Did Alcohol Save A MAN ON TITANIC?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024
  • In this video we tell the story of the Titanic's Chief Baker Charles Joughin and we try to find out if Alcohol really was the key to his survival.
    Support Historic Travels on Patreon
    / historictravels
    Check out Historic Travels merch
    historic-trave...
    My first video on Charles.
    • Titanic History/How be...
    Tales of the Protectors book series!
    www.amazon.com...
    Part Time Explorer Channel
    / parttimeexplorer
    Titanic Honor and Glory Channel
    / titanichg
    Maritime Interactive (Titanic SOS Roblox Game)
    www.roblox.com...
    Historic Travels PO BOX address below
    Samuel Pence
    P.O Box 75356
    Charleston WV
    25375
    #titanic #history #engineering #baking #sinkingship #ocean

Комментарии • 482

  • @dwood78part23
    @dwood78part23 Год назад +410

    Charles Joughin is a case of "don't try this at home." Nevertheless the fact that he rode the stern into the water (like in the 1997 Titanic movie) & lived to tell makes him a legend in the Titanic fanbase.

    • @autumnroad4879
      @autumnroad4879 Год назад +59

      All while drunk. 😂

    • @maxonite
      @maxonite Год назад +18

      fanbase makes it sound like titanic was a band or something 🥲

    • @LuzMaria95
      @LuzMaria95 Год назад +3

      Yes exactly 🙌🏽

    • @tonydeakin519
      @tonydeakin519 Год назад +4

      It's okay Sam what Charles joughin did during the sinking of the unsinkable RMS Titanic

    • @bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24
      @bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 Год назад +30

      Saved lives, created a funny backstory, survived the sinking, featured in every movie about the Titanic. Absolute legend in every respect.

  • @ItsTheMunz
    @ItsTheMunz Год назад +132

    I’ve always loved this story. Just the idea of a drunken baker traversing the side of the ship as it sunk like he was Spider-Man and then stepping off it into the water like it was the shallow end of the pool is the closest thing to a feel-good story I can think of in this epic tragedy.

  • @nathanseper8738
    @nathanseper8738 Год назад +165

    I think it's incredible how Joughin continued to work in sailing even after surviving the Titanic. He even worked in troop transports during World War II! The guy really was a legend!

    • @jonathanstuart7354
      @jonathanstuart7354 Год назад +11

      @@pterinochilusjohn4613damn he lived to 98, thats insane

    • @ZOSO900
      @ZOSO900 Год назад +1

      78 according to Wiki.

    • @nathanseper8738
      @nathanseper8738 Год назад +1

      @@ZOSO900 Still a long time in that period.

  • @jackc1186
    @jackc1186 Год назад +133

    As a fellow cook, I am greatly inspired by Charles Joughin. Living that back of house life even in the face of death

  • @Whitneypyant
    @Whitneypyant Год назад +94

    So this man saved a lot of women and children and save himself while drunk? Legend!

    • @lilspliffster88
      @lilspliffster88 Год назад +6

      I heard he was listening to the power of love on his walk man well the boat was sinking he is just that chill

    • @Whitneypyant
      @Whitneypyant Год назад +1

      @@lilspliffster88 legend

    • @TheFarmerfitz
      @TheFarmerfitz 9 месяцев назад

      Yes.

    • @armin3057
      @armin3057 8 месяцев назад +1

      you realize he was joking? Walkmans exist since the 1979 or sth@@Whitneypyant

    • @TitanicStarGaming
      @TitanicStarGaming 7 месяцев назад

      He was a legend ever since he put the bread into lifeboats for the woman and children.

  • @AnodyneHipsterInfluencer
    @AnodyneHipsterInfluencer Год назад +108

    I think Charles might be my favorite person from the story of the Titanic. His sense of calm, his devotion to service, his easy going, "devil may care" attitude and outlook and the miraculous circumstances from which he survived. It all makes for an incredible bit of history. No wonder so many liked him. I wonder if he ever took to sea again after Titanic.

    • @jeniafru
      @jeniafru Год назад +19

      He actually continued working on ships and even served on troop transports during WWII before retiring in 1944. Truly a legend, apparently nothing could scare him off working on ships since he left for sea at age 11.

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 Год назад +9

      I love Charles Joughin. I would liked to have known him--obviously he had a very kind heart, making Thomas Andrews a loaf of Irish soda bread to help hm feel less homesick. And just as obviously, his alcohol consumption didn't harm him. Here's to you, Mr. Joughin!

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 Год назад +6

      @@jeniafru That man definitely had saltwater in his veins.

  • @Voxac100b
    @Voxac100b Год назад +33

    The man was a hero. Helping people. He liked a wee drink and didn't do anyone harm. He made sure food was in the boats

  • @KibblezanBitz
    @KibblezanBitz Год назад +59

    One of the most unintentionally funny moments in cinema history, in my opinion, is the bit in the 1997 Titanic movie where the one guy pings off the propeller and the very next shot is a closeup of Joughin taking a giant swig from his flask.

