tried to help people and that's worth some respect from us.

    • @gurtelrosen9801
      @gurtelrosen9801 Год назад +1

      he did it for the money.

    • @erickearnes9644
      @erickearnes9644 Год назад +1

      There is that 5 letter cuss word again!👿🤑 Money 🤑(Greed ) that is the root of all evil 👿👿!!!

    • @Fighter4Street
      @Fighter4Street 6 месяцев назад

      Do you ever wonder how they could tell he had a heart attack?

    • @Slikx666
      @Slikx666 6 месяцев назад

      @@Fighter4Street
      I think it involves good grades at school, collage or university and then experience. That's about all I can think of. 🧐

    • @siderth9035
      @siderth9035 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@Fighter4Street Rien ne permet d'affirmer qu'il est mort d'une crise cardiaque. On a seulement constaté son décès, rien de plus car aucune autopsie n'a été réalisée.

  • @hawaiidispenser
    @hawaiidispenser Год назад +25

    It's enlightening to hear the details that led up to the jump. When you first hear about the story, you get this impression that no one tried to stop him or that no one cared about safety back then, but this video shows that wasn't entirely true.

  • @RelicCipher
    @RelicCipher Год назад +41

    There's something that's going to stick with me about learning that he had a heart attack on the way down... I can't help but wonder what caused it, the shock of the fall itself, or the horrific realization that his invention failed, and it was too late to back off. Maybe a mix of both. Sure you can argue the man was a fool, but it is still kinda sad to think that his life had to end in such a scary way.

  • @TheIndifferentGamer
    @TheIndifferentGamer Год назад +460

    "I intend to prove the worth of my invention"
    Mission accomplished I guess.

    • @KitsuNerezza
      @KitsuNerezza Год назад +28

      Mission failed successfully.

    • @Gamble661
      @Gamble661 Год назад +8

      @@Horizon429 Well, he did achieve fame I guess. The price of it was a bit steep though...

    • @Richard-zc1cj
      @Richard-zc1cj Год назад +8

      He was a early Darwin award winner.

    • @tommyvercetti891
      @tommyvercetti891 Год назад +3

      💀👍

    • @Oriana_leung
      @Oriana_leung Год назад

      🤣

  • @bellakagamine
    @bellakagamine Год назад +395

    this one is insane. you have to wonder if he knew exactly what was going to happen, honestly.

    • @xSayresthx
      @xSayresthx Год назад +56

      What could have he been thinking when the dummy didn't work and he still went ahead and tried it?

    • @scoobydo446
      @scoobydo446 Год назад +50

      @@xSayresthx he was thinking he only needed more height

    • @KCzz15
      @KCzz15 Год назад +68

      He knew exactly what was going to happen, halfway down the fall when he had his heart attack.

    • @capt.bart.roberts4975
      @capt.bart.roberts4975 Год назад +30

      As someone who was a stunt arranger, and participant, you have to be somewhat touched to not do all you can go mitigate the risk.

    • @gohawks3571
      @gohawks3571 Год назад

      @@KCzz15 Man, on the one hand, I was thinking I hope he died of the heart attack on the way down. Then I thought how much a mid air heart attack would suck😖 Poor, kinda stupid, kinda brilliant man...

  • @damonroberts7372
    @damonroberts7372 Год назад +86

    “If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. Then quit. No use being a damn fool about it.” - W.C. Fields

    • @eywine.7762
      @eywine.7762 Год назад

      That's one of my favorite quotes.

    • @FrankNFurter1000
      @FrankNFurter1000 Год назад +6

      Quentin Crisp had a similar variation I quite like: “If at first you don’t succeed, failure may be your style.”

  • @rayross997
    @rayross997 Год назад +253

    He certainly should have had confidence in his invention, that is confidence it was not safe. He sure had guts and most likely helped other inventors learn from his mistake.

    • @zombiedoggie2732
      @zombiedoggie2732 Год назад +10

      yes, the failure could be a learning opportunity. But it's only a learning opportunity if you don't make yourself the guinea pig. The mannequin can also give a good 'wat if' scenerio. Such as, 'what if the pilot was injured, or somehow otherwise incompacitated, can they still safely get down?'

    • @CT77
      @CT77 Год назад +2

      He fell so that we could someday float 😀

    • @dx1450
      @dx1450 Год назад +3

      One could say he made a huge impact in parachute design...

