"Titanic Survivors" - Fascinating 1983 Interviews with Last Survivors

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  • Опубликовано: 13 апр 2022
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    110 years ago! The Last Seven Survivors tell their amazing stories of how they escaped death. At 2 o'clock in the morning on April 15, 1912 the "The Unsinkable Titanic" sunk. All have since passed away, so you are hearing and seeing them together for the last time.
    The Titanic - the British passenger liner that sank in the North Atlantic Ocean on April 15, 1912, after colliding with an iceberg during her maiden
    voyage from Southampton, England to New Your City.
    1,514 people that drowned in the deadliest peacetime maritime disaster in history. Her passengers included some of the wealthiest people in the world, as well as over one thousand immigrants from Great Britain, Ireland, Scandinavia, and elsewhere seeking a new life in America.
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @user-bn7bk5mw4s
    @user-bn7bk5mw4s 2 месяца назад +23

    I took care of a lady while a nurse in 1999 who was 108 years old. She remembered when the Titanic sank and talked about it often. She lived to 110...no lie

    • @gg456stormy
      @gg456stormy 22 дня назад

      @user-bn7bk5mw4s back in 08 I was a residential cable company installer. The customer was a tall old lady running up and down stairs showing me where the boxes went. I was impressed and asked her how old she was, she said 83. Then she said her mom was 105 and was the name on the invoice. The mom came out later and moved around pretty good. I guess it's genetic, anyway they had titanic photos and articles on the mantle. Looking back I wonder if the mom was on the ship.

  • @bluewaters3100
    @bluewaters3100 Год назад +496

    So many of the people who died were men who had no choice but to sacrifice their lives so women and children could be saved. They were the real heroes of this sad story.

    • @Junksaint
      @Junksaint Год назад +28

      Let's start a men's rights club

    • @emisilly
      @emisilly Год назад +7

      @@Junksaint😂

    • @faithieflame4976
      @faithieflame4976 Год назад +50

      Where are the feminist????. Will any of them do this???
      Men are truly protectors!!!

    • @Betsy89
      @Betsy89 Год назад +43

      @@faithieflame4976 No modern day feminist would do this for men. They're nuts!

    • @stephendacey8761
      @stephendacey8761 Год назад +8

      @@JunksaintAl Bundy, "No Ma'am:.

  • @chsftball57
    @chsftball57 Год назад +79

    Those guys that got interviewed about how much they “loved” and “romanticized” the Titanic gave me chills. Something about how they lit up about a tragedy is incredibly unnerving.

    • @KennyBunions
      @KennyBunions Год назад +11

      I agree with you. The "fans/enthusiasts" were so creepy

    • @Righteous85
      @Righteous85 Год назад +2

      They’re very evil people.

    • @questioneverything-rf3yf
      @questioneverything-rf3yf Год назад

      Yes. It's troubling in too many ways to count, each as appalling as the next, but I think the general social acceptability regarding organized group glorification of such a tragic, ghoulish piece of history is the most unsettling. Just call it the Morbidly Obsessed Association.
      "UNSINKABLE!!!"...typical bravado begging for it.

    • @Flirri
      @Flirri Год назад +9

      The guy in the t-shirt, like it was Star Wars or something ...

    • @Tunein2greatness-uf7bw
      @Tunein2greatness-uf7bw Год назад +13

      Yeah it’s like they were at Comic-Con something

  • @kristenmorgan9824
    @kristenmorgan9824 Год назад +474

    You can tell the gentleman who jumped off the stern of the ship was truly haunted by the entire ordeal. I hope he was able to find peace.

    • @andrewc2491
      @andrewc2491 Год назад +12

      Oh. He found peace alright.

    • @BabyJesus420
      @BabyJesus420 Год назад +37

      @@andrewc2491 yeah you are not funny

    • @andrewc2491
      @andrewc2491 Год назад +19

      @@BabyJesus420 you’re going to find peace, too. I wish you peace, game boy.

    • @smokefree08
      @smokefree08 Год назад +5

      ​@@andrewc2491the Grim creeper

    • @trevornoel9
      @trevornoel9 Год назад +31

      I think anybody would. Falling from the stern in the middle of the freezing ocean in pitch black with other people dieing around you. Yea that trauma is for life.

  • @justineharper3346
    @justineharper3346 Год назад +479

    It’s so nice that they got these interviews before these people were gone

    • @Juandelgadoo956
      @Juandelgadoo956 2 месяца назад +3

      It’s so nice you left this comment before you’re gone

    • @primetime_mitch
      @primetime_mitch 2 месяца назад

      @@Juandelgadoo956why be a prick?

    • @disclaimer.imjokin
      @disclaimer.imjokin 2 месяца назад +1

      Read a book and you'll have so much more

  • @kasteman1
    @kasteman1 Год назад +205

    The mere fact that I was alive while these survivors were still around gives me a certain sense of obligation to hear their stories directly, a human continuance for future generations.

    • @BabyJesus420
      @BabyJesus420 Год назад +5

      yes yes yes yes

    • @BabyJesus420
      @BabyJesus420 Год назад +5

      and same

    • @braylenthegoanimator2k11
      @braylenthegoanimator2k11 Год назад +2

      Same

    • @trevornoel9
      @trevornoel9 Год назад +2

      Ur right. I have thought about that. I didn't realize that these people were around during my childhood. I am trying to extract all the information from my 81 year old grand mother that was in her 20s in crazy 60s.

    • @berta7019
      @berta7019 Год назад +2

      In the end death comes a 'callin for both pauper's and kings 😢

  • @unknown10391
    @unknown10391 10 месяцев назад +40

    I was lucky enough to know Eva hart I always thought how brave and strong she was for surviving such a terrible accident she is a amazing human being

  • @malohn2068
    @malohn2068 Год назад +298

    The only thing more terrifying than the hundreds of screams was the silence that followed

    • @SalveRegina8
      @SalveRegina8 Год назад +3

      and the overkill "reenactment" Morse Code beeping in this documentary.

    • @emanuelamanucci18
      @emanuelamanucci18 Год назад +6

      Concordo... Deve essere stato terribile, a volte il silenzio è piu agghiacciante del rumore

    • @disclaimer.imjokin
      @disclaimer.imjokin 2 месяца назад

      Such a bot comment

    • @JanBadinski
      @JanBadinski 25 дней назад

      😢

  • @shawnaaustin3396
    @shawnaaustin3396 Год назад +447

    “It was almost like murder wasn’t it?” No truer words about the Titanic disaster were ever uttered.

    • @robertlanz3124
      @robertlanz3124 Год назад +40

      How true. Today in 2023 the ship company owners would be in jail.