    • @Wilko710
      @Wilko710 Год назад +10

      I have felt bad since 1997 for laughing at that

    • @savannahmarie8254
      @savannahmarie8254 Год назад +1

      I know they might not have happened just like that but the propeller guy happened too 😢 I hate thinking about it they say the guy that was with him stayed with him I think it might have been Charles I'm not sure I just watched a video the other day. I'm hyperfixated

    • @jhwhthemerciful
      @jhwhthemerciful Год назад

      ​​@@savannahmarie8254 Hi there Marie! I am your lord and I choose you to know a little secret of my.
      I know Its a bit weird but I need to communicate through these kind of channels. Are you ready to know?

    • @austinpalmquist3196
      @austinpalmquist3196 6 месяцев назад

      I believe that propeller guy was supposed to be Cyril Ricks

  • @leftyken
    @leftyken Год назад +43

    I think what saved Jouglin was that he was warmly dressed in a thick, fur overcoat over his other clothes. The fur repelled the water and kept his upper body dry. Fishermen in those days often wore a thick, wool sweater made from untreated wool which was also waterproof, but I imagine a fur coat was better.

    • @Queer_Nerd_For_Human_Justice
      @Queer_Nerd_For_Human_Justice Год назад +9

      Depends on the kind of fur, but there's definitely fur that does it, and since he's on a boat he most likely knew what to get for himself. but the idea of drowning with heavy clothes on seems really intimidating. When I was growing up in california in the 90's, people warned that jeans were one of the worst things to have on when trapped in water, but mostly because of the shrinking. actually, the weave in denim is/was so tight that I was told you can inflate them to use as an emergency floatation device, as they tend to trap air when wet.

    • @hildeschmid8400
      @hildeschmid8400 Год назад +1

      ​@@Queer_Nerd_For_Human_Justicemy late husband was in the Navy and he told me the same thing about denim.

    • @AdamFoster-jc5zt
      @AdamFoster-jc5zt Год назад +1

      Yeah, jeans collect so much water that they get super heavy.

    • @CJODell12
      @CJODell12 Год назад +2

      And that fact that he was a bit stocky also probably helped.

  • @istream36Official
    @istream36Official Год назад +101

    I guess this shows that a way to survive cold waters after a sinking ship. Step one: Get drunk, Step two: Let the alcohol settle in you, Step three: keep core body out of water as much as possible by finding some kind of anything from the sinking still floating climbing on to it. That's it.

    • @what8562
      @what8562 Год назад +4

      The only necessary step is Step 3.

    • @MisoElEven
      @MisoElEven Год назад +12

      Not at all.. alcohol will make you feel less cold because it causes vasodilation (widening of the arteries and large blood vessels), but thats the exact opposite of what you want in cold conditions. You need to restrict blood flow to restrict temperature losses. When youre waiting, floating on debris in the middle of the atlantic you dont need to cool all the blood in your fingers and toes - you need the blood in the core and the brain where its going to stay warm.
      The alcohol might lower the psychological shock though, so in some cases it probably is better to get drunk before :D

    • @maxonite
      @maxonite Год назад +3

      @@MisoElEven Maybe because of the effect he didn’t tremble as much and that saved him energy? Idk I’m not medically knowledgeable but it seems almost like he held on for longer than the people that WERENT drunk

    • @MisoElEven
      @MisoElEven Год назад +5

      @@maxonite Maybe it was just the fact he had his core out of the water.. either way one drunk man isnt enough to form a statistic or base any advice on - there were probably plenty of people in that water with alcohol in their system (it was 1912, almost every man drank something before going to sleep)

    • @Flash-sr8hm
      @Flash-sr8hm 4 месяца назад

      ​@@MisoElEvenyou are correct. Giving someone with hypothermia alcohol is one way to kill them quicker, by diverting warm blood from vital organs, to non-vital organs such as fingers, toes, cheeks etc. A professor of biochemistry told me that physiological fact 30 years ago and I always wondered about the story of the drunk Titanic cook.

  • @puuxexil
    @puuxexil Год назад +40

    You call it alcohol, I call it "Food Grade Antifreeze". Anyway, his observations of the ships deteriorating conditions inside are interesting and frankly, terrifying.

    • @whitneywilliams317
      @whitneywilliams317 Год назад +8

      I call it feeling great, since death was coming, might as well not notice it.

    • @savannahmarie8254
      @savannahmarie8254 Год назад +1

      ​@whitneywilliams317 exactly like I would get drunker than a mfr that way I have no clue what's happening shit don't know if I die from the water or alcohol poisoning

    • @gilliankingston8259
      @gilliankingston8259 9 месяцев назад

      Yes, exactly, good for him, he did his best both for others and himself👍👨‍🍳🍞🥃

  • @douglasnieblas74
    @douglasnieblas74 Год назад +28

    I believe that Charles described the sensation of the stern sinking as being on an elevator going down. He said that when the water got to him he simply let go of the poop deck railing and swam away so it is plausible that he didn’t get his hair wet. The sea was dead calm and the slow sinking of the stern didn’t cause the type of suction seen in movies.