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 Год назад +2

      @@zombiedoggie2732 Actually, you CAN be the guinea pig and still gain a valuable learning experience from a failure... It's just that YOU MUST SURVIVE that experience to put that learning and gains to any use, yourself... Otherwise, it's still a learning experience, but reserved for someone else.
      World's MOST dedicated TEACHER??? ;o)

    • @D0NU75
      @D0NU75 Год назад +2

      Well seeing he's got a heart attack on midair, even if the parachute deployed and worked properly he would have landed most likely dead. That really makes me question the level of confidence he had in his plan though, maybe a test jump with a dummy could have had prevented this.

  • @jerseythedog
    @jerseythedog Год назад +352

    Dude is actually a pioneer. He is the world’s first BASE jumper.

    • @zakelwe
      @zakelwe Год назад +29

      So that is what the E stands for in BASE ... Eiffel....

    • @NibNa5ty
      @NibNa5ty Год назад +14

      Based base jumper

    • @ytcensorhack1876
      @ytcensorhack1876 Год назад +22

      More like the world's first darwin award

    • @Rick0430
      @Rick0430 Год назад +21

      His biggest problem is he couldn't also be the worlds SECOND base jumper.

    • @flynnlivescmd
      @flynnlivescmd Год назад +7

      How often do planes crash?
      Just once.

  • @Diptera_Larvae
    @Diptera_Larvae Год назад +69

    Not all tragedies have to be in vain, it’s this type of video that reminds me why I like this channel, sometimes a loss of life can pave for a safer future.

    • @BrenMurphy1
      @BrenMurphy1 Год назад +3

      Indeed. Often it is only after we smell the scent of failure that we can sniff the wife of success. Or something like that 😂🎉

    • @seeker296
      @seeker296 Год назад +6

      This one was totally in vain. Could have used a mannequin

    • @travisbrunner2922
      @travisbrunner2922 Год назад

      @@BrenMurphy1 Go sniff someone else's wife!

  • @LORDOFDORKNESS42
    @LORDOFDORKNESS42 Год назад +231

    I deeply respect Franz commitment. He went all in on his dream.
    Just a pity he didn't have the patience for a few more trail runs.

    • @user-xu2pi6vx7o
      @user-xu2pi6vx7o Год назад +12

      Even moreso that his dream was to save others.

    • @trevordick272
      @trevordick272 Год назад +6

      To be fair, I don’t think too many more trail runs would have helped. Hard to inflate a parachute at ground level effectively.

    • @jake12466
      @jake12466 4 месяца назад

      *TRIAL, not TRAIL

  • @marablake344
    @marablake344 Год назад +90

    Your documentaries are so well researched, scripted, and produced. I look forward every Tuesday to watching them. Thank you for sharing your dedication and sharing these with us.

    • @FascinatingHorror
      @FascinatingHorror  Год назад +17

      And thank YOU for watching! I love being able to share these stories.

    • @tgd9477
      @tgd9477 Год назад +4

      Yes I love history and these are awesome 👍🏾

    • @mattmc5069
      @mattmc5069 5 месяцев назад +1

      I gotta give him a 10 out of 10 for effort. He cared about whom would use his invention, did his research and was confident enough in the product to demonstrate it himself. Really you can't ask for a better inventor. It makes it all the more tragic. But his death isn't in vain because it did save some lives im sure there is at least one person who believed his idea would work and maybe even didn't know him but has a similar idea and abandoned the idea due to the tragedy. He didn't show us what worked that day but he did show us what DIDN'T work. That ultimately made others tweak their designs.

    • @johncmitchell4941
      @johncmitchell4941 2 месяца назад

      ​@@mattmc5069 Sadly, while he could surely construct the suit he didn't design it based on testing prototypes or perhaps variants. Imagine what he'd have improved had he learned from the tower with a 'dummy'. One could say he tried too hard. He was pushing the envelope as were all the others. Then we now have wing suits, but I can't imagine how one would land, esp if not trained to do so. Hmm ..

  • @frogman9989
    @frogman9989 Год назад +2

    His mustache was absolutely AWESOME . It's a shame what happened, but the mustache, pure brilliance!

  • @NonStoppie
    @NonStoppie Год назад +23

    Just wanted to say. The tune you use in the beginning and end fits perfectly with your vids!

  • @jelyfisher
    @jelyfisher Год назад +22

    I once saw a 100ish-year-old video of a man who jumped off the Eiffel tower, supposedly in an early Batman suit. It broke my heart, and I couldn't stop thinking about my little boy who was obsessed with Batman.
    Now I wonder if it was a video of this man?