    • @NKdidit.24
      @NKdidit.24 Год назад +23

      It definitely was like murder

    • @Acidburn3141
      @Acidburn3141 Год назад +7

      Very untrue 🤣🤣🤡🤡

    • @shawnaaustin3396
      @shawnaaustin3396 Год назад +17

      @@Acidburn3141 so what if the company who made your vehicle cut corners because they were cheap and caused a fatal accident? Who’s fault would that be? Would the company be liable for your death?

    • @truthhurts2879
      @truthhurts2879 Год назад

      The bankers on the ship were holding out on introducing the federal reserve. With those gone, the rest is history, it was implemented just data after at Jeckyl Island.

  • @slip-n-slide4807
    @slip-n-slide4807 Год назад +77

    These interviews were done 2 years before the Titanic was found in 1985.. that's crazy
    I'm sure those haunting images and videos of the ship at the bottom of the ocean caused some intense memories

    • @Flirri
      @Flirri Год назад +3

      That's true, it's like the great moment of the legend, before the discovery and the science part of it.

    • @packer812
      @packer812 4 месяца назад +1

      Edwina McKenzie died in December 1984, so she didn't live to see it.

  • @chriswolf7003
    @chriswolf7003 Год назад +26

    Those people went through a lot! Titanic, World Wars 1&2, Economic depression…🥲

  • @susanmorano405
    @susanmorano405 Год назад +36

    All those warnings about ice, just break my heart.
    R.I.P. victims of the Titanic. 🌹

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      And to think that the captain gave one of them to Ismay before posting it on the bridge for the officers to read....

  • @AntajuanGrady
    @AntajuanGrady 2 года назад +96

    he's right at 15:20, you CAN sort of smell ice when its around. Like snow, you CAN sort of smell it!

    • @Abcity92
      @Abcity92 3 месяца назад +2

      It gives you a mild, burning feeling in your nose; I have had this happen before.

    • @lisajeter9511
      @lisajeter9511 2 месяца назад +1

      In deed you can smell snow coming!

  • @Knappa22
    @Knappa22 Год назад +256

    Frank Prentice remains the ultimate eye witness survivor for me. I love his know-how about the ship, his use of maritime phrases etc. It’s all so authentic e.g “What I did see was ice in the forward well deck and I thought ‘Hullo, we’ve hit an iceberg.’”
    And his survival story is extraordinary.

    • @VanishedPNW
      @VanishedPNW Год назад +23

      That guy is the best. Love listening to him. Could for hours

    • @gregorykayne6054
      @gregorykayne6054 Год назад +19

      To spend an hour with Mr. Prentice.

    • @gregg9694
      @gregg9694 Год назад +7

      Why not longer?

    • @stephendacey8761
      @stephendacey8761 Год назад +6

      He's dressed very nice.

    • @dennispearson871
      @dennispearson871 Год назад +12

      The Consumate English Gentleman ! Such charm and wit !!..

  • @elderlybrunch4169
    @elderlybrunch4169 Год назад +124

    The woman in red at 24 minutes, imagine her surprise 2 years later when the wreckage was discovered after all that time. She'd been told for 65 years that the ship did not break in half during the sinking, even though she'd heard explosions; cracking. She convinced herself it was the boiler because hardly anyone believed the ship had broken in half.
    I have this theory that since mostly women were saved because of the chivalry of the captain, when they said they believed the ship had broken they were seen as hysterical and panicked because of the tense situation, and no one believed their stories. Until the shipwreck was found in 1985. Sadly most of the survivors had passed on by then...

    • @Mixedpixie
      @Mixedpixie Год назад +10

      Yea. Ppl argue the same with Eva Hart and she was 7 at the time but remembered clarity that did break. Sadly that Walter lord didn’t use that to his book cus he interview her.

    • @leidygarcia86
      @leidygarcia86 Год назад

      I watched a documentary where they explained that the ship did not break any where near the surface. It did but when it was almost about to hit the sea floor. Maybe everything did crack inside the ship but it didnt split before their eyes. Or maybe it did, but not completely.

    • @leodefine86
      @leodefine86 Год назад +13

      @@leidygarcia86it did break on the surface, Eva Hart clearly said that she saw the ship broke in half. Not only her, but many others said the same thing, they said the ship broke in half on the surface but no one believed them.

    • @midokhalil1558
      @midokhalil1558 3 месяца назад +2

      She was bullied into it , she clearly saw it break in half before an idiot came along took the mic 🎤 from here telling everyone that this was an illusion due to titanic funnels collapsing , wow , I would sue all these idiots who shut me up

    • @ajrwilde14
      @ajrwilde14 3 месяца назад

      Er almost an equal number of men and women were saved.

  • @tonemarieantonsen1597
    @tonemarieantonsen1597 Год назад +436

    To say something is unsinkable is begging for trouble. It's ludicrous as heck. Eva Harts mom had a great sixth sense and it saved Eva. Rest easy to all deceased ❤️❤️❤️

    • @massimoricciardi6202
      @massimoricciardi6202 Год назад +19

      When they said it they jinxed the ship bad .

    • @OSTARAEB4
      @OSTARAEB4 Год назад

      @Herbert Sattelmeier and the Oceanos that sank off South Africa in the early 1990’s.

    • @susanhewitt6359
      @susanhewitt6359 Год назад +28

      Ismay should never have said,"God himself could not sink this ship". It wasn't just in the movie, many witnesses verified that he said it. What absolute arrogance!

    • @The12345gt
      @The12345gt Год назад +7

      They never said that. That came after it sunk. It was practically unsinkable and that's how they sold it to the public and it was, it was one of the safest ships of the time

    • @paulanthony5274
      @paulanthony5274 Год назад +6

      It was first deemed "practically unsinkable" by a magazine called Ship Builder. But it was referring to Olympic and Titanic. Olympic had been in service since 2011 and didn't sink. It sank because of a number of reasons. If it was because of saying it was unsinkable then why didn't the sister ship Olympic sink then. That's just a fantastic story.

  • @mandyellis876
    @mandyellis876 Год назад +34

    Eva Hart’s mother was quite someone else. Imagine having a feeling of doom hanging over you to the point you refused to sleep at night!

  • @eej1983able
    @eej1983able Год назад +268

    The man who was rescued from the water...incredible he survived! I can't imagine the trauma and night terrors/ptsd

    • @mikethomas6120
      @mikethomas6120 Год назад +42

      They didn’t have ptsd back then , people were much tougher. They just went on with life and did what needed to be done!