  • @invisibleray6987
    @invisibleray6987 Год назад +2

    Iconic story....love the bit where he's hanging onto the railings with Jack and rose

  • @JustPeasant
    @JustPeasant Год назад +46

    I believe that at the time when Joughin through that all of the lifeboats were gone (with water being ice cold), he probably assumed that he's gonna die. In his mindset at the time (IMO), if he was already thinking that his demise was inevitable, he'll not go out sober. If you're destined to perish, you'll might as well be completely wasted (or "pissed" in British English). Thoughts anyone?
    😵‍💫😵‍💫😵‍💫

    • @dr.buzzvonjellar8862
      @dr.buzzvonjellar8862 Год назад +8

      That’s a totally reasonable explanation. In effect, dull the inevitable pain of dying in ice cold water

    • @razorfett147
      @razorfett147 Год назад +5

      Hell, its what I'D do 😁🍻

    • @jenniferk6697
      @jenniferk6697 Год назад +9

      If I’m going down on a sinking ship, I’d prefer to be wasted too

    • @davidh4374
      @davidh4374 Год назад +2

      There's an old proverb about that, Proverbs 31:6

    • @mattmingo7694
      @mattmingo7694 Год назад +1

      ABSOLUTELY

  • @icaanul
    @icaanul Год назад +35

    I'm sure the blood thinning and anti-freeze property of alcohol helped a lot. So now alcoholics everywhere have an excuse to always have a big flask of whiskey with them. "Dude, why do you have so much booze?".... "Titanic."

  • @carlambroson8872
    @carlambroson8872 Год назад +8

    For being pretty inebriated at this point, he made some clear and very rational decisions!
    May the sea be forever at you’re back Charles!!

    • @suras8984
      @suras8984 Год назад

      Adrenaline probably cleared up his mind

  • @Wildcat_Media
    @Wildcat_Media Год назад +190

    Great Heroes of the Titanic:
    Captain Smith: “Women and children first!”
    Officer Murdock: “Men, come along if there are no more women.”
    Charles Joughin: “Save the booze!”
    What a freaking legend. 😊

    • @HistoricTravels
      @HistoricTravels  Год назад +35

      Everyone loves Charles. I mean seriously, how many people would go that deep inside a rapidly sinking ship, see a massive wall of water about to flood your room. Then you still run in to save the booze. XD

    • @melodyvalentine8779
      @melodyvalentine8779 Год назад +4

      ​@@HistoricTravelsHe was very likely an alcoholic and worried about going into withdrawal. Addiction will make you do the wildest things to get what your body needs. He knew it was gonna be the last drink he'd have in maybe a few days, if he survived the night and alcohol withdrawal is horrific and can be fatal, so he made sure to get as much as possible in his system. I can't see why anyone would go that far into a sinking ship otherwise. Either way, the guy's a hero and a legend.

    • @goaway8610
      @goaway8610 Год назад +12

      ​@melodyvalentine8779 or he was a refined man that needed a damn drink before his impending death.

    • @Rick_Cleland
      @Rick_Cleland Год назад +7

      @@melodyvalentine8779 As an alcoholic myself, I suppose it's possible, but I think it is more likely that he thought he was not going to survive and got drunk.

    • @EroticOnion23
      @EroticOnion23 Год назад +1

      The whole thing was Smith's fault though...

  • @sitara2783
    @sitara2783 Год назад +23

    I'm reminded of this Icelandic fisherman not long ago who survived a shipwreck because it turns out his body fat was the consistency of blubber and was able to shield his vital organs from the cold. I doubt this was the case here but it's an interesting thought. I do think that the alcohol kept him from feeling the cold as much and maybe kept him calm in the face of all the chaos. Good work, dude.

  • @ericstuglik7022
    @ericstuglik7022 Год назад +35

    I've heard it said that hypothermia really wasn't an issue for him because, as Sam pointed out, he was numb to the cold. I think part of what helped him survive was that he didn't have that shortness of breath or shallow breathing from the extreme cold.

    • @lightspeednate
      @lightspeednate Год назад +2

      Whenever I am a passenger on a plane I drink a few beers. It helps me control my breathing.

    • @brentrichards1200
      @brentrichards1200 Год назад +3

      He also put on a lot of clothes including a thick fur coat.

  • @garydunken7934
    @garydunken7934 Год назад +3

    When you are sinking, start drinking!

  • @patrickg3796
    @patrickg3796 Год назад +3

    “A night to remember“ has became one of my favourite movies. Got it in blu ray.

  • @wolfgang6517
    @wolfgang6517 Год назад +35

    You should make a video on Father Thomas Byles. He was a Catholic priest during the Titanic who not only refused to escape the sinking ship abut also decided to help as much people as he could and giving consolation to the terrified passengers. In Cameron's Movie he makes I think 1 appearance as the ship goes down during the final scenes, praying with the passagers.
    His story is truly fascinating and its sad that many people never heard about him.

    • @tamiwatchesstuff
      @tamiwatchesstuff Год назад +2

      But he didn’t die on the ship, I heard. He got off on the second stop, I think. He took like 200+ photographs and he’s why we have as many pictures of the ship and the Titanic itself.

    • @marshalbelisarius4563
      @marshalbelisarius4563 Год назад +6

      @@tamiwatchesstuff Wrong Priest. Father Francis Browne took the pictures and left the ship. The remaining three Priests, including Father Thomas Byles, died in the sinking

  • @jevinday
    @jevinday Год назад +111

    "His 2nd objective was also to make sure that as little alcohol as possible went down with the Titanic before she sank"
    That was great haha. Your writing is getting better with every video Sam. Keep it up

    • @oriontaylor
      @oriontaylor Год назад

      I feel like I heard that from Tom Lynskey (Part-Time Explorer) a few years back. No criticism though - it's a great line!

