This is amazing! I hope it's for a documentary because the Bradley is in desperate need of a good one. Survivor Frank Mays was my cousin and a good friend. He would have loved this animation! Thank you for keeping the memory of these great ships alive with your animations!
As sad and as tragic as all sinkings have been, this one may have been the most tragic in regard to how much it affected one town....Rogers City Mi. RIP to all who have been lost on the lakes.
Always love the classic front-bridge/pilothouse forward freighters, they were all such pretty ships. They used to rule the lakes, now there are only a few are left on the lakes in active service. Nice animation! Edit: Possibly Daniel J. Morrell or SS Cedarville?
The term you are looking for is “straight-decked”, and only two are still around without a self-unloader if memory serves. And Ryerson hasn’t sailed in 14 years… :)
@@TheEmeraldMenOfficial The Anderson hasn’t sailed for 14 years? It has been frequently sailing without fault, if you check a ship tracker you can see that it is running fine.
@@TheEmeraldMenOfficial well this one wasn’t a straight decker. The ships with the pilot house forward are my favorites rather than the rear bridge freighters that are so common nowadays. I know the term straight decker but the terms I used are specifically classic lakers.
@@Chris-zs4qd was talking about Edward L. Ryerson, not Arthur M. Anderson. Anderson is a self-unloader, ans the two surviving true straight-decked ships are the SS Alpena and the SS Edward L. Ryerson.
You’ve gotta recreate the sinking of the Daniel J Morrell. It’s one of the lesser known great lakers that went down. One of the most interesting and terrifying things about the sinking is once the bow sank, the stern keep going for another 5 nautical miles before sinking.
Great animation, may I suggest doing either the Daniel J Morrell and or it's sister Edward Y Townsend the latter of which sank within the general vicinity of RMS Titanic as it was being towed to a scrapyard in Spain.
What's amazing about the wreck is that the spar deck managed to keep the fore and aft connected after the section in the cargo hold seemingly just fell out. All the stress - twisting and bending in the waves, while still under propellsion - one would think would cause the spar deck to fail, and the Bradley to sink in two distinct halves - but that isn't what happened. Even the survivors were certain she'd broken clean in half.
It's good to see this ship gaining some attention; there are so many other shipwrecks from the Great Lakes that deserve to be remembered along with the Edmund Fitzgerald. And, as other people have asked, where did you get the model for the Bradley? I looked around for one a few months back and had no luck.
Nice to see more mainstream attention is being brought to Great Lakes history lately including the lesser known wrecks, the Fitz is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to wrecks littering the Lakes, could you by any chance do the Lady Elgin at some point?
One interesting wreck that not many people know of is the Anthony Wayne, it sank 8 miles off the coast of Vermilion Ohio on April 28, 1850. Two of her Starboard boilers exploded.
Very amazing now the last freighter that sank is the Daniel J. Morrel,also it would be very cool to see the Arthur m Anderson sink can you make that happen for a video not like a real ship video you know what I mean
There’s something about the design of these kind of ships, they look so haunting and just oddly weird but at the same time they can look pretty interesting and just something that just gains your attention. I guess the reason why it looks so haunting is because of all the sinkings that had happened with these kind of similar ship designs with the same flaws in their sinkings.
Any long freighter is going to have the same flaws because they're built to be the cheapest possible way to carry a lot of very, very heavy cargo. There's a video from last year of MV Arvin breaking in two on the Black Sea. She sank before anyone could reach her, taking half of her 12-man crew with her. The oceans are harsh and the Great Lakes are as treacherous as any ocean - I've seen with my own eyes 50-footers crashing against the cliffs of the North Shore.
I enjoyed your simulation of this sinking but I couldn’t tell what caused it. The water looked pretty calm and there didn’t appear to be any mechanical issues (explosion, fire and the like). What caused the tragedy?
A combination of constant excessive loading and a 31-year long career without much regular maintenance at the time of her sinking caused the steel hull to become brittle and split under pressure. There was a sudden storm on Lake Michigan and the vessel was transporting a full limestone load to Wisconsin.
Fun fact: After a dive few days(or years, idr-) after Bradley's sinking, the ship was in..suprisingly good condition(for shipwrecks atleast), not split in half, just, sitting there in 1 piece. It was found in 2 pieces only in 1997.
No the company that owned it sent they're own team of divers down just so they could say it didn't break up so they couldn't have to pay the families of the victims. And when the divers went down in 1997 they discovered it was in 2 pieces and that was when they payed the families but not the amount they promised
The current theory is that she split down to the keel on the surface and didn't actually separate until she hit the bottom. In other instances like the Morrell (1966) or the Minch (1940) the bow and stern are several mile apart.