    • @geemonster9179
      @geemonster9179 Год назад +58

      @@mikethomas6120 They had PTSD it just wasn't recognized as a condition back then, but you are in part right, people were tougher back then, technology hasn't made our lives easier at all, it's made us weaker, it's said that tough lives breed tough people.
      I was born in 1969 so national service wasn't a thing after i left school in the mid 80's, i think it should be reintroduced here in England

    • @darthvacation9299
      @darthvacation9299 Год назад

      ​@@mikethomas6120dumb comment, dont talk about things you are clueless on.

    • @John-996
      @John-996 Год назад +9

      ​@@geemonster9179Well the further Back in time you go people seem to be tougher. Look at Andrew Jackson who was dueling people. People Adapt to the times.

    • @Aletheia-Media
      @Aletheia-Media Год назад +11

      What a ridiculous and unfounded comment.

  • @debbielb2325
    @debbielb2325 Год назад +90

    It’s so weird to think this was filmed before the Titanic was discovered. I remember as a little girl learning about it in school and it discussed that it’s too deep to find.

    • @b.m.t.h.3961
      @b.m.t.h.3961 Год назад +2

      Sometimes I wish Titanic wasn't found. I always liked the thought that she went down in one piece.

    • @shell6829
      @shell6829 Год назад +3

      It absolutely fascinates me, but I wish it were never found. We mustn’t disturb the dead nor should we have ever messed with a huge part of history. Some things just need to be left alone. It’s been 111 years and the Titanic is still taking lives. 😢

    • @TimothyZakaria
      @TimothyZakaria 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@shell6829they tell us that it happened in 1912 however I believe it happened in 1902. Many of the passengers weren't normal I guess they were used to cold weather. They could of been saved within an hour of the sinking. It's foul play cause of how cold it was

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 10 дней назад +1

      @@shell6829 I know the feeling. I do feel though that Robert Ballard was the right person to go down there; he has the right attitude for these kind of undertakings .

  • @clairenraven
    @clairenraven Год назад +82

    Her mother reminds me of my mother, who has a strong sense of danger, she would sit up at night whenever she felt something was off and not sleep. In the end, thieves turned up at our home, and she would confront them like a ghost and scare them with her voice. My senses are heightened at night, too, it's strange.

    • @tampabayrealestate_lpt
      @tampabayrealestate_lpt Год назад +5

      My mom is the same way I’m like that now I can sense it coming I even can sense when someone is about to knock on my door

    • @tampabayrealestate_lpt
      @tampabayrealestate_lpt Год назад +3

      😂😂 I’m legitimately laughing because my mom is this way hahaha it’s so annoying 😂😂😂

    • @irisflow7461
      @irisflow7461 Год назад +4

      Every one has intuition it's just that most skeptic people don't listen to it. That strong gut feeling

    • @charlesstephenarnest8513
      @charlesstephenarnest8513 Год назад +1

      You could have given her the medication back....

    • @marthapackard8649
      @marthapackard8649 Год назад +4

      ​@@irisflow7461modern people are conditioned to ignore it now. Listen to your instincts!

  • @MsThemjs
    @MsThemjs Год назад +26

    It was so sad to here the gentleman say he still has nightmares and will have another one that night 😢. Rest well precious Angels 🙏🏾

    • @yvonnerahui8729
      @yvonnerahui8729 3 месяца назад

      He believed he was saved by the grace of God yet he never walked with that Gpd who would have healed him. Jesus showed God holiness but he failed to find Him..I hope he did b4 he died.

  • @thraciangrapes
    @thraciangrapes Год назад +69

    A beautiful documentary. The people are so lovely and dignified. My grandfather, from Donegal, went to Belfast to see the Titanic being built when he was only 14. He had never seen black men before. Black men helped build the Titanic on the docks.

    • @McLarenMercedes
      @McLarenMercedes Год назад +28

      @simpleWebDev We do. *Clown*

    • @marysteven6347
      @marysteven6347 5 месяцев назад +1

      I find this disingenuous and frankly unbelievable.

    • @thraciangrapes
      @thraciangrapes 5 месяцев назад

      @@marysteven6347 Were you there in the docks of Belfast in the year 1900 to watch this?

    • @lux132
      @lux132 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@thraciangrapesBelfast in 1910-1912 was very homogenous. So no black men didn’t build the titanic.

    • @eskee1
      @eskee1 4 месяца назад +1

      Idk about that

  • @tyroneraman6395
    @tyroneraman6395 2 года назад +157

    Never knew they had so many iceberg warnings but failed to react. Poor form indeed! And holy snap, that guy jumped off the back end of the ship and survived, Aint nobody else has a story like that!

    • @freckles4603
      @freckles4603 Год назад +13

      Not really, most if I remember right we’re not directly on their path and captain smith did turn the ship south once because of the ice warnings as was more standard of the time. It was likely a cold water mirage / false horizon that distorted their view until the iceberg was right there.

    • @TorontoJediMaster
      @TorontoJediMaster Год назад +17

      One thing to keep in mind is that wireless had been on ships for less than twelve years. Captain Smith had been on the North Atlantic for over forty years. He had sailed through ice more times than he could likely remember. He'd never had any incident happen and he was pretty much handling his ship as he always had.

    • @galesal1109
      @galesal1109 Год назад +17

      @@freckles4603the operator responded with “shut up I'm busy”. They def f’ed up.

    • @DJTrickiMusic
      @DJTrickiMusic Год назад

      @@galesal1109 whether that operator survived or not, hope he was thrown in jail for life. Or committed...
      What a careless, lifeless incompetent soul

    • @JB-hj2vj
      @JB-hj2vj Год назад +7

      @@galesal1109 Some warnings were sent up to the bridge and ignored. There was no protocol for passing on and responding to messages.

  • @melindajackson3602
    @melindajackson3602 Год назад +20

    LOVE that they got these interviews before they passed away.
    🙏❤️

  • @eileenrobbins8430
    @eileenrobbins8430 Год назад +60

    Thank you for this documentary. God bless these survivors. They must have been through pure hell having to witness and remember the screaming of all the people who died

  • @MarcoGosatti42
    @MarcoGosatti42 Год назад +160

    It took 2 1/2 years to build the Titanic, it then took 2 1/2 hours for her to sink (sadly)
    An example of how all the hard work can come undone quickly as that.
    Keep on the right path in what you do.

    • @chuckie102883
      @chuckie102883 Год назад +14

      Same for the World Trade Center.

    • @NKdidit.24
      @NKdidit.24 Год назад +9

      @@chuckie102883 that was a controlled demolition

    • @paulanthony5274
      @paulanthony5274 Год назад +5

      I'm nit picking but it sank in 2 hours 40 minutes.

    • @MarcoGosatti42
      @MarcoGosatti42 Год назад

      @@paulanthony5274 No problem 👍

    • @Chris-lz4vk
      @Chris-lz4vk Год назад +1

      It took 3 years to build.

