Final Plunge: Titanic's HORRIFYING Last 5 Minutes

Ойын-сауық

On the morning on April 15, 1912 Titanic had battled for hours to stay afloat but at 2:15 the end had come. Today join us as we learn about the final few minutes of Titanic's life and the great ship's terrifying end.
The amazing graphics and animations for this video come from our friends at @TitanicHG who are working on recreating Titanic in exquisite detail. Visit their KZread channel or website at www.titanichg.com/
Sources:
On a Sea of Glass by Fitch, Layton and Wormstedt
Encyclopedia Titanica
Oceanliner Designs explores the design, construction, engineering and operation of history’s greatest vessels- from Titanic to Queen Mary and from the Empress of Ireland to the Lusitania. Join maritime researcher and illustrator Michael Brady as he tells the stories behind some of history's most famous ocean liners and machines!

Пікірлер: 4 400

  • @DuckieDabz
    @DuckieDabz4 ай бұрын

    I go in to this weird rabbit hole ever so often again and again about the Titanic. It’s fascinating yet so heartbreaking.

  • @jennieconnolly9328

    @jennieconnolly9328

    3 ай бұрын

    Same. I love finding pictures of the artifacts from the ship

  • @jennieconnolly9328

    @jennieconnolly9328

    3 ай бұрын

    @@RonScuggeri-et7od I do that too. Lol

  • @peergynt9852

    @peergynt9852

    3 ай бұрын

    You realize it was a psyop yet?

  • @shannonmcelroy8454

    @shannonmcelroy8454

    3 ай бұрын

    I thought I was the only one. I want to jump in, but it's not always a pleasant experience.

  • @lizhermann4964

    @lizhermann4964

    3 ай бұрын

    I’m currently back down that rabbit hole, again.

  • @rekunta
    @rekunta5 ай бұрын

    What’s really unsettling is the fact that all this happened in near complete darkness. It was near pitch black once her lights failed.

  • @TheJustUsLeague

    @TheJustUsLeague

    4 ай бұрын

    I wouldn't say pitch black dark to where you couldn't see anything at all. Being so far out away from smog, pollution, smoke, factories, refineries, the moonlight provided enough to be able to see what you're doing, I wasn't there but I'm pretty sure moonlight helped enough.

  • @baileyyh72

    @baileyyh72

    4 ай бұрын

    @@TheJustUsLeague I had thought the same, but the moon phase that night was almost new moon, so there was nearly no light provided by the moon.

  • @leonmartin7445

    @leonmartin7445

    4 ай бұрын

    @@baileyyh72that’s horrible

  • @DeFySniping

    @DeFySniping

    3 ай бұрын

    There was no moonlight that night. @@TheJustUsLeague

  • @jacksonmiller7745

    @jacksonmiller7745

    3 ай бұрын

    @@TheJustUsLeagueIt was a moonless night. The spotters of both the titanic and Carpathia said they didn’t even see an iceberg, they saw black shapes.

  • @jebbroham1776
    @jebbroham17764 ай бұрын

    The engineers who gave their lives to keep the lights burning to the last possible second are the true heroes in this very tragic tale.

  • @catreader9733

    @catreader9733

    4 ай бұрын

    I agree that the engineers were among the greatest heroes, but I feel there were so many others. Wallace Hartley and his musical ensemble are high on my list. Mrs. Strauss' staying with her husband breaks my heart (not referring to the cinematic dramatization, but the fact that she did so); she did not allow him to drown alone. Molly Brown, behaving within her usual bold personality, nonetheless exemplified courage and confidence to other women -- and men.