  • @McKeelix
    @McKeelix Год назад +5

    Confirmation bias is a hell of a drug. I get why he was so convinced it’d work, though. As a kid I used to jump off ledges with my umbrella open. I could feel the air resistance catch, and it really did feel like it made a difference in whether or not I stumbled upon landing. However, my uncle had parachuted a few times while training in the national guard, and he had explained that even with a military grade parachute, you still hit the ground hard enough to explode your knees and decimate your spine if you’re not ready for it. He was good at explaining things.

  • @whitestarlinegoodnight
    @whitestarlinegoodnight Год назад +12

    In some alternate universe, this story would've been a classic "underdog inventor proves his naysayers wrong", and I think there's a lesson to be learnt in that.
    When the famous inventors of the past began experimenting with their passion projects, their success came only after repeated failure beforehand (and with a significant amount of luck). The only thing that separates great inventors with confidence and failures with excessive hubris is how much of their faith in their work is justified.

  • @The_Defiant_One
    @The_Defiant_One Год назад +33

    "A man's got to know his limitations."
    - Inspector Harold Francis Callahan

  • @DollarGeneral_Is_a_Plague
    @DollarGeneral_Is_a_Plague Год назад +86

    Imagine bringing some of these inventors into the future to today and seeing their reactions to today's technology.

  • @ghostratsarah
    @ghostratsarah Год назад +443

    knowing what NOT to do, and the consequences of doing it, is probably even more important than knowing how to do it. This wouldn't have become such a significant lesson if he hadn't made it so... dramatic. At least he died for something.

    • @SylverMage
      @SylverMage Год назад +18

      And yet, there are SO many Jurassic Park movies...
      But no, you're right. Learning what DOESN'T work is very much part of the scientific process. It's always a shame when it comes at a high cost, but it wasn't meaningless. And his heart was in the right place: parachutes are valuable to air travel.

    • @HellyeahRook
      @HellyeahRook Год назад +3

      @@Horizon429 He's definitely famous for his endeavors.

    • @macaylacayton2915
      @macaylacayton2915 Год назад +3

      lol yeah, if you know what to do and still screw it up then it's a somewhat smaller(comparatively) lesson than NOT knowing what to do and screwing it up. screwing it up as you did NOT know what to do means A LOT has to be learned and set in stone

    • @trevorregay9283
      @trevorregay9283 Год назад +4

      I guess....however, I do get the sense from this vid that thee was some kind of race to find or develop a parachute type device for the nascent air travel mode......that being said, I don't he was responsible for bringing this to the forefront or anyone used his "design" to further parachuting.....perhaps others considered how to make one less cumbersome and looked briefly at what this guy was pushing, but knew full well that you definitely needed far more surface area of a chute in order to slow its descent......anyway, I don't think we can call this man the father of the parachute or casualty of its future development...

    • @kennedytaylor4783
      @kennedytaylor4783 Год назад +1

      Well said.

  • @AG-ng8gt
    @AG-ng8gt Год назад +30

    I always learn something new from this channel, even about incidents I've heard about many times before.

  • @adamellsworth3732
    @adamellsworth3732 Год назад +37

    Imagine if the parachute had worked perfectly, but still suffered a heart attack, and he landed safely on the ground, dead.
    That would have spooked a lot of further invention for a while. Even if people completely trusted their designs, it would plant the idea that humans can't take the stress of the trip.

    • @davi.medrade
      @davi.medrade 5 месяцев назад

      Reminded me of this.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Hayes_(jockey)

  • @lindsay3995
    @lindsay3995 Год назад +12

    I’m going to need someone to explain to me this concept of having a heart attack on the way down. Even someone experiencing a heart attack rarely drops dead immediately, so I can’t imagine post-mortem evidence of an attack really tells us much. You can’t very well say he was dead before hitting the ground or anything, though that would be comforting in some way to think-especially if you’re terrified of heights like me.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Год назад +1

      I’m also skeptical about this. If you read up about heart attack autopsy, they can find blocked arteries but that doesn’t happen instantly. Any other evidence like dead heart tissue also wouldn’t have had time to happen. On the other hand if his heart stopped due to fright, that’s technically not a heart attack since it’s not caused by blockage - and I doubt they could have seen evidence of that in an autopsy either. But I’m not a doctor so…?