  • @RX7CHICnz
    @RX7CHICnz Год назад +81

    The reason why I find this so fascinating is how preventable this tragedy was R.I.P to all who lost their lives on that fateful night! ❤

  • @heatherwade2373
    @heatherwade2373 Год назад +925

    There is nothing romantic about this tragic loss of life.

    • @Matt-ns8nb
      @Matt-ns8nb Год назад +28

      Funny how we remember history isn't it

    • @tonemarieantonsen1597
      @tonemarieantonsen1597 Год назад +84

      Absolutely agree. It's ludicrous to use romantic and death in same settings.

    • @fernfunk
      @fernfunk Год назад +65

      yes, that was the oddest thing said in this documentary!

    • @rhaenyralikesyoutube6289
      @rhaenyralikesyoutube6289 Год назад +77

      Yeah, that one guy romanticizing this event was weird for sure.

    • @tonemarieantonsen1597
      @tonemarieantonsen1597 Год назад +4

      @@wownewstome6123 I am sure he didn't mean that .

  • @fmyoung
    @fmyoung Год назад +28

    Eva Hart said the Titanic "will go down in history as the one disaster where there was no need for anyone to die."

    • @antoniafaheerty6980
      @antoniafaheerty6980 Год назад +6

      And now with today's news those words are very errie. Rip passengers of Titan.

    • @johnnycapote9817
      @johnnycapote9817 Год назад +4

      9/11 says hello

    • @lisajeter9511
      @lisajeter9511 2 месяца назад

      The next disaster where no one needed to die was that stupid ship that took visitors to see the Titanic. That’s what happens when people mess with Hallowed grounds.

  • @penelope-oe2vr
    @penelope-oe2vr Год назад +8

    As a welder... lessons were learned from this that i was taught when learning. They had put "slugs" of metal bars into the big welds to make the welding faster. Well, it weakened the hull of the boat to a lethal demise. We were taught NEVER to do that. Never. Its legacy lives on in many ways

    • @gracie3174
      @gracie3174 20 дней назад

      Wow! That’s a big deal! Thank you

  • @What.me.worry.
    @What.me.worry. Год назад +78

    I have always been so fascinated by this disaster. So many mistakes, fateful decisions 😥😥

    • @Missy182
      @Missy182 Год назад +7

      Me too

    • @milliem8051
      @milliem8051 Год назад +8

      I’m on a Titanic video binge. It’s so sad I just can’t even imagine what they went through.

    • @HB-ey2dk
      @HB-ey2dk Год назад

      @@milliem8051 can you recommend any other good ones to check out?

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      All of us here are fascinated by the story I think

  • @ghostdemon7936
    @ghostdemon7936 Год назад +13

    It's refreshing to hear the truth of what iccured from survivors rather than sepculation. RIP to all those who lost their lives.

  • @markgolden8710
    @markgolden8710 Год назад +275

    Sometimes on a winter night when it’s real cold and I have to go outside, I think about those people who had to go in the water and how horrible it must have been for them.

    • @peterm1826
      @peterm1826 Год назад +1

      @markgolden8710 crap

    • @user-cp1ne8ln5o
      @user-cp1ne8ln5o Год назад +20

      Bless those old soles but these enthusiasts are goofballs. And here we are in 2023 it took 5 more millionaires/billionaires. In that story I only feel bad for the teenager.

    • @DinoAlvarez4115
      @DinoAlvarez4115 Год назад +4

      @mark: So do I.

    • @SteffiReitsch
      @SteffiReitsch Год назад +21

      If folks think the Titanic was bad, an even more horrible sinking was that of the MV Wilhelm Gustloff in January 1945. The passenger liner was crammed full with more ~ 10, 600 people.: wounded soldiers, seamen, cadets, and especially thousands of civilians with lots of children, fleeing the oncoming revenge seeking Soviet Army . It was a very cold January night and the sea was rough. A Soviet submarine fired 3 torpedos into her. An estimated 9,600 people perished, the worst sea disaster of all times. It was not reported by the Allies, and still most people have never heard of it. ruclips.net/video/l9SjT9yamSA/видео.html

    • @lukecarvill7721
      @lukecarvill7721 Год назад +4

      Given there were only so many lifeboats launched and it was “women and children”, when I see the men in the group of survivors, I’m wondering how many women they pushed overboard to save themselves 😬

  • @patriciaguenzler9150
    @patriciaguenzler9150 Год назад +18

    I'm 65 we found my great Grandma had her ticket on shelf thank God she was late getting there she passed away as always had a pie in oven warm as nine years old I loved her Miss her memories All happy 😁

  • @crystalinabacteria3430
    @crystalinabacteria3430 Год назад +18

    The screams would haunt me😢💔The poor man was finding it hard to describe. So traumatising for him 💔

  • @frederickrueckert850
    @frederickrueckert850 Год назад +52

    I was 13 and I was there at the convention as a member of the THS. I still have all the survivor autographs as well as others.

    • @scottinnh88
      @scottinnh88 Год назад +8

      Wow that’s awesome.

    • @MonaHerSelfM
      @MonaHerSelfM Год назад +1

      I hope your can preserve those autographs. :) I'm glad you were able to make these memories!

    • @frederickrueckert850
      @frederickrueckert850 Год назад +1

      @@MonaHerSelfM Danke Mona :)

  • @ModernDayRenaissanceMan
    @ModernDayRenaissanceMan 3 месяца назад +5

    Its strange to see documentaries that do not show the ship rising up & breaking apart. Its amazing how much we learned about this event in the last 40 years.

  • @naturesmagik
    @naturesmagik Год назад +41

    I have ALWAYS been very interested in the history of this event and the Titanic.

  • @savtrill333
    @savtrill333 Год назад +12

    Im here after the 5 people who just lost their lives trying to see the remains of the Titanic smfh

  • @tjhookit
    @tjhookit Год назад +71

    "It's very romantic, very dramatic, very melodramatic"
    No bruh........it was an absolute disaster, and not one survivor would use any of those words to describe the experience. smh

    • @rebeccaroussel3405
      @rebeccaroussel3405 Год назад +8

      I am pretty sure romantic was meant for the actual titanic, not the sinking part.

    • @Richard-1776
      @Richard-1776 Год назад

      English? Try it.

    • @tjhookit
      @tjhookit Год назад +2

      @@Richard-1776 Reading comprehension? Try it.

    • @Charlie-bh3yk
      @Charlie-bh3yk Год назад +1

      @@Richard-1776 if you can’t understand a perfectly legible comment, that’s your issue.

    • @gregg9694
      @gregg9694 Год назад

      BURN

  • @MOUMITA708
    @MOUMITA708 Год назад +33

    Thank you for this video. And I do thank the survivors to have been brave to revisit and talk about such an experience in their life.