Constructed during the interwar period, steel from that era was notoriously brittle, the Bradely was supposed to be done for the season and was scheduled to structurally reinforced in winter drydock but the company ordered it to do one more load at the last minute then it got caught in a storm where the structural failure happened.
Kle sa teed päris häid simulatsioone ajaloolistest juhtumitest... Aga mis arvad kui lisaks mõned tehnilised asjad veel nagu näiteks navigatsiooni tuled nendele laevadele seal videotes? Muudaks pildi veel reaalsemaks ja eriala inimestele muudaks asja vähem silma kriipivaks? Muidu hea töö ja jätka samas vaimus 😉
Unfortunately, this animation does not match the testimony of the survivors. Apparently, the crane on deck shifted to the side when the Bradley split, pulling the bow over to port and capsizing it; the survivors watched people scramble on the stern but it went down pretty much as it did in the animation, only once it was completely submerged there was a massive explosion from the cold sea water hitting the still burning boilers.
Yeah the Bradely sank during very harsh conditions. Though depending on the program he's using and the specs of his PC making big detailed waves can be a pain in the ass to render so I get why'd he go for this.
I believe the last part has her deck hinged. The dives to the Bradley show the deck is broken. Although I don't believe anyone can prove it, It is most likely hinged at the bottom. This is the video of the break ruclips.net/video/lqTkgeIi97g/видео.html
No. The Fitzgerald's sister ship was the Arthur B Homer which was scrapped after they found structural issues. Carl D Bradley's sister ship is the Cedarville which sank in the 1960's after a collision with another ship underneath the Mackinaw bridge
This is amazing! I hope it's for a documentary because the Bradley is in desperate need of a good one. Survivor Frank Mays was my cousin and a good friend. He would have loved this animation! Thank you for keeping the memory of these great ships alive with your animations!
If this had come out a few months earlier, it would've gone perfectly in this one :) ruclips.net/video/zz2T4UWf9X4/видео.html
I love the FITZGERALD , but I've always been intrigued by the sinking of the Bradley I feel it gets overlooked way to much.
Maritime horrors has a good video on the Bradley
@@ThatGuy-po7df will check out thank you.
We're actually all cousins everyone in world is
As sad and as tragic as all sinkings have been, this one may have been the most tragic in regard to how much it affected one town....Rogers City Mi. RIP to all who have been lost on the lakes.
And then the sinking of Bradley’s sister ship Cedarville sunk affecting Roger city again
Yes.....I heard 20 of the men who died in this wreck were from there. RIP
Always love the classic front-bridge/pilothouse forward freighters, they were all such pretty ships. They used to rule the lakes, now there are only a few are left on the lakes in active service. Nice animation!
Edit: Possibly Daniel J. Morrell or SS Cedarville?
The term you are looking for is “straight-decked”, and only two are still around without a self-unloader if memory serves. And Ryerson hasn’t sailed in 14 years… :)
@@TheEmeraldMenOfficial The Anderson hasn’t sailed for 14 years? It has been frequently sailing without fault, if you check a ship tracker you can see that it is running fine.
@@TheEmeraldMenOfficial well this one wasn’t a straight decker. The ships with the pilot house forward are my favorites rather than the rear bridge freighters that are so common nowadays. I know the term straight decker but the terms I used are specifically classic lakers.
@@Chris-zs4qd was talking about Edward L. Ryerson, not Arthur M. Anderson.
Anderson is a self-unloader, ans the two surviving true straight-decked ships are the SS Alpena and the SS Edward L. Ryerson.
Weren’t these straightdecks pretty much the inky ships that sunk on the lakes? That proves they’re dangerous
Nice recreation of the Bradley sinking: eerie animation once again. It's incredible how fast the Great Lakes can swallow a ship whole.
love your videos. big fan from South Africa 🇿🇦
You’ve gotta recreate the sinking of the Daniel J Morrell. It’s one of the lesser known great lakers that went down. One of the most interesting and terrifying things about the sinking is once the bow sank, the stern keep going for another 5 nautical miles before sinking.
@@GoofyGoober191 okay, thats interesting, i going to read about that, i will make it one day for sure! Thanks!
Do the Daniel J Morrell and Cedarville next. Then you have done all 4 of the most recent and the biggest great lakes shipwrecks!
Great animation, may I suggest doing either the Daniel J Morrell and or it's sister Edward Y Townsend the latter of which sank within the general vicinity of RMS Titanic as it was being towed to a scrapyard in Spain.