  • @elizabethhair9017
    @elizabethhair9017 Год назад +58

    Hope you'll do something for April like you did last year with the Isla Nublar Incident.

    • @travismiller4320
      @travismiller4320 Год назад +16

      Probably, the year before had video on the Amity Bay shark incident, trying to brainstorm in my head movies he could do…

    • @stevenstice6683
      @stevenstice6683 Год назад +17

      The Nakatomi Plaza Crisis was highly requested.

    • @eeveestar6826
      @eeveestar6826 Год назад

      ​@@stevenstice6683Personally I'd love to see the 1997 eruption of Mt Wilshire in Los Angeles or the 1997 eruption of Dante's Peak. The capsizing of the SS Poseidon in the seventies would be a good one too.

    • @housemana
      @housemana Год назад +6

      you normies, stop discussing this. he will do what he will do.

    • @erraticonteuse
      @erraticonteuse Год назад +5

      I don't actually want him to do The Snap, but just imagining Infinity War/Endgame being told in this format is very funny to me.

  • @davidbudge8359
    @davidbudge8359 Год назад +20

    Quoting the original plan he was actually going to jump from the second platform but his friends stopped him, if he had jumped from that height his parachute would have fully deployed and might have saved him. The book of Heroic Failures.

  • @nicoleofnowhere8842
    @nicoleofnowhere8842 Год назад +37

    It's so sad because if you watch the film of the drop (not for the faint of heart) you can tell that if he'd done it with a mannequin, he would've learned so much about how to change his design from the film. 😢 The thing did fully unfurl.

  • @LilliBlackmore
    @LilliBlackmore Год назад +10

    I love this channel. Your work is always respectful and never sensational.

  • @SonOfASpurs2023
    @SonOfASpurs2023 Год назад +6

    Poor man, but happy to have his story treated with such respect. Always the best work my good sir

  • @jacekatalakis8316
    @jacekatalakis8316 Год назад +84

    I knew the story as soon as you mentioned where and that an invention was involved. I just forgot the name of the poor guy who tried showing it worked.

    • @BrenMurphy1
      @BrenMurphy1 Год назад +2

      Beautiful 😢 ❤️

    • @TK-fk4po
      @TK-fk4po Год назад +7

      The footage of his death plunge is readily available on RUclips. It is very eerie.

    • @trevorregay9283
      @trevorregay9283 Год назад +3

      @@TK-fk4po your kidding? This was filmed? I didn't realize they had that ability back then......then again...I suppose if there was ever something to capture on film....this was it........

    • @TK-fk4po
      @TK-fk4po Год назад +4

      @@trevorregay9283 Yeah, search on youtube. This video had clips from it - but of course, the eerie part is him standing on the edge for almost a minute appearing to go back and forth as to whether he should do it, then he jumps and the guy on the ground captures the death plunge and impact and a few seconds of onlookers taking his broken body away.

  • @TheJingles007
    @TheJingles007 Год назад +671

    “We’d rather have pilots die with the plane than have a parachute because planes are expensive”
    It’s nice to see that governments have always sucked

    • @chad9166
      @chad9166 Год назад +15

      Probably would have better luck surviving trying to land the plane than using some moron's death trap "parachute" but kk

    • @nonna_sof5889
      @nonna_sof5889 Год назад +71

      There was a faction in British Parliament against helmets during WW1, saying they increased head injuries... well ignoring that those head injuries would have been deaths without their helmet. Really it was just because a crippled soldier costs more than a dead one. Of course it's not like private industry is any better. Kids caught in machines and all that.

    • @medler2110
      @medler2110 Год назад +23

      @@nonna_sof5889 Or maybe they didn't understand the concept of survivorship bias.

    • @skiller189x4
      @skiller189x4 Год назад +30

      As someone who has made several airborne jumps in the US Army, and one with the South Korean special ops, I always had a second to contemplate trusting my life with a person who packed the chute (called a Rigger) who I had never met and never seen. How many put their lives in someone else’s hands so unequivocally? In the military we have to have ultimate trust in our comrades.

    • @Joseph-Mamma
      @Joseph-Mamma Год назад

      Pssy

  • @elliottprice6084
    @elliottprice6084 Год назад +13

    For all his faults, and being blinded by his own ambition, Franz Reichelt had his flaws, but he paved the way for saving a lot of lives in aviation, and that has to be remembered. I'd never heard of him before, and its stories like these that Fascinating Horror brings to memory so well

    • @ng.tr.s.p.1254
      @ng.tr.s.p.1254 Год назад +2

      The sole reason why other parachute inventors weren't as well-known was simply because they cared about safety and didn't attempt to take their own life to make a point.