  • @northeastrailway.
    @northeastrailway. Год назад +29

    Her mother knew. Always trust your mothers intuition.

    • @McLarenMercedes
      @McLarenMercedes Год назад +1

      That justifies hysterical, paranoid and mothers suffering from Generalized Anxiety Disorder.
      95% of those women who trust their "intuition" obviously don't have it when marrying. Eventually they turn into bitter women. Guess their intuition didn't save them.

    • @ravenel2
      @ravenel2 Год назад

      God, what an answer above. She’s talking about moms with incidents like Eva Hart’s, not women who made bad marriages. My mom had a few psychic incidents like this and if she hadn’t, I would not be here.

    • @ikkelimburg3552
      @ikkelimburg3552 3 месяца назад

      Thanks to my mother’s ‘hysterical intuition’, we didn’t board and drowned on the Free Herald of Enterprise. I really do admire her by not letting anyone talk her out of her refusal and giving zero F’s about ‘how she would come across’ in that cue for cars boarding the ferry. She just took us kids from the backseat and said to my dad ‘You can make a scene out of it by dragging it along refusing to come with us and me having to fetch alternative transport back home or you can come with us. My children are not going on that ferry’. Luckily my dad wasn’t the arguing or dominant type and just gave in, hoping to find a snackbar still open to get some Belgian fries.

    • @lisajeter9511
      @lisajeter9511 2 месяца назад

      You can take a mother’s instinct to the bank! A woman’s instinct for that matter!

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      The North Atlantic is truly "a harsh and jealous sovereign" (David McCallum) it advises you not to be "flying in the face of God" (Esther Hart)

  • @ScoopDogg
    @ScoopDogg Год назад +14

    The Titanic was still lost when this video was made, then In 1985, it took Robert Ballard eight days to find the R.M.S. Titanic around 400 miles off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      1985 was a banner year for that

  • @user-xx8qo9ov5w
    @user-xx8qo9ov5w 3 месяца назад +5

    Thank you for your service 🙏 the crew of the Titanic may you rest in peace 🙏 🪦.

  • @ericcastillo1332
    @ericcastillo1332 Год назад +29

    Now it's 2023,and 5 men recently lost their lives 😢 😔 on a trip to explore the depths of titanic, again due to errors, tragedy has struck ! Let titanic rest,for she can still take lives!!!

    • @yah5395
      @yah5395 6 месяцев назад

      Titanic doesn’t take lives. People being careless is what is causing the issues.

  • @robertcronin6603
    @robertcronin6603 3 месяца назад +4

    It's through videos like this that youtube proves it's worth....priceless stuff here.

  • @danieldevries3230
    @danieldevries3230 Год назад +6

    As for me, growing up.. my dad was very much into history. I can't say I was back when I was a little boy but my dad had a lot of historical books. Big hard cover ones. One stood out to me and I flipped through all of those black and white pictures. It was the Titanic. That ship gripped me and I just had to keep looking at it. All this time later, still in it's grip. What a story and tragedy.

  • @sunnyday6680
    @sunnyday6680 Год назад +13

    The man who said he may have had a past life on the Titanic. That’s what I feel is going on with all of the enthusiasts especially those that become “obsessed” as children- they are closer to the other side and have a stronger knowing and feeling sense about their past lives. Pretty cool to think about.

    • @Colts92-ve2nl
      @Colts92-ve2nl Год назад +3

      My 12 year old son has been obsessed with it for some years..to the point that it’s kind of odd..I have never spoken about it..watched anything about it or ever said it’s name in his presence.He just brought it up to me one day… went as far as asking if he could watch the movie on it..I turned it on in his room for him and let him by himself. He knew about the sub going down to it before I even did lol.. he stays keeping an eye on it.

    • @ravenel2
      @ravenel2 Год назад +2

      2200 souls experienced the sinking, thousands more were devastated families and friends on shore, and most of them could have lived and died three or five times since then. I don’t doubt that’s why some people are obsessed with it as children.

  • @shawnadeyo
    @shawnadeyo Год назад +13

    Unbelievable. Its so heartbreaking listening to these survivors who were actually on the titanic. You can watch all the movies and read all the books but nothing comes close to the tragic and agonizing pain fealt with their stories.

  • @thomasgilliam7764
    @thomasgilliam7764 Год назад +8

    Its so heartwarming to see how many ppl in the comments actually care about the passengers who lost their lives that night so many years ago, because it seems like most are only interested in the ship itself even till this day people are going down in the water to look at a deteriorating ship. Smh

  • @doctorbohr1585
    @doctorbohr1585 2 месяца назад +3

    My grandmother, an illiterate Maltese farmgirl born in 1907, used to tell me how much commotion the news of Titanic caused in her village. An amazing event that continues to captivate

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 22 дня назад

      You should tell the Titanic Historical Society about that .

  • @chuckie102883
    @chuckie102883 Год назад +40

    1983 is the year I was born. Crazy to know I was born when titanic survivors were still alive. 😮

    • @Missy182
      @Missy182 Год назад +2

      Same. June 1983

    • @entertainingsportshighligh7525
      @entertainingsportshighligh7525 Год назад +5

      Crazy to know i was a 12 Year Old BOY and BREAK DANCING when you was Born in 1983 :o

    • @STARFOXPERIENCE
      @STARFOXPERIENCE Год назад +3

      How is this crazy?!
      That's 40 years ago and that people from 1912 are still alive is just normal.

    • @Jcandy20012
      @Jcandy20012 Год назад +1

      You must be 40 now I was born in 1984 they found the ship under water in 1985

    • @leedslass5821
      @leedslass5821 Год назад +1

      ​@@Jcandy200121985 the ship was found wow 😢

  • @DBZluvz
    @DBZluvz Год назад +11

    only one survivor mentioned the ship breaking in two and we now know that 2 years later Dr. Ballard would discover the wreck and confirm that the ship did indeed break into 2 pieces.

  • @simplyme8593
    @simplyme8593 2 года назад +299

    Wow, what a documentary..
    The gentleman's descriptions and remarks are amazing..
    Also, the mother who felt that something bad was about to happen long before the voyage and that the arrogant statements about the ship were a blasphemy to God, gives me goosebumps..
    Most of the passengers were brainwashed that the ship was literally unsinkable and didn't take the danger seriously..
    First class passengers were prioritised and the rest were left to die cause it was too late for them..
    When the crew got the iceberg warnings their reply was "Shut up, I'm busy"..
    They ignored all the warnings and wanted to break the speed record..
    The lifeboats were not enough and the first boats left not fully filled..
    OMG, all this tragedy could have been avoided if humans were more humble and wise... 😓

    • @freckles4603
      @freckles4603 Год назад +17

      Ok as regards to the passengers being brainwashed the ship was literally unsinkable that’s very likely not true. The white star line never said it was unsinkable all they said was that they had made it as ‘unsinkable’ as they knew how to make a ship and that she was well built which was true. Some people probably said it was “unsinkable” but it was blown out of proportion after the sinking and it is incredibly unlikely if anyone really thought it was “unsinkable”.