I was just thinking about this channel and how you should have made a video about the Carl D
seems like this specific ship design with the superstructure in front makes it easier to sink
What's amazing about the wreck is that the spar deck managed to keep the fore and aft connected after the section in the cargo hold seemingly just fell out.
All the stress - twisting and bending in the waves, while still under propellsion - one would think would cause the spar deck to fail, and the Bradley to sink in two distinct halves - but that isn't what happened.
Even the survivors were certain she'd broken clean in half.
Rip Edmund Fitzgerald and Carl D bradley
Wow! You have skills my friend
1975 vs 1993 Edmund Fitz vs carl d Bradley
It's good to see this ship gaining some attention; there are so many other shipwrecks from the Great Lakes that deserve to be remembered along with the Edmund Fitzgerald.
And, as other people have asked, where did you get the model for the Bradley? I looked around for one a few months back and had no luck.
Looks like the Emund Fiszt Gerald but blue
I have needed to see a video like this so long so I can see how it sank so I can make a stop motion
Do The SInking Of The SS Daniel J. Morrell
I still wonder how great lake freighters got away with the hull design even though it was prone to snapping in half
Great animation
I didn’t know so many frightening ship wrecks happened in my own backyard 😕
Nice to see more mainstream attention is being brought to Great Lakes history lately including the lesser known wrecks, the Fitz is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to wrecks littering the Lakes, could you by any chance do the Lady Elgin at some point?
One interesting wreck that not many people know of is the Anthony Wayne, it sank 8 miles off the coast of Vermilion Ohio on April 28, 1850. Two of her Starboard boilers exploded.
I believe you mean center of the storm
Tip of the ice-burg: slang for a small portion of media that is looked at but ignored the rest of said media.@@brianstabile165
great vid. only critique no boiler explosion , when the stern sinks.
Thanks, I know yes, i had no coice 😃
Where did you get the model for the ship? It looks stunning
Very amazing now the last freighter that sank is the Daniel J. Morrel,also it would be very cool to see the Arthur m Anderson sink can you make that happen for a video not like a real ship video you know what I mean
you need to make a wreck version this is amazing
Coming in 7 hours
@@caljucotcas Nice can't wait to see it
Good animation!
Why is it always these kinds of Great Lakes freighters going down. The Edmund Fitz, Carl D Bradley, Daniel J Morrell, and so on so forth
Isn't this animation for the upcoming The Men Long Forgotten Film they're doing about the Bradley?
I'm the only one that see the Bradley like the brother of SS Edmund Fitzgerald?
Yes...
There’s something about the design of these kind of ships, they look so haunting and just oddly weird but at the same time they can look pretty interesting and just something that just gains your attention. I guess the reason why it looks so haunting is because of all the sinkings that had happened with these kind of similar ship designs with the same flaws in their sinkings.
Any long freighter is going to have the same flaws because they're built to be the cheapest possible way to carry a lot of very, very heavy cargo. There's a video from last year of MV Arvin breaking in two on the Black Sea. She sank before anyone could reach her, taking half of her 12-man crew with her. The oceans are harsh and the Great Lakes are as treacherous as any ocean - I've seen with my own eyes 50-footers crashing against the cliffs of the North Shore.
Thank you for doing the Bradley
earned a sub
How long did it take for it to sink from the split to it fully going underwater?
you didn't include the boiler explosion when seawater got to the engine room
I enjoyed your simulation of this sinking but I couldn’t tell what caused it. The water looked pretty calm and there didn’t appear to be any mechanical issues (explosion, fire and the like).
What caused the tragedy?
A combination of constant excessive loading and a 31-year long career without much regular maintenance at the time of her sinking caused the steel hull to become brittle and split under pressure. There was a sudden storm on Lake Michigan and the vessel was transporting a full limestone load to Wisconsin.
@@marsfunkhouser5886 thank you!
Foreshadowing the Edmund Fitzgerald's own sinking nearly 20 years later, and in the same month no less.
This ship makes me remember Edmund Fitzgerald
Fun fact: After a dive few days(or years, idr-) after Bradley's sinking, the ship was in..suprisingly good condition(for shipwrecks atleast), not split in half, just, sitting there in 1 piece. It was found in 2 pieces only in 1997.
No the company that owned it sent they're own team of divers down just so they could say it didn't break up so they couldn't have to pay the families of the victims. And when the divers went down in 1997 they discovered it was in 2 pieces and that was when they payed the families but not the amount they promised
The current theory is that she split down to the keel on the surface and didn't actually separate until she hit the bottom. In other instances like the Morrell (1966) or the Minch (1940) the bow and stern are several mile apart.