    • @rawfoodwriter
      @rawfoodwriter Год назад

      I mean, he's said it before...

    • @nathanseper8738
      @nathanseper8738 Год назад

      I chucked as well!

    • @thegoodsisjas
      @thegoodsisjas Год назад +1

      That's so inaccurate, if he had he wouldn't of been able to do everything he did that night. And what's funny about someone thinking they are about to die so they choose to have a drink 🤷🏾‍♀️

  • @rileybridgham1963
    @rileybridgham1963 Год назад +12

    I love your videos, it's incredible that Charles Joughin survived for that long until the Carpathia picked him up.

  • @historyinsideanutshell
    @historyinsideanutshell Год назад +34

    Huge respect for Charles; I never get tired of his story - and don't worry, Sam. I giggle when the word "drink" comes up when I think of Charles and Titanic. So, you aren't the only one 😊

  • @michlo3393
    @michlo3393 Год назад +14

    Mr Joughin's story is one of the few bright spots in that disaster. It's warming to hear he did what he could for others given the circumstance. I'm glad the film _A Night to Remember_ took the time to portray him. It's trite to say "if I were in his shoes I would have done the same" but THIS is true: I too would have been drunk. Everything else, I can't speculate.

    • @jhwhthemerciful
      @jhwhthemerciful Год назад +2

      Being drunk actually allows you to hold your breath significantly longer while staying conscious. It also helps to keep calm in stressful situations. This might be strange to say - but yes - there are rare circumstances in which being drunk can help one survive.

  • @LilPeeper420
    @LilPeeper420 Год назад +3

    Besides Thomas Andrews; this man is one of my favorite characters from titanic; and he’s quite a character.

  • @SAOS451316
    @SAOS451316 Год назад +8

    He was certainly a very lucky man, especially considering what happened to some of the other kitchen staff.

  • @jjmfrees
    @jjmfrees Год назад +11

    Maybe make a video on Third Officer Pitman. He’s rarely mentioned and almost never appears in Titanic movies. I didn’t even know he existed until a few years ago.

    • @Truecrimeresearcher224
      @Truecrimeresearcher224 Год назад +1

      I didn't know about him until honor and glory did one of their live streams in 2018 or 2019 I can't remember

  • @Fuzzycatfur
    @Fuzzycatfur Год назад +3

    Charles Joughin: Posterman for "Fuck if I'm doing this shit sober"

  • @isobelle.London
    @isobelle.London Год назад +3

    He’s a legend I love him 😍

  • @andrewb325
    @andrewb325 Год назад +8

    I’ve heard the theory before that Scotland Road itself played a big role in speeding up the sinking of Titanic by allowing the water to easily traverse the entire length of the ship. This story seems to back that up.

  • @superjoyyable
    @superjoyyable Год назад +5

    So Im rewatching the titanic, and now that I know who Charles is,I'm sorry for chuckling, but I am so happy they put him the movie!
    Just a fact I hadn't known before and there he is! My Mad Lad Charles Joughin!!!!!!!!

    • @richardjoughin6602
      @richardjoughin6602 Год назад +1

      Proud of this fascinatingly family link to Titanic. Us Joughin’s love a drink

  • @shelleywayne4329
    @shelleywayne4329 Год назад +4

    Charles Joughin's surviving titanic could be made into a movie

  • @sallykohorst8803
    @sallykohorst8803 Год назад +3

    Nice to hear about him. Thanks! Yes alcohol in the freezer won't freeze!

  • @SnaRi-dc1nl
    @SnaRi-dc1nl Год назад +8

    It wasn't the numbness preventing him from freezing in the water, but all the alcohol in his blood. Hypothermia causes blood circulation to slow down, eventually causing the heart to stop. But given that his bloodstream was saturated with alcohol (which does not freeze), it meant that the onset of hypothermia might have been postponed for a much longer time than someone who hadn't consumed alcohol. So it would not be strange for him to have been in the water for up to an hour or even more without losing his bodily functions.

    • @zazoreal5536
      @zazoreal5536 Год назад +1

      Finally someone else who knows about alcohol in the blood stream. Whiskey is the preferred choice to give to people who are trapped in the cold. Old snow rescue dogs use to Carry whiskey around their necks to aid and warm people who are trapped in blizzards.

  • @Nightshadelvii
    @Nightshadelvii Год назад +1

    That’s one hell of hangover

  • @majorfacepwn
    @majorfacepwn Год назад +11

    One of my favorite stories about the titanic! Any time I watch the James Cameron movie (which I know is full of inaccuracies and some accurate depictions) I always point him out and inform anyone in earshot about the man, the myth, the legend. Lol

    • @TaijanDean
      @TaijanDean Год назад +4

      There are a couple of deleted scenes that show him more clearly, both in the Titanic (taking a swig) and in the water before being fully rescued. He is, however, still very much in the final cut at the end of the sinking, taking a swig and riding the stern with Jack and Rose at the end.
      It's a shame his other scenes didn't make the final cut, but then again if all the deleted scenes made it in the final version the film would have been over 4 hours long which is a little stretch even for James Cameron 😆

    • @majorfacepwn
      @majorfacepwn Год назад +2

      @@TaijanDean It might be a stretch in time, but god it would have been great for JC to put all those Deleted Scenes in. Just for the pure history of it. Sure I understand he had to cut things for the story he was telling, but for hard core history buffs, it would make the movie that much better. IMO lol

    • @ilsignorsaruman2636
      @ilsignorsaruman2636 Год назад

      ​​@@TaijanDeane could have made "Titanic: James Cameron's Cut" with the subtitle "the various stories", in wich he put all other stories of the survivors, such as the Straus and so on.