    • @ajjackson1526
      @ajjackson1526 Год назад +2

      I'd like to read more about the actual claim. Any good sources I can find that in?

    • @OMG_No_Way
      @OMG_No_Way Год назад +14

      @@freckles4603 And they also weren’t trying to a break a speed record. They were taking the longer Southern route because of the iceberg warnings. If they were trying to break a speed record, they would have taken the shorter Northern route.

    • @susanhewitt6359
      @susanhewitt6359 Год назад +34

      The older I get, the more I've learned to never dismiss your instincts! Intuition is a gift from God, and we should never ignore it!

    • @Acidburn3141
      @Acidburn3141 Год назад +1

      Truer words couldn’t be said.
      Human beings have no common sense.
      Have no sense of well being
      Have no sense of safety and security.
      It’s also unbelievable just how mentally stupid most people are.

  • @madxico
    @madxico 2 года назад +45

    Fantastic historical document. Many thanks for sharing.

  • @andiestewart7423
    @andiestewart7423 Год назад +10

    I could not imagine living through something like this! God bless these people 😢

  • @lmae989
    @lmae989 Год назад +14

    Interviews with the young men are ridiculous! “Almost religious” and “I feel I walked the decks in another life” oh please. Tragic horrific and nightmares for some of those who survived. I can’t imagine the horrors of it all. God bless all of them. 😔🙏

  • @SrAJones-ns7sx
    @SrAJones-ns7sx Год назад +18

    Thx for posting this is one of the best and most frank documentaries I've seen on the Titanic

  • @megandillon4883
    @megandillon4883 Год назад +27

    Titanic sunk on off the coast of Newfoundland 🇨🇦 where I live. I cannot imagine the pain the people in the water went through before they died. Even in the summer time our part of the ocean is freezing. Sometimes in May there are still lots of icebergs floating around ❤

  • @emeliosantana9769
    @emeliosantana9769 Год назад +13

    The one lady was accurate saying she heard a explosion and thought it broke in half witch later proved to be true

  • @auntigingy8666
    @auntigingy8666 2 года назад +19

    Awe the terror of living thru this.

  • @tiffanystarbeck2279
    @tiffanystarbeck2279 Год назад +24

    James Cameron just did an interview saying that the captain ignored many iceberg warnings so that could've been avoidable to such a tragedy and a great loss of life so avoidable on so many levels. This just breaks my heart, and to these poor people what they had to Indore bless their hearts.

  • @bowtoyoursensei554
    @bowtoyoursensei554 Год назад +65

    And 111 years later, it seems the lessons of the Titanic are lost on many, including those who travel down to the wreckage to study its mysteries. 😢

    • @rebeccaiop9061
      @rebeccaiop9061 Год назад +2

      Truly

    • @paulcarey191
      @paulcarey191 Год назад +5

      yep!! and they just received corrections also, like jack Nicholson was told by that ghost, in the movie the shinning ''and when my wife tried to stop me from doing my duty'' i..''.CORRECTED HER'' you know what i mean. - terrible, people should just let that ship rest in peace. Arrogance , pride, pompous wind bagery, always seem to rise to the top of people's minds right where the devil loves to see it and should be checked all the time.

    • @emanuelamanucci18
      @emanuelamanucci18 Год назад +2

      Esattamente.... Non impariamo mai nulla

    • @taliahg7614
      @taliahg7614 Год назад +4

      Exactly….. the submersible

  • @lisaviglio4984
    @lisaviglio4984 Год назад +15

    She claimed five more lives one hundred and eleven years later.

  • @railenherman6482
    @railenherman6482 Год назад +77

    What breaks my heart is how many people could have been saved if there had just been a few safety checks.

    • @antoniafaheerty6980
      @antoniafaheerty6980 Год назад +14

      Or enough life boats

    • @zonabot6029
      @zonabot6029 Год назад +4

      I mean this is not entirely true. There was definitely things that might have changed. But there was a combination of things that caused this tragedy. Safety checks was definitely one of them

    • @user-qn7qd5nh7w
      @user-qn7qd5nh7w Год назад +1

      Gus Grissom knew the real danger and took it regardless. The teacher knew the real danger and took it. To the billionaires in the Titan, it was just an excursion. The world got a wake-up call.

    • @jeanandre6998
      @jeanandre6998 Год назад

      @@user-qn7qd5nh7wtell us more

    • @Yetaxa
      @Yetaxa Год назад

      The Titanic was the absolute latest in safety. It had more safety features and checks than any ship had before

  • @cathybobalek8069
    @cathybobalek8069 2 года назад +80

    my grandfather was on the CARPATHIA. it was a very horrific event.for all.need to hear the stories from the CARPATHIA.

    • @donnix1192
      @donnix1192 Год назад +9

      My great grandfather Albert Horswill was a Titanic survivor.

    • @heavysummer
      @heavysummer Год назад +3

      @@donnix1192fascinating. Did you ever have the chance to meet him?

    • @donnix1192
      @donnix1192 Год назад +3

      @@heavysummer unfortunately he passed away in 1962, 20 years before I was born. My dad remembers him when he was growing up, he said that Albert was a nice guy and loved the outdoors.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      Oh was he....

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      @@donnix1192 Oh was he....

  • @CarolynAitken-yp2rq
    @CarolynAitken-yp2rq Год назад +9

    I remember in 2012 the very last surviver was interviewed she had been the youngest child on the ship a 9 week old baby she’d been too young to remember but she learned all about what happened from her mum who had been too upset for years to talk about it because her husband had died because he stayed behind on the ship and they’d only been married for 4 years I forget this lady’s name, she died shortly after the interview... e very sad story!

    • @KSakamoto
      @KSakamoto Год назад

      2009.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      Oh that was in 2009 actually and her name was Eliza Gladys "Millvina" Dean. In an eerie coincidence she died on May 31st that year the same date the Titanic was launched 98 years earlier

  • @bufordt.justice1539
    @bufordt.justice1539 Год назад +9

    I was always told to “Respect the Sea”. If you don’t, tragedy is guaranteed.

    • @wesleyalan9179
      @wesleyalan9179 Год назад

      Yes! Absolutely!