  • @bobt5778
    @bobt5778 Год назад +10

    A bad day. His invention failed, he had a heart attack, and he had to climb 347 stairs to do it.

  • @melissag9160
    @melissag9160 Год назад +28

    Wow, isn't it funny how we don't think about the origins of things that we take for granted today? I can't say that I've ever wondered about the origins of the parachute. I've always wondered who was the first person to think that eating a raw oyster was a good idea, but I've never wondered about the first person to think that personally testing the first parachute was a good idea. I love this channel. So many interesting stories about the origins and development of safety measures, tools, and regulations that have impacted society. Thank you!

    • @westsidewheelmen
      @westsidewheelmen Год назад +3

      How about the guy that discovered milk? I bet he was into a lot of creepy stuff.

    • @tannerhyde-dc3ud
      @tannerhyde-dc3ud Год назад +1

      And…
      The Artichoke.
      Who can look at a large Thistle & think there’s something edible there.
      But…. They are delicious.
      Who knew.

  • @rogersheddy6414
    @rogersheddy6414 Год назад +5

    I found the pathe' film showing the incident, including the impact depression it looks very much like something you would see with Bugs Bunny and Wylie Coyote.

  • @helenawarsinnak
    @helenawarsinnak Год назад +34

    As ALWAYS.... another AMAZING video!! This story is so extremely sad...Franz was so damn passionate and proud of his creation and unfortunately a little bit over confident... I feel, if he would have used one of the mannequins, he would have noticed the flaws in his suit... And I can guarantee he would have been immediately making a new design to replace the last one as he did on prior attempts, and POSSIBLY in time could have made the right parachute...but, he was a smart and talented man that put his whole heart and life into his creation, WHICH helped to lead the way to what is used today!!
    (**To bad he wasn't around long enough to see it!!😥🙏)

    • @borderlands6606
      @borderlands6606 Год назад +2

      He went from hypothesis to conclusion, without observation or methodology. Not a good idea with novel technology and science.

    • @Skaatje
      @Skaatje Год назад

      He was NOT a smart man. lol 😂

  • @zachhaywood1564
    @zachhaywood1564 Год назад +1

    Been following this story for a long time, never knew until now about his heart attack. That's what I like about your channel. I always learn something new.

  • @stephenmoerlein8470
    @stephenmoerlein8470 Год назад +6

    One has to admire his passion for discovery and invention. In science, even an experiment with negative results can generate new knowledge. What was it about his design that failed? RIP Franz Reichelt, and congratulations for your contribution in advancing parachute technology.

    • @vinawaldren6888
      @vinawaldren6888 Год назад +1

      Indeed, I often say if certain inventions were up to me we'd still be living in caves, without fire, without wheels, without tools...(certainly without litter box liners!) 🤣

  • @johnirving5949
    @johnirving5949 Год назад +19

    He failed to understand the gravity of the situation.

  • @coconyt3623
    @coconyt3623 Год назад +3

    By the way, congratulations on 1M! Brings me great joy to see your continued growth, especially as someone who found you when you had some 7 or 8 uploads. Very well deserved, here's to your continued rise and looking forward to more FH docs!

  • @holotori_senior_admin_teno
    @holotori_senior_admin_teno Год назад +1

    You always see those black and white videos of the missteps in early aviation, the failures in design of planes and helicopters and parachutes. It's great seeing one of those brought to life, and the story behind them explained.

  • @FM-hw8yv
    @FM-hw8yv Год назад +8

    New Fascinating Horror videos always make my week better

  • @adamlee3772
    @adamlee3772 Год назад +3

    Amazed you have covered this today. I was just talking to the guys at work about this on Friday.

  • @sherimcdaniel3491
    @sherimcdaniel3491 Год назад +36

    wow. if he stood, looking down, for several minutes before jumping and had a heart attack, mid-fall, he pretty much got the result that was inevitable.

    • @SpaceCadet45s
      @SpaceCadet45s Год назад +7

      When that parachute didn't deploy, he simply gave up the ghost. He knew it was over. RIP

    • @DerMichael
      @DerMichael Год назад +5

      And to be fair, if any human is to try that invention in action, it may be their inventor. After many tests without humans of course, but imagine someone would tell you "I got this new invention, and all my dummies survived, but we never tested it with a human. You wanna try?" I certainly wouldn't because I would be too scared. Reichelt stood there, uncertain too, but I guess he knew he had to do it because no one else would.