Great! 🤗 But the question is: why did it sink?
Structural failure, stressed beyond its strength limit.
@@emmett_n Thanks a lot! 🌹
Constructed during the interwar period, steel from that era was notoriously brittle, the Bradely was supposed to be done for the season and was scheduled to structurally reinforced in winter drydock but the company ordered it to do one more load at the last minute then it got caught in a storm where the structural failure happened.
@@funnelvortex7722 Thank you! 🌸
@@funnelvortex7722 single weld hull or riveted hull
One little inaccurate thing i found. The survivors said the bow capsized when it sank the stern sank the right way though
The Bow is sitting right-side up on the lake floor though.
@@HoshizakiYoshimasa yeah she is but the bow section could have landed on an even keel search up the survivors testemony’s on the sinking
Oh what a beautiful morning wait what is that squeaking sound?
Kle sa teed päris häid simulatsioone ajaloolistest juhtumitest... Aga mis arvad kui lisaks mõned tehnilised asjad veel nagu näiteks navigatsiooni tuled nendele laevadele seal videotes? Muudaks pildi veel reaalsemaks ja eriala inimestele muudaks asja vähem silma kriipivaks? Muidu hea töö ja jätka samas vaimus 😉
Nice
It looks like a blue Edmund Fitzgerald to me.
They’re both lake freighters so it makes sense
Carl D Bradley on 1927 loss thes😊
1958. Not 1927
wasn't there a boiler explosion?
Yes there was. Flames went out from the smokestack/funnel
The sink just like edmund fitz gerald
Seems when the decks go under trouble comes.
could you do one on the Daniel J. Morrell?
Taaskord oled retsilt hea animatsiooni teinud!!!!!
How did you figure out how it went down after the break?
Unfortunately, this animation does not match the testimony of the survivors. Apparently, the crane on deck shifted to the side when the Bradley split, pulling the bow over to port and capsizing it; the survivors watched people scramble on the stern but it went down pretty much as it did in the animation, only once it was completely submerged there was a massive explosion from the cold sea water hitting the still burning boilers.
1:36 it just pulled it down like a catapult
The old break in half ploy
FITZGERALD?!🤯
The waves need to be more severe
But other than that it is quite good
Yeah the Bradely sank during very harsh conditions. Though depending on the program he's using and the specs of his PC making big detailed waves can be a pain in the ass to render so I get why'd he go for this.
How do I know that the ship is going to brake in two!!!!!!!!
The Daniel j morrell next?
the ss carl d bradley tge carl was my name so its like its my ship
rust sank the carl d bradly no mystery at all so why people call it a mystery it blows my mind plus the carl d bradly has no books of her at all
Could you do the Edmund Fitzgerald?
He already did!.
What caused it? The waves?
Yes
@@caljucotcas oh so it was like the Edmund Fitz Gerald, got it
I believe the last part has her deck hinged. The dives to the Bradley show the deck is broken. Although I don't believe anyone can prove it, It is most likely hinged at the bottom. This is the video of the break ruclips.net/video/lqTkgeIi97g/видео.html
I belive its keel held until the bolier explosion
Was the SS Carl Bradley a sister ship of the Edmund Fitzgerald?
No. The Fitzgerald's sister ship was the Arthur B Homer which was scrapped after they found structural issues. Carl D Bradley's sister ship is the Cedarville which sank in the 1960's after a collision with another ship underneath the Mackinaw bridge
@@HoshizakiYoshimasa Thank you.
Is this real?
Y e s
Making a v-break be like:
What animation app did you use?
Lumion
Uh i meaned to only Edum Fizgerald is the only bulk carrier who sank At Michigen river
Bruh i am bad in English i meaned Lake
What did you use?
Sketchup and Lumion
@@caljucotcas neat.
Will you do Daniell J Morrell.
Quando olhei pela primeira vez achei que erra o Edmund fiztzerald kk
How about some narration?
Ss stand for steamship and carl d bradley did not use steam it use oil
Propulsion. General Electric high and low pressure steam turbines turning electric motors to a single fixed pitch propeller
লা ইলাহা ইল্লাল্লাহু মুহাম্মাদুর রাসুলুল্লাহ সাঃ আলাইহি ওয়াসাল্লাম
Always this scheme… with this type of ships…
Like titanic
oh a real v-break up
Man does dang is a maid
ρяσмσѕм