  • @kirkmorrison6131
    @kirkmorrison6131 Год назад +8

    Alcohol makes you feel warm by bringing the blood to the surface. This makes you freeze more quickly,. He had to have been pulled from the water in time

  • @stewartspencer368
    @stewartspencer368 Год назад +3

    Forget about Jack and Rose, I want the movie a movie of the Titanic focused around Charles joughin

  • @kasvinimuniandy4178
    @kasvinimuniandy4178 Год назад +1

    I legit laughed out loud when I saw the depiction of him throwing the deck chairs.... hehehehehe... so cute! I love this story! What an uplifting one in a tragic incident.

  • @jonathanlee7355
    @jonathanlee7355 Год назад +33

    I think u laugh at him drinking in his cabin cuz u think of the scene in "a night to remember" lol.. I love this story but always wondered how long it took him to swim all the way to the overturned boat. The myth that alcohol saved his life has been debunked numerous times. Maybe it didn't keep him warm, but made so he could swim and be saved.
    I often wondered if he drank because he knew he might die..

    • @thebigpicture2032
      @thebigpicture2032 Год назад +8

      If you’re going to go, may as well go happy. 😀 He’s my favourite survival story from the Titanic.

    • @whovianhistorybuff
      @whovianhistorybuff Год назад +7

      If you're gonna die you may as well enjoy yourself, it was a tradition in Britain to give a condemned man a shot of whisky before he went to the gallows.

    • @madezra64
      @madezra64 Год назад +8

      I think the psychological numbing, and physical numbing would actually help. Obviously it won't stop you from freezing, but it would help for you to be calm and not feel so much pain and strain your body more then necessary. No matter what getting his core out of the water is what saved him without question, but who knows if he had not been drunk how he would have handled it. His legs were still submerged which to a completely sober person would be excruciating. The alcohol definitely help him ride out the night without question. It didn't save him out right, but it gave him a crutch to lean on in the water.

    • @bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24
      @bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 Год назад +3

      It wouldn't physically help you but it may help psychologically helping you feel less scared and prevent you from feeling the cold as much.

    • @marywilliams5712
      @marywilliams5712 Год назад

      Yes the alcohol would definitely helped him stay chill (no pun intended) and not panic

  • @martayebio5382
    @martayebio5382 Год назад +2

    The story of Charles Joughkin is a very interesting one. I'm really glad you decided to talk about him in this video, and I had a lot of fun watching it. Thank you!

  • @murphyslaw5150
    @murphyslaw5150 Год назад

    “…by this point, Charles was pretty buzzed…” - I adore this quote 🤣

  • @nbunnysnowboard
    @nbunnysnowboard Год назад +19

    I feel a special kinship to Charles Joughin because I was being stupid in high school and I fell through the ice on the back of an ATV and almost died but I was so drunk that it felt like jumping into a hot tub and because of that I didn’t panic and I was actually pretty calm, and I genuinely think it helped save my life that I had been drinking that night. I know people say that if you drink you are more likely to freeze, but I think the fact that it made me keep calm is what helped me survive. I kept trying to get up on the ice and it kept breaking and after about 5-10 minutes all of a sudden I got even more calm and I thought to myself “if I died right now everything would be fine” and I think that was the DMT that my brain was releasing because it thought that I was dying. My friend was finally able to pull me and my bf out after he slid on his belly like a penguin to grab me but I think if I had been in the water another 10 to 15 minutes I might have had a similar fate to the rest of the Titanic victims. When I found out about Charles Joughin I was psyched that I wasn’t the only person that experienced this phenomenon! It’s the first and only time (hopefully)that I have had a near death experience but it made me fear death a little bit less and it also made me realize that it’s calm at the end. I’ve always been drawn to the ocean but I’ve also always kind of thought that I would die in the water, strange paradox but it’s something I’ve always felt since I was little. Not sure where I stand on reincarnation but it’s interesting to think that maybe in a past life that is how I went and that’s why I’m morbidly drawn to the ocean, and by extension ships and shipwrecks. Just a thought 🤷🏼‍♀️
    Edit because I forgot to add it the first time: I also fell in the water similar to him, the ATV fell out from under me and I didn’t even get my hair wet! I could see the light from the ATV at the bottom of the lake, and now it reminds me of when people were saying that they could see the lights from the ship disappear under the water. Super eerie. (Once the spring came, we were actually able to haul the ATV up and it worked fine after months of being underwater!)

    • @JoeyMartz
      @JoeyMartz Год назад

      Do you struggle with binge drinking? I am not being sarcastic or trolling, I assure you? It is a genuine inquiry.

    • @nbunnysnowboard
      @nbunnysnowboard Год назад +1

      @@JoeyMartz I only drink a bit on holidays now but in college I had a pretty bad problem, do you think that made a difference at all in how long I was able to stay in the water?