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      "The North Atlantic is a harsh and jealous sovereign" (David McCallum) it advises you not to keep "flying in the face of God" (Esther Hart)

  • @mhizzgorgeouso.s2012
    @mhizzgorgeouso.s2012 Год назад +10

    After 100 plus years my heart still aches and I’m only 47 years old

    • @ericwatts6291
      @ericwatts6291 Год назад

      You're only 47 but your heart has been aching for over 100 years? 😜

    • @NELLYWIC
      @NELLYWIC 11 месяцев назад

      Only 47 lol. Just kidding ❤

  • @bb-gc2tx
    @bb-gc2tx Год назад +8

    if titanic sank today the media would be blaming global warming for the ice bergs 🤣

  • @thisisme3238
    @thisisme3238 Год назад +6

    Great documentary on the Titanic, thank you.

  • @DeRock401
    @DeRock401 Год назад +24

    It’s so interesting to see how different people spoke back in the day. Like a whole different species lol. 😊

    • @antoniafaheerty6980
      @antoniafaheerty6980 Год назад +8

      Omg yes how well spoken everyone is.. No slang, no thick accents no curse words just proper English dictionary spoken words, manners really. Imagine the words spoke today. 🙄

    • @stellatsirou
      @stellatsirou Год назад +2

      Very dignified, unlike today. Different world!!!

    • @gracie3174
      @gracie3174 20 дней назад

      It’s called class.

  • @hadleyscott1160
    @hadleyscott1160 2 года назад +42

    At the last minute M.S.Hershey cancelled his tickets and went to buy German/Swiss confectionery equipment. It became Hershey Chocolate. A Multi-billion dollar corporation with the majority shareholder being his School(s) for Orphan children. He never had any of his own. It’s now the second richest school in America, behind Harvard.

    • @kierawhite6264
      @kierawhite6264 Год назад

      Wow

    • @psuchic06m22
      @psuchic06m22 Год назад +5

      Lady fate had other plans for him! I live close to Hershey...so many kids have been enriched due to him. The park, is overpriced, but the school is a saving grace!

    • @righteousdude93
      @righteousdude93 Год назад

      I read he canceled it because there was an explosion at one of his factories.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 10 дней назад

      That reminds me of Alfred, Bertram and Thomas Slade, along with trimmer Alfred Penney and stokers Alfred Podesta and William Nutbean who missed the Titanic after lingering at this pub, the Grapes, a bit too long. Five days later they must've been glad about this totally unexpected turn in their luck.

  • @yanalicious87
    @yanalicious87 Год назад +6

    This is still a heartbreaking story, all these ages later.

  • @girlsrnotwimps
    @girlsrnotwimps Год назад +59

    The younger men at the convention show a bizarre and morbid fetish with the tragedy experienced by others. Unfortunately, there are people today who do the same, glomming onto someone else’s horrific pain with unhealthy fascination-especially if it’s a public-facing tragedy. It’s unsettling that anyone would smile whilst speaking of such a thing.

    • @cherylmockotr
      @cherylmockotr Год назад +21

      I was thinking the same thing. Those guys came across as sociopaths.

    • @lauriwalker8308
      @lauriwalker8308 Год назад +10

      Touché! I concur. The men were creepy how they seemed to enjoy the horrible event.

    • @PrimericanIdol
      @PrimericanIdol Год назад +6

      9/11 already has enthusiasts like these who were born after it happened, yet are old enough to romanticize it.

    • @scotsman6712
      @scotsman6712 Год назад +7

      A couple of them were just plainly WEIRD.

    • @girlsrnotwimps
      @girlsrnotwimps Год назад +2

      @@PrimericanIdol that’s just wholly wrong.

  • @robharding5345
    @robharding5345 Год назад +8

    The very name Titanic ! has fascinated me, ever since I first heard of her,back in school, in 1968.Our History teacher happened to have just finished reading about her, in a night to remember . Loved the film of the same name.

  • @manuelfedericocachazasanju5294
    @manuelfedericocachazasanju5294 Год назад +8

    THESE ARE TRULY AND MESMERISING INTERVIEWS WITH THE SURVIVORS...ALL OF THEM WERE CHILDREN BACK THEN ...THROWN INTO THE LIFEBOATS SO THEY COULD SAVE THEIR LIVES FROM THIS ORDEAL !💖💖💖😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @InnocentPotato-pd7wi
    @InnocentPotato-pd7wi 3 месяца назад +2

    Baby Boomer here! My Grandfather was born in 1900! So he was 12 when the Titantic sunk!.Easy to figure out his age! have been 124 years old this year! So the sinking of the Titantic wasn't really that long ago ! Even the Civil War wasn't that long ago! The last Civil War veteran died in the early 1950's !

  • @muphfab
    @muphfab Год назад +2

    I remember when the whole Titanic craze came back around in the 80s.
    Looking back, it was hyped up quite a bit just before she was found.
    Those involved new it was found and were ready to milk all they could from it.
    Suddenly one day, “Titanic Found!”

  • @bwwestman
    @bwwestman Год назад +31

    I can't imagine the pain and regret the passengers had when they fell into the frigid waters after being offered a chance in the lifeboats. (((

  • @evelynopoku2058
    @evelynopoku2058 Год назад +6

    I'm pained whenever i listen to the sinking of the Titanic 🥺

  • @MeMe-lx2jw
    @MeMe-lx2jw Год назад +6

    And here we are with history repeating itself in a way. Humans do not learn.

  • @thepintman6166
    @thepintman6166 Год назад +6

    Just think when this video was filmed the Titanic still wasn't discovered

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      Not till 2yrs after

  • @hocheye
    @hocheye Год назад +20

    My father knew a gentleman who was on the titanic, he passed away many years ago but it was horrible what happened, and how lucky he was to survive. I find it hard to believe how long and how fascinated people still are about this ship sinking in 1912!

    • @MrNikolidas
      @MrNikolidas Год назад +2

      The film played a big role keeping the fascination alive, otherwise I think now would be around the time it would have passed into relative obscurity now that the survivors are dead.

    • @McLarenMercedes
      @McLarenMercedes Год назад +1

      @@MrNikolidas It was already obscure in the 1950's. Walter Lord's famous 1955 novel "A Night to Remember" became a best-seller as did the Hollywood film released in 1958. The latest film will pass into obscurity as well and there's a whole new generation who won't see it because it's "too old". In 2040 most people will say "Titanic what??" Aside from people with a keen historical interest everything is forgotten by the public. Why? Because what the public never experienced themselves is not remembered.

    • @captlazer5509
      @captlazer5509 Год назад +4

      ​@@McLarenMercedesthe first depiction on film of the Titanic disaster was made only a month after the sinking and it had a Titanic survivor in the cast. First feature film about the tragedy was in 1943, which was a German propaganda film. Roughly 16 films have been made about it. Besides dozens of books. When people think of a ship sinking, it's the one most thought of. I doubt that will change in a 100 years.