    • @lifespanwellnessbeauty-60i64
      @lifespanwellnessbeauty-60i64 Год назад +1

      ​@@SpaceCadet45s Amen.

    • @sherimcdaniel3491
      @sherimcdaniel3491 Год назад

      @@DerMichael
      HAHAHAHA!!! Touche’

  • @robertuskoppies444
    @robertuskoppies444 Год назад +2

    This is one of the best channels on youtube. The very finely selected topics, your voice, the way of telling these stories, the respect for the subject and the suspense that you build up very creatively....outstanding performance. Thank you very much for running this creative channel.

  • @TheJumpingJake
    @TheJumpingJake Год назад +11

    To this day, this man was a pioneer to greater things than he could have imagined.

  • @lordshell
    @lordshell Год назад +3

    Gotta admire the courage.
    And confidence.
    Wisdom, on the other hand...

  • @raumshen9298
    @raumshen9298 Год назад +6

    I just saw the actual footage, of course FH narration is just spot on

  • @galebailey5583
    @galebailey5583 Год назад +3

    But even the Wright Brothers realized that attempting to fly or glide involved risking their lives with their invention. You could say Reichelt was doing the same with his parachute suit, but his results ended very tragically.

  • @kaoru288
    @kaoru288 Год назад +6

    sometimes the best of inventions came from mere accidents.
    Imagine during the jump, Franz's parachute folded just the right way for him to just glide down below.
    he noticed it, checked how it looked from other photographers present at the time, trimmed some excess stuff on his "chute"
    and,instead of making a parachute, he made the very first Wingsuit

  • @tonisiret5557
    @tonisiret5557 Год назад +9

    At least this episode doesn't follow the "innocent people die, & the people in charge get off Scott-free" formula!
    He paved the way for others, good for him 👍

  • @legendarygary2744
    @legendarygary2744 Год назад +8

    Your videos never fail to live up to your channel’s name!

  • @gantz22ify
    @gantz22ify Год назад +3

    His biggest mistake was saying “See you soon!”. That’s like saying “I’ll be right back.” in a horror film.

  • @jackking5567
    @jackking5567 Год назад

    It's a tragic story. The footage we have of the event is so sad to see. A lure of big money on offer and his desire to not just claim a reward but to also make his name known to many. It's unfortunate that we know his name now for the wrong reasons.
    His pausing on the jump is difficult to watch. For me I see a man who adored the excitement and attention from the crowds and yet once there, stood on the boundary he's pretty much regretting his choices. It's like he's regretting being there and it's only the desire to please a crowd that makes him leap. I expect his heart was already going into meltdown before he jumped - his body rejecting his life choices.
    I'm pleased you made this video. It gives us a much better understanding of the man and his life and dreams. Thanks for sharing.

  • @kevincharbonneau5953
    @kevincharbonneau5953 Год назад +4

    Love❤ your channel. Thank you for sharing these stories.

  • @CatOperated
    @CatOperated Год назад +6

    I’ll say this, he had an absolutely fantastic mustache.

  • @niaram
    @niaram Год назад +2

    this makes me so sad. he worked so hard and had so much confidence in it. i can’t imagine how terrified he must’ve felt when he realized it wasn’t going to work. he just wanted to be an inventor and change the world, and ppl just mock him

  • @shiroshika1
    @shiroshika1 Год назад +39

    We can learn one thing from Reichelt. Conviction.

    • @daveb227
      @daveb227 Год назад +2

      And gravity never fails

    • @nhmooytis7058
      @nhmooytis7058 Год назад

      Or the wisdom of “Let’s not and say we did.”

    • @lofthouse23
      @lofthouse23 3 месяца назад

      Avoid France at all costs?

  • @berner
    @berner Год назад +10

    I'm actually very impressed and thankful for Franz and other inventors like him, because even though it was fatal, it was because of him that we learned what didn't work which if I recall correctly, is a part of finding out what does.
    There's an expression I heard a while ago and I think it applies here:
    "There's no such thing as a failed experiment."