    • @Queer_Nerd_For_Human_Justice
      @Queer_Nerd_For_Human_Justice Год назад +1

      I'm glad you survived and I'm weirdly happy that you were able to dreg up the ATV lol

    • @richardjoughin6602
      @richardjoughin6602 Год назад

      Me too. He was my great great uncle. A long line of keen ‘boozers’ on my dad’s blood line.

  • @circlebackjen
    @circlebackjen Год назад +2

    Congrats my man

  • @EonityLuna
    @EonityLuna Год назад

    "Who cares if the ship is sinking, I got to save my *FULL LIQUOR BAR* first!" "And get absolutely buzzed while doing it!"

  • @explorationandhistorywithethan
    @explorationandhistorywithethan Год назад +5

    He has done it again. Another amazing video where the topic is something i never even thought of.
    Also, could you do video on the automobile the Titanic was carrying?

  • @jahthehusky9745
    @jahthehusky9745 Год назад +1

    Charles Joughin is the coolest survivor and hero

  • @phillyguy8541
    @phillyguy8541 Год назад +23

    Charles was not only numb to the cold but it is known that alcohol is an anti-freezing agent. How many people store vodka in the freezer? The alcohol level in his blood could indeed have enabled him to survive the subfreezing water temperatures much longer than what would ordinarily be possible. I think that Charles had even been ship-wrecked once before and he may have picked up this bit of wisdom from that experience.

    • @RCassinello
      @RCassinello Год назад +5

      Sorry to say... But that's not how it works. Humans don't "freeze" to death because our blood turns to ice. We freeze to death because we need to be warm. Yeah, sure, alcohol is a good anti-freezing agent, but that's not the issue with hypothermia. Contrary to popular belief, alcohol actually cools the body down and makes the it more susceptible to hypothermia because it causes surface blood vessels to dilate - this extra blood flow near the skin both makes us feel hot, but also allows heat to leave the body much quicker.
      Which makes Charles Joughin's story more incredible - he didn't survive BECAUSE he drank. He survived IN SPITE of drinking.

    • @gregorystace8176
      @gregorystace8176 Год назад

      @@RCassinello To me these are both correct - Whatever happened he did survive and surely it must have helped if he wasn't panicking as much. Maybe that';s the answer. Either way it's a heck of a story !

    • @rafenord2
      @rafenord2 Год назад +2

      @@RCassinello His body suffered because of his drinking but his mind seems to have greatly benefitted from it in the heat (or rather cold) of the moment

  • @lucasm4194
    @lucasm4194 Год назад

    Lol i love this story , i can picture chaos going around his and hes just oblivious on different quests for alcohol lol

  • @TheSportscar86
    @TheSportscar86 Год назад +1

    The screenshot should've been Tom Lynskey & a wine bottle. LOL

  • @MasqueradingDragon
    @MasqueradingDragon Год назад +12

    "His second objective was to make sure as little as alcohol as possible went down with the Titanic as she sank" *giggles* Yeah, it's hard not to laugh at that!
    Fantastic job, Sam!

    • @CJODell12
      @CJODell12 Год назад +1

      I’ve noticed every time Sam mentions Charles Joughin, he says that.

  • @JohnWiIkesBooth
    @JohnWiIkesBooth Год назад +1

    This guy is the true main character of the titanic films.

  • @colbyjames7205
    @colbyjames7205 Год назад +5

    One story you should tell is when Leading Fireman Charles Hendrickson tried to reason with Sir Cosmo and Lady Duff Gordon and the other 12 occupants to rescue more survivors but that request got declined.
    Charles Hendrickson is likely the character in the movie A Night to Remember who tried to order Sir Richard to save more survivors. He does have also a cameo in 1997 Titanic movie in a deleted scene as well.
    I like to hear the most devastating tale on Leading Fireman Charles Hendrickson I actually like his character and why might I ask is because he was the only occupant out of the other 11 who wanted to save more and Sir Cosmo denied saving more which I felt sorry for Leading Fireman Hendrickson to say the least.
    My favourite hero is Leading Fireman Charles Hendrickson from the Titanic.
    But you also should do one on Leading Fireman Frederick Barrett as well at somepoint he became a hero saving the stokers and Fireman from the Boiler Room and quite possibly he also saved the occupants from Lifeboat 13 from nearing being squished by Lifeboat 15 almost nearing on-top of them. Barrett was in charge of 13. And the Stokers aboard 13 was both Fireman George William Beauchamp. And Fireman Albert Major. Able Seaman Robert Hopkins and Lookout Reginald Lee where both in that Lifeboat. They're is also a Japanese Passenger you ought to mention on Lifeboat 13 in future as well. And famous Lawrence Beesley as well. In charge of Lifeboat 15 was Fireman Frank Dymond. Fireman George Cavell. Fireman W.H Taylor. Third Class Stewart John Edward Hart. First Class Bathroom Steward Samuel J. Rule. Third Class Steward Arthur Lewis and Verandah Cafe Steward John Stewart. And the occupants are what you should tell sometime in future.
    Yeah Fred Barrett's heroic tale is one I like to see as well.

  • @Deveolgaming1912
    @Deveolgaming1912 Год назад +4

    This guy was the last survivor to ever touch titanic again

  • @weasel2173
    @weasel2173 Год назад +7

    As awesome and miraculous as his survival was, I don't think he has anything on another cook who survived a sunken ship; Harrison Okene.

