Titanic launch into Belfast Harbour (1911), fit out and beginning of voyage to Southampton (1912).

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024

Комментарии • 13

  • @irishmikester
    @irishmikester 5 месяцев назад +1

    Fabulous images put together to bring you back to Belfast back in the day!

  • @KevinGrayWrites
    @KevinGrayWrites 5 месяцев назад +2

    What a great resource. This is a side of the Titanic that students have trouble grasping-the promise and the grandeur of it. This video is excellent primary source material!

    • @seedlingeducation
      @seedlingeducation  5 месяцев назад

      Hi Kevin, thanks for the kind comment. This story uses more of these images to conjure up what it was like for a 12 year old apprentice to work on the great ship's construction myyarns.org/blog/games/an-apprentices-tale-2/. The story is told using the Ulster-Scots vernacular common here in Northern Ireland at the time and to this day.

    • @KevinGrayWrites
      @KevinGrayWrites 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@seedlingeducation This is fantastic! Thanks for sharing the link. So interesting to see the overlap between the Ulster-Scots vernacular and the English we speak today.

    • @seedlingeducation
      @seedlingeducation  5 месяцев назад

      @@KevinGrayWrites There's quite a few folk over here who still speak like that.

  • @Judith-cu2er
    @Judith-cu2er 5 месяцев назад +1

    This touched my heart. So evocative. Well done, Seedling! To all you teachers out there, I highly recommend that you check out this wonderful resource. ❤

    • @seedlingeducation
      @seedlingeducation  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you Judith. Yes, My Yarns (www.myyarns.org) provides Key Stage 2 teachers a resource that enables them to discuss the Victorians, Titanic and World War I in the context of storytelling, writing and the Ulster-Scots language.

  • @tonywoods4759
    @tonywoods4759 5 месяцев назад +2

    Fantastic images in very high definition. It feels like recent footage some of the pictures are so clear - what an amazing time.

    • @seedlingeducation
      @seedlingeducation  5 месяцев назад +1

      It really is! We pulled together various shots from the NMNI archive collection, including the aewsome sequence of the titanic hull launch.

    • @seedlingeducation
      @seedlingeducation  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks Tony. Many of these images have been seen before but never at this quality. Check out this story from My Yarns (myyarns.org/blog/games/an-apprentices-tale-2/) to see more of the images taken during the building of Titanic. The story is from the perspective of a young apprentice working at Harland & Wolff and is told using the Ulster-Scots vernacular common here in Northern Ireland.

    • @tonywoods4759
      @tonywoods4759 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@seedlingeducation wow - more amazing images and the story is cool

  • @seedlingeducation
    @seedlingeducation  5 месяцев назад +1

    The images featured in this video are from the archives of National Museums Northern Ireland. They have been cleaned and sharpened but not changed for the Ulster-Scots Educational Project www.myyarns.org. As a result, we were able to animate the sequence from the Kempster Collection known as "Going, going, gone" that documents the Titanic sliding down the slip way into Belfast Harbour. This video attempts to recreate the atmosphere and spectacle of the launch, Titanic's subsequent fit-out and departure from Belfast almost one year later.

    • @riche4118
      @riche4118 5 месяцев назад

      This video is excellent and a valuable addition to the 'My Yarns' resource. 'My Yarns' is an engaging teaching and learning resource for Primary schools, providing teachers and learners with a range of stimulus materials and activities on historical themes.
      The curriculum based teaching and learning activities are excellent and the production quality is of the highest standard.