    • @coconutsmarties
      @coconutsmarties Год назад +1

      This was one of the very rare examples of a truly failed experiment. If he had used a mannequin and it was destroyed on impact, even that would've been a valuable outcome as it would provide him with data to work on his next iteration.
      This just provided the Parisian concrete with a wet splat.

    • @berner
      @berner Год назад +1

      @@coconutsmarties Whether it was a non living construct made out of plastic or a biological organism, the end result was the same:
      His parachute suit didn't work.
      It was tragic but we all learned something from this experiment.

    • @svenjansen2134
      @svenjansen2134 9 месяцев назад

      'Always wear a labcoat so it's an experiment'

  • @korbell1089
    @korbell1089 Год назад +3

    Reichelt: "Hold my wine."
    People like him are critical for the survival of our race. We watch them then say things like, "OK, don't eat that." or, "Yeah that didn't work."

  • @aprilmorris4588
    @aprilmorris4588 Год назад +3

    That was a truly fascinating story. It really proves that there are lessons to be learned from someone else's mistakes.

  • @Unownshipper
    @Unownshipper Год назад +5

    God, you’re really good at building tension with your delivery. My palms were getting sweaty listening to this account. My fear of heights helped, but it was mostly your narration.
    I wish he’d followed his proposal and used a mannequin, but I commend his desire to be a pioneer. Sad way to go.

  • @davidmedlin8562
    @davidmedlin8562 Год назад +27

    I appreciate you not showing the footage, why I like and respect this channel its not about shock

    • @martinc.720
      @martinc.720 Год назад +2

      Would have been removed by RUclips.

    • @meetoo594
      @meetoo594 Год назад +1

      @@martinc.720 The full unedited footage is on youtube, has been for years.

  • @TreyMcDonaldAnimator
    @TreyMcDonaldAnimator Год назад +29

    Really, somebody had to. A Rocketeer sense of nobility without the precautions of health nor fatality. It really does take a man with at worst a boost of arrogance and showmanship, at beast a novel and world changing sense of bravery and innovation, to do something this insane. Give him this, he went down in the history books, but not for the reason he may have wanted.

  • @ChristieAdamsKangoo
    @ChristieAdamsKangoo Год назад +2

    Well, I'll hand it to him: he was confident to the end and he didn't try to coerce anyone else into being his human guinea pig. At least he went out chasing his dream.

  • @mauricedavis2160
    @mauricedavis2160 Год назад +6

    Another excellent episode Sir!!!🙏👌🦉❣️

  • @jajssblue
    @jajssblue Год назад +10

    187 feet. Dang, even into water, that would've been nuts.

  • @Pattilapeep
    @Pattilapeep Год назад +1

    Another great job! I always look forward to your new releases and save them so I can watch them while I eat my lunch. Keep up the good work . Cheers Pat in New Jersey

  • @colleenfaini2087
    @colleenfaini2087 Год назад +7

    I knew a lady (over a 104 yrs old in the 70's), whose only son was killed in a WWI airplane crash. I wonder if he could have been saved by a parachute.

    • @svenjansen2134
      @svenjansen2134 9 месяцев назад

      Read that as: 'I knew a lady lover 104 years old'..

  • @ChewyThomson
    @ChewyThomson Год назад +9

    Man, times were wild back in the day. I remember reading a book at uni all about different entertainment at the end of the 19th century in Paris and it was a crazy time. I remember reading that the morgues would take all the unclamed Jane and John Does, dress them up, pose them and put them behind glass and people would make an afternoon of just going to stare at dead cadavers. Crazy stuff. I think the book was called Spectacular Realities or something like that. Really interesting read.

    • @farfaraway4285
      @farfaraway4285 Год назад +3

      And what about the organised head on train collisions, that was crazy. Like monster truck rally of the age.

    • @ChewyThomson
      @ChewyThomson Год назад +1

      @@farfaraway4285 Oh yeah, those must have been something else.

  • @Audriene
    @Audriene Год назад +14

    I think he invested so much time and effort that eventually, he felt there was no turning back.

  • @Rosscogalli81
    @Rosscogalli81 Год назад +3

    Loved this documentary! Thanks for creating it.👍

  • @maryriley6163
    @maryriley6163 Год назад

    Thank you for narrating so clearly and at a normal pace.

  • @carlstenger5893
    @carlstenger5893 Год назад +1

    Excellent video. I look forward to each of your videos. Your research is solid and your presentation is engaging. Thanks so much!