  • @jemimallah

    @jemimallah

    3 ай бұрын

    why? capitalist slaves lol

  • @francy8589

    @francy8589

    3 ай бұрын

    3rd class passenger were awaiting for instruction till the last moment and ended up imploding in their room when the ship sank to the bottom of the ocean

  • @toriiacoviello4127

    @toriiacoviello4127

    3 ай бұрын

    Father Thomas Byles was also a true hero 😇He gave up his seat on a life boat twice and eventually decided to remain on the sinking ship to hear the last confessions of the doomed.I'm sure his presence was a comfort to those who remained on the sinking vessel.I just can't imagine the terror that these poor people felt at the very end of their lives😓

  • @tamrix

    @tamrix

    3 ай бұрын

    Everyone would have screamed the moment the lights went out. Then the deafening silence will be apparent as distant screams of death would have been heard.

  • @Slayer-tv8ub
    @Slayer-tv8ubАй бұрын

    The musicians playing with all the chaos happening around them has to be the most incredibly beautiful and courageous thing. I wouldn’t be able to do that.

  • @LordOfThePancakes

    @LordOfThePancakes

    11 күн бұрын

    That never happened

  • @rebekah9713

    @rebekah9713

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@LordOfThePancakesIt did. Just Google it.

  • @paranormaltheorist
    @paranormaltheorist7 ай бұрын

    There's a famous story about a Titanic survivor who lived near a major league ballpark. He never went to a game because the noise of the crowd reminded him of that night. Imagine, the sound of a ballpark screaming... then silence.

  • @dougn2350

    @dougn2350

    7 ай бұрын

    That is very interesting

  • @Lebowski333

    @Lebowski333

    3 ай бұрын

    Do you mean a major league baseball game

  • @jeeither

    @jeeither

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Lebowski333 yes, which takes place in a major league ballpark.

  • @JackCallSports

    @JackCallSports

    3 ай бұрын

    @@jeeitherin Detroit correct?

  • @jeeither

    @jeeither

    3 ай бұрын

    @@JackCallSports as I've read. yeah. He couldn't go by it when a game was in session as an adult either.

  • @Maritime_History
    @Maritime_History8 ай бұрын

    During the sinking of Titanic, Father Thomas Byles reportedly gave up his seat twice on two different lifeboats, saying he would rather stay on the ship and listen to peoples' confessions and give them absolution. He was lost in the sinking. RIP Thomas Byles.

  • @sapphireseptember

    @sapphireseptember

    8 ай бұрын

    A true man of God. May he rest knowing he was doing the Lord's work. It would have been a comfort to the people left on the ship to have him with them.

  • @nathanlerma9891

    @nathanlerma9891

    8 ай бұрын

    Bless that man,he gave poor passengers hope in their darkness hour, bless them all✝️

  • @littleway24601

    @littleway24601

    8 ай бұрын

    Fr. Thomas Byles, pray for us!

  • @tuckewhite111

    @tuckewhite111

    8 ай бұрын

    Brute ismay ------- and Charles Lietoller on other hand ! Rest in piece indeed 🙏 father , Byles rot in hell ismay and lightoller ! 🇬🇧 enquiry embarrassing whitewash ! Least alden smith 🇺🇸 lietoller was lieing through his teeth ⚖️ 🗽 class prevailed even 8n death! ⚰️ 17 year old jack Thayer even drew a six piece drawing off the break up ! Was beside lietoller in water 💧 🤔 1st Sept 85 kid was telling truth ! Least lightoller revealed all on his deathbed to his wife and granddaughter who ✍️ a book on his confession ! Corporate manslaughter at its worst 🫡

  • @libertyjustice4847

    @libertyjustice4847

    8 ай бұрын

    🙏❤️ hopefully his sacrifice allowed some to unburden themselves before their final moments, God bless their souls.

  • @TonySoprano-hr5uu
    @TonySoprano-hr5uu3 ай бұрын

    The emptiness of the ocean at night always freaked me out. I always found it so eerie. To know your going in the water whether you like it or not, in the middle of nowhere, in the vast emptiness of the sea is a horror I have trouble wrapping my head around. To know you’re not going to make it and your body wouldn’t been seen again is such a terrifying idea.