  • @cannabiscomet4410
    @cannabiscomet4410 Год назад +16

    You know your Titanic knowledge is better than the average when all I had to hear was "It was a little after 2 AM and he went to the A deck pantry" for you to go
    "Bad idea, thats about to be several kinds of messed up in there..."

    • @leon419
      @leon419 Год назад +1

      "The sound of steel beams breaking all around...." Yeah I think ima just head out.....

    • @vojtakriz8989
      @vojtakriz8989 Год назад +3

      Nothing good happens after 2 AM... 🙂

  • @Yggi11
    @Yggi11 Год назад +4

    Regarding Joughin's two-hour claim, there was an incident where an Icelandic fisherman survived six hours in very cold water. Scientists concluded that his body fat had unusual properties.

  • @ThatOnePlatypusGuy
    @ThatOnePlatypusGuy Год назад +2

    Great video as always Sam, keep up the awesome work!❤️❤️

  • @lune78
    @lune78 Год назад +1

    I really like that Charles Joughin guy lol I think he had the right idea, I would've drunken as much as I could too in this situation lol

  • @KiwiSentinel
    @KiwiSentinel Год назад +4

    All that I've been taught about hypothermia and alcohol doesn't recommend it as a survival method. I like your theory about core temps and keeping his upper body out of the water keeping him alive.

  • @greatestgoalie25
    @greatestgoalie25 Год назад

    I have been waiting for you to make a video on this crazy legend.

  • @toddkurzbard
    @toddkurzbard Год назад

    That one "all roads lead to Rome" drunken scene to this day remains one of my favorite TITANIC movie scenes.

  • @OUTTA-TYME88
    @OUTTA-TYME88 Год назад +6

    Alchohol actually makes you lose bodyheat faster and harder to regulate body temp, add on top of that below freezing water. Half of his body being out of the water saved him for sure. I think there was another passenger that survived by floating on a deck chair. Possibly thrown by Joughin. If possible, I'd like you to cover The Addergoole 14, the 14 passengers from Ireland that boarded the Titanic at Queensland. Only three of the fourteen survived. Some of the men from the group were heroes, leading women and children up a ladder, through a hatch leading up to the poop deck. ! After they were told to go back to their rooms that it wasn't dangerous. I think more of them would have survived if they weren't told to go back down to their rooms.

    • @zazoreal5536
      @zazoreal5536 Год назад +1

      Not if it's whiskey. Ever wondered why the Old snow rescue dogs carried whiskey around their necks? Whiskey Heats up the body.

  • @FluxKitten
    @FluxKitten Год назад +1

    2nd Objective check!. I didn't mean to laugh but it was really funny. Awesome that he saved so many

  • @Lestat21500
    @Lestat21500 Год назад

    A night to remember was a fantastic film. The attention to detail in 1958 was simply incredible.

  • @cassiefriedman1446
    @cassiefriedman1446 Год назад +1

    I'm glad Charles and his staff forcibly brought those women and children up to the boat deck he saved their lives in doing so

  • @josephconnor2310
    @josephconnor2310 5 месяцев назад

    Wonderfully detailed account of this man.

  • @cassiefriedman1446
    @cassiefriedman1446 Год назад +1

    Off topic I love your southern accent 😍 it's beautiful

  • @crystal-thewall
    @crystal-thewall Год назад

    This is so cool to hear the story whilst being shown on a model. I want one❤

  • @Red__Law
    @Red__Law Год назад

    Having recently watched A Night To Remember, I didn't expect to find any humour at any point during the film, but the portrayal of Charles had me genuinely laughing out loud.

  • @phishENchimps
    @phishENchimps Месяц назад

    I assumed that it was to keep his nerves straight. If he was an alcoholic, he knew how much he needed. His actions showed a man who wanted to LIVE and let others Live. But he also knew what not having booze can do. Yes, stress can exacerbate or even trigger alcohol withdrawal symptoms. God Bless that man for his heroic actions. It does show that for those who may be suffering Alcoholism or other dependencies, that they ultimately are good people who love life. some just need to see the light and be thrown a life vest.

  • @obeezytex5466
    @obeezytex5466 Год назад

    Everyone- OMG we’re all gonna die
    Charles- *Project X drinking noises*

  • @Wayner71
    @Wayner71 Год назад +1

    Charles' story is fascinating. It would have taken lot of whiskey to ease the anxiety of that catastrophic situation. In fact, I doubt whether it would have done the job. But it would have lessened it somewhat. That last trip back to his cabin would have sunk the spirits of the most optimistic individual. The alcohol would have numbed the pain of the cold water considerably and probably allowed him to function at a higher level than someone in shock from the freezing water. I think that the adrenaline going through his body from his fear might have mitigated the debilitation of the alcohol. If he had drunk that much under normal circumstances he would have found it difficult to walk or orient himself.

  • @andrewspeers4018
    @andrewspeers4018 Год назад +1

    Fantastic video Sam ..

  • @richardjoughin6602
    @richardjoughin6602 Год назад

    Proud of great great unc. Hell of a story

  • @oliversherman2414
    @oliversherman2414 Год назад

    Jack Sparrow: Why is the rum gone?
    Titanic chef: Did someone say rum?