  • @AaronShenghao
    @AaronShenghao Год назад +6

    There is courage and there is reckless. There is a fine line in between…

  • @_kaleido
    @_kaleido Год назад +6

    I wonder if he had the heart attack first and therefore was unable to deploy the parachute?

    • @Bananacustardcostuming
      @Bananacustardcostuming Год назад

      Exactly what I thought

    • @lyrmaxlyrics
      @lyrmaxlyrics Год назад +2

      From how it sounds, the suit itself was supposed to be the parachute. It didn't seem like there was an additional parachute that needed to be deployed. Seeing the footage though, it seems even if there was one it wouldn't make a difference.

  • @heath2694
    @heath2694 Год назад

    I recently heard of this story in the Cautionary Tales podcast. Thanks for sharing this detailed account.

  • @tinaharnish
    @tinaharnish Год назад +2

    You didn't mention that parachutes are landing small planes. The planes do suffer damage but the occupants come out unscathed. Now, if only they had them for big planes...His creation should be considered an early wingsuit prototype. Excellent idea. Poor execution.

  • @MAllen-ng8pl
    @MAllen-ng8pl Год назад +8

    He really made an impact on the world.

  • @StudioCoqui
    @StudioCoqui Год назад +8

    The heartbreaking thing in all of this was that Reichelt WAS right about the height in relation to parachute deployment. It's a shame he skipped the important steps in invention and science, and went straight for the jugular with his jump. He was not stupid or a moron, he was impatient in his ambition. He needed more time with the experiments. He would have succeeded and revolutionized aviation if he was just more patient.

  • @user-em1dw3ft6m
    @user-em1dw3ft6m 4 месяца назад +1

    His final seconds of existence had to be absolutely horrific and embarrassing. Unimaginable the terror and shame he was feeling as he plummeted to earth like a stone.

  • @GenXfrom75
    @GenXfrom75 Год назад +2

    My grandparents both turned 1 year old in 1912. Crazy they were actually alive when this happened!! I rather feel terrible his dream ended so disastrously. 💔

    • @nicoledenning8090
      @nicoledenning8090 Год назад +1

      My Grandfather was also born in 1911, that is crazy being alive when this happened! How far we've come in a short time!

  • @dangerousandy
    @dangerousandy Год назад +86

    Good morning

  • @ShaunHopkinsAVFC
    @ShaunHopkinsAVFC Год назад +20

    He really is a pioneer. A pioneer in the field of failing spectacularly after people tried to talk him out of it. The very first “hold my beer “

  • @VIGLounge
    @VIGLounge Год назад +2

    I saw the story of Franz Reichelt on the show Curious and Unusual Deaths. Hearing a more detailed version of his story was quite refreshing.

  • @SylverMage
    @SylverMage Год назад +2

    Always a good day when it starts with a Fascinating Horror video! This was like a slow train wreck, but still, respect. His intentions were good, and failure is as much a part of science as success.

  • @rl2699
    @rl2699 Год назад +3

    So here's a quick question. If the autopsy shows he had a heart attack on the way down then is that why technically his experiment/invention didn't work? If he passed away before he was able to deploy his parachute then how can it be proven that it didn't work?

  • @kdfulton3152
    @kdfulton3152 Год назад +32

    Over a century before his time. Look at the parachute suits now.

    • @drdrew3
      @drdrew3 Год назад +7

      You are no doubt referring to MC Hammer’s parachute pants

  • @Person01234
    @Person01234 Год назад +2

    Should be noted that even modern parachutes will struggle to open within 50m, when doing jumps that low the equipment generally needs to be designed with the platform helping to spread out the chute. 30m seems to be a minimum.
    His problem may not have been with his design, it may have been with his calculations on how fast it would open, at a time when aerodynamics were still poorly understood. Sad really, the dude was just trying to save lives, but I respect his conviction. Modern life is very sanitized, but back then people took their lives in their own hands to makes progress like this.

  • @moonytheloony6516
    @moonytheloony6516 Год назад +1

    Well, Franz sure fell for that one...
    but he did leave with quite an impact providing a heart-stopping thrill for his audience.

  • @victoriaeads6126
    @victoriaeads6126 Год назад +5

    Even with 20/20 hindsight (and we all know what 2020 was like), this guy needed better friends. We weren't exactly great at understanding aerodynamics in those days, but this was predictable just with the poor results he had already gotten. If nothing else, the guard could have tackled the guy when he tried to jump.
    At least his death hasn't been forgotten, and we did learn from it.