  • @Texas_Made_

    @Texas_Made_

    2 ай бұрын

    Omggg yesss,so creepy😢😢😢😢

  • @trteeerryfse-wy2ww

    @trteeerryfse-wy2ww

    2 ай бұрын

    The ocean: "Im gonna eat you 👿 Yum 😊"

  • @margieleazenby804

    @margieleazenby804

    2 ай бұрын

    I believe that is part of what makes the Titanic sinking such an enduring tragedy to so many people the world over. The sheer horror of such a death just staggers the imagination.

  • @MGillDesign

    @MGillDesign

    2 ай бұрын

    the same thing (terror) i feel about bridges (at night) and the fear of my car falling off, or plunging into the dark water. Funny how in the daytime it's just a bridge... but something changes when it's nighttime (the darkness, the unknown, the dark depths of the river). Same thing with the Titanic, (darkness of night) and unknown depths of the dark ocean, to swallow you beneath.

  • @teahlaaffe

    @teahlaaffe

    Ай бұрын

    This just happened :0

  • @Corristo89
    @Corristo895 ай бұрын

    The screaming in the water must've sounded like hell. Hundreds of people screaming for their lives in freezing cold, pitch black water, slowly growing numb and then, finally, falling into a deadly stupor. The scene in James Cameron's 1997 Titanic where a lone lifeboat searches for survivors, rowing through a field of frozen, floating corpses still haunts me to this day, especially the mother holding her baby in her arms. Titanic held up quite well for a while despite mortal damage. Had she sunk sooner, the death toll would've been much, much higher, perhaps only a hundred or so surviving, many more being trapped inside.

  • @funnycreep

    @funnycreep

    4 ай бұрын

    Someone said they had gone to a ball game and the roar of the crowd was exactly like the panic of all the people and now I feel so weird when I’m in a roaring crowd. That joy sounds just like despair. Kinda like when crying sounds like laughing sometimes

  • @pikespeak361

    @pikespeak361

    4 ай бұрын

    No Dear, Titanic didn't hold up in spite of mortal damage...she had a 12 foot gash from the purposeful side hit...this was a scuttling...these are all lies...the displacement of the ship would not allow the stern to rise 5 stories, nor does water break steel or flare it out of gaping holes...the sea water was allowed to run back towards the firey coal bunkers and booom! the steel on Titanic is some of the strongest known to man. It is a purposeful shrine dedicated to the abyss, which served and continues to serve the illuminati...

  • @B_Chasnika

    @B_Chasnika

    3 ай бұрын

    thats what hell will sound like for those who might go. lots of crying and screaming. the smell of burning flesh but no one is burning to a crips, just constant burning. the pain will be so great that it should kill you, but it wont, just ongoing. and after years and decades pass, their time wont be "up" and after their sentence is served they can clean up and go to heaven. it will last for ever and ever. i dont want that to happen to me. and i wont say i dont believe it just to trick myself in to thinking i could never go. i accept that if i am not right ill go.

  • @Cheximus

    @Cheximus

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@B_Chasnikaah, the beauty of religion.

  • @njdxnjdx

    @njdxnjdx

    3 ай бұрын

    The screaming would be so annoying, the best part would be when the water would get so cold, that the people would die, and shut the hell up already

  • @bradydacloud
    @bradydacloud8 ай бұрын

    The fact that Titanic stayed afloat for over 2 hours when Thomas Andrews said she had 1 hour or less is just a testament to how well built she was!

  • @TheEDFLegacy

    @TheEDFLegacy

    8 ай бұрын

    Absolutely! Imagine if they had extended the bulkheads to B deck?

  • @theadventuresofred19

    @theadventuresofred19

    8 ай бұрын

    Or Andrews was making a guess This was a new thing

  • @nonsensicalnauticalramblin3994

    @nonsensicalnauticalramblin3994

    8 ай бұрын

    I believe Andrews belief that Titanic would sink in an hour comes from the thought that Titanic had received a 300-foot gash from her collision, rather than a few buckled plates. Had she gotten that 300-foot gash, she would have sank much quicker, and had a higher loss of life.

  • @pantherplatform