  • @DrVaults
    @DrVaults Год назад +1

    Oh I don’t blame him for getting that whiskey I’m sure it was a very great 1912 blend 😃

  • @jakecavendish3470
    @jakecavendish3470 Год назад +2

    Alcohol would increase your chances of hypothermia. He actually had very little to drink if you read his account, he certainly wasn't drunk (he drank about the amount you would put in a large trifle or pudding). Almost certainly a lot of the men who ended up in the water would have been very drunk, they didn't survive. He was stocky which would have helped and crucially he didn't panic so he probably didn't go into shock. The fact he stayed so cogniscent is actually the impressive bit

  • @batmasterson7091
    @batmasterson7091 4 месяца назад

    Nice description. I gave your vid a up thumb. “Now” is the keyword. Yep, every time you say it, you have to take a shot.

  • @robertlauncher
    @robertlauncher Год назад

    Joughin: Henry Wildes was being harsh with the male passengers.
    James Cameron: Did you say Will Murdoch?

  • @bishopsix1628
    @bishopsix1628 Год назад

    Awesome video! I'd like to see a video of you going through all the models you have at the back there, or your favorite Titanic books as there are so many out there!

  • @OUTTA-TYME88
    @OUTTA-TYME88 Год назад

    Charles Joughin, the man the myth, the legend. Don't know what it is but I love this guy!

  • @LoneWolf051
    @LoneWolf051 Год назад +3

    Find someone that loves you the way Charles loved his whiskey

  • @Rayrard
    @Rayrard Год назад +1

    The character in ANTR was my favorite character... pointing at the bottle of liquor warning it not to fall over before he left the room for the final time. I think given what was happening I'm surprised more people didn't get drunk.

  • @detroitandclevelandfan5503
    @detroitandclevelandfan5503 Год назад

    12:10 Mr. Joughin was at that point was probably what my Uncle Rob would say after drinking a little to much. "You feel like you can take on the whole world, but still no better not too." After seeing the water wall, he probably went to feeling he could take on the whole world.

  • @roberthess3939
    @roberthess3939 Год назад +6

    Sam, one more thought. Please do a series on the lives of the survivors after they got back home. I know you have spoken about the lives of a few of the more well-known survivors [post-Titanic], but this got me to wondering what took place during the rest of Charles Joughin's life? Thx!

    • @richardjoughin6602
      @richardjoughin6602 Год назад +2

      He went and lived in New Jersey and continued to work for White Star Line. He married a lady named Louise, as did I…Louise Joughin II ☺He died in December 1956 aged 78, 3 months after me dad (his great nephew) was born.

    • @kasvinimuniandy4178
      @kasvinimuniandy4178 Год назад

      @@richardjoughin6602 whoaaa... you're related to this legend??

  • @AngelTails97
    @AngelTails97 Год назад +1

    I think the lesson here is simply, if you're ever on a sinking ship, get absolutely blasted!!! 🤣
    JK

  • @anniesmolkin7685
    @anniesmolkin7685 Год назад

    Thank you for the history! Love your accent

  • @ricardobelmont5984
    @ricardobelmont5984 Год назад

    Charles second objective was to get hammered!!! I always enjoyed his story.

  • @ncc1701chris
    @ncc1701chris Год назад

    A hero in away as well....good man.

  • @tim9798
    @tim9798 Год назад +2

    Medically this is a good survival technique, adding anti-freeze (alcohol) to your bloodstream will help you survive in the cold and also help avoid amputations.

  • @wind-inmy-face7949
    @wind-inmy-face7949 Год назад +1

    What a fantastic story! Very well done! Is it known what label, what brand of Whiskey he was drinking?

  • @04nbod
    @04nbod Год назад +1

    I just discovered that this man was born 10 minutes away from my house. Birkenhead mate. Birkenhead!

  • @mhmm3101
    @mhmm3101 7 месяцев назад

    Watching this increases my heart rate

  • @jakegarvin7634
    @jakegarvin7634 Год назад

    That guy was an absolute unit. Right up there with the Chinese dude on the table.

  • @Oozaru85
    @Oozaru85 Год назад

    I just watched "A Night to remember" for the first time and that drunk guy had so much screen time there, his comedic presence felt almost like a slap in the face in a movie about a ship disaster. On the other hand it was quite amazing how many more details about the sinking were shown in that movie compared to Cameron's version. I highly recommend that movie, if people haven't seen it yet.

  • @ec6933
    @ec6933 Год назад +1

    This has always been my favorite survivor story

  • @paulharris7654
    @paulharris7654 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this insight into the story of Charles Joughin. I love your videos explaining things in an informative way whilst still maintaining respect for the disaster. Your charisma and passion is highly contagious! From my understanding upon consuming alcohol, core body temperature begins to fall thus putting him at a biological disadvantage before even falling into the icy water! I believe it is true that is numbs your senses which perhaps gave him the will to fight on. All of this is highly relatable. There have been many occasions after enjoying a couple of Whiskeys that I have not felt the cold night air as much coming out of a bar (albeit fortunately not falling into a frozen river). Theoretically speaking, being inebriated should have shortened his 15 average min survival time and increased his odds of accidently swallowing water and drowning.....A lucky man through and through. Much love from the UK.