    • @victorvictoriousv5255
      @victorvictoriousv5255 Год назад

      Lol your joking lol, how comes we still discuss Dinosaurs from millions of years ago and 'we weren't there?' This story and fascination will never end for the public globally, now more than EVER after that tragic submarine voyage onroute to visit the Titanic, that's now a billion 'new people' worldwide who have now googled the name 'Titanic' since that incident in 2023..... just think about It!

  • @joeyenicks2521
    @joeyenicks2521 2 года назад +20

    Wow that lady was 98 in 1983!.

    • @bishopp14
      @bishopp14 2 года назад +4

      Yup. A whole lot of people were 98 years old in 1983 I'd imagine. Not as many as there were people who were younger than that but there were a decent number of them. Not me of course. I only turned 6 in February of that year ('83).

  • @Gkucuk1215
    @Gkucuk1215 Год назад +4

    This was a really good documentary

  • @knownpleasures
    @knownpleasures Год назад +13

    It’s the captain 👨‍✈️ who takes the blame. Other ships had rested that evening because of the ice. Captain orders were not only to keep moving but also in full speed

    • @Sarah0583
      @Sarah0583 Год назад +1

      No, not at full speed, she never reached her full speed. 5 of her boilers were still not lit by the time she struck the berg. It was standard procedure to maintain speed in the presence of ice at the time, several captains confirmed this when they testified at the inquiry.
      As for the ships that were stopped for the night, can you name one that did stop besides the Californian ?

  • @fmyoung
    @fmyoung Год назад +12

    A New England newspaper at the time said of the shipowner "Ismay survived to tell the courts how fifteen hundred people under his care and on his ship perished while he escaped." He may have been exonerated at court (Lord Mersey even said he would have merely added his own life to the death toll), but he had to live with that and much, much more in a similar vein for the remaining twenty-five years of his life :-l

  • @michaelhoggarth89
    @michaelhoggarth89 Год назад +5

    Mrs H 🇬🇧 ... I can't imagine what those people felt when hitting that freezing water and know they where gonna lose they lives and for both the survivors also...The Fear/Terror must have been unbearable..Those that did survive must have lived with what is known today as PTSD... We can learn everything about TITANIC but the horror these people suffered we'll never know..We know it must of been terrifying and we'll not be able to imagine the devastation cos we've not experienced it .. I'm thankful I havent.... RIP to all those on board the unsinkable ship...💔

  • @pennwoman
    @pennwoman Год назад +14

    Captain is at fault. He could smell ice. He knew there were icebergs.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      The whole industry was at fault they all knew deep down that it was dangerous to just speed through the ice

  • @ModernDayRenaissanceMan
    @ModernDayRenaissanceMan 3 месяца назад +1

    "You can smell ice."
    Using that line in the movie as a joke is wild.

  • @kristindewitt9059
    @kristindewitt9059 Год назад +7

    The ship hadn’t yet been discovered when this was filmed. They had no idea what would happen two years later.

  • @tasmiyakouser2718
    @tasmiyakouser2718 Год назад +4

    Those who survived the titanic are lucky enough to narrate what happened that day to the world and rest of them resting in peace with titanic, so sad man challenges his abilities but God wished something else.

  • @stevez.6805
    @stevez.6805 Год назад +47

    I've always wondered since watching the movie "Titanic" if they actually locked the gates to the people in steerage so they couldn't get up on deck when it started to sink. If they did, I find that indefensible.

    • @pauls064
      @pauls064 Год назад +32

      They did not. It was one of the many myths played up for drama.

    • @becksmotorlodgesanfrancisc1161
      @becksmotorlodgesanfrancisc1161 Год назад +10

      @@pauls064 true but they may as well had, you know good and damn well they didn't give 2nd thought to those on the lower decks staff included.

    • @Beautyforashes613_
      @Beautyforashes613_ Год назад +15

      From some of the stories, it didn’t matter, by the time some people (2nd & 3rd class) heard about the news, all the lifeboats were gone.

    • @lisamorrison214
      @lisamorrison214 Год назад +1

      @@pauls064yes, gates were locked but not on purpose.

    • @pauls064
      @pauls064 Год назад +4

      @@lisamorrison214 nope

  • @SlapMyA_AndCallMeSally
    @SlapMyA_AndCallMeSally Год назад +5

    You guys … tragedy can happen anywhere, anytime, as we all know. But damn, are we lucky to live in 2023 with the technology we have … had this happened today, most or all lives would have probably been saved. So tragic. 😔. Be grateful for where we are today, even if it comes with its issues.

  • @dkramer8872
    @dkramer8872 Год назад +6

    This is a time capsule

  • @fernfunk
    @fernfunk Год назад +20

    unbelievable that they were going so fast when they'd had iceberg warnings...?!

    • @milliem8051
      @milliem8051 Год назад +2

      Yes and the lookout accidentally took the key to the binocular lockbox with him after his shift so the nighttime lookouts didn’t have binoculars. Crazy.

    • @fernfunk
      @fernfunk Год назад +1

      @@milliem8051 omg have never heard that one before!!!

    • @Kaibigan39
      @Kaibigan39 Год назад

      They wanted to set a record Atlantic time crossing.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 2 месяца назад

      @@Kaibigan39 That they weren't but the shipowner who was on board apparently tried to persuade the captain to make it into NY Harbor on Tuesday evening instead of Wednesday morning and thereby beat the Olympic, her sister ship

  • @ModernDayRenaissanceMan
    @ModernDayRenaissanceMan 3 месяца назад +1

    Ive seen this man speak a few times. Each time he is so eloquent

  • @katbrown1449
    @katbrown1449 Год назад +14

    This " we want to be astor" guy is insane

    • @lauriwalker8308
      @lauriwalker8308 Год назад +3

      He’s just a bit creepy!

    • @CaptainFatfuk
      @CaptainFatfuk Год назад

      Astor?

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 10 дней назад

      This reminds me, John Jacob Astor IV was the richest person on the Titanic .

  • @JJMHigner
    @JJMHigner Год назад +10

    It wasn't just that the lifeboats needed to be of a sufficient number, it is also mentality that would have had to have been different as well. I better design ship and more lifeboats certainly would have helped more people survive this. But it is no guarantee that everybody would have made it off. They simply would have run out of time even after just 2 hours. And this is for a ship that was populated with 2,200 people out of 3200 the ship was at maximum allowed to carry. There were many cabins that never saw anybody in them in all classes and indeed places where people were trapped in the end. Excellent documentary and a favorite of mine otherwise and it is quite something to see several survivors standing in honor and in memory of those who died at that convention. It's one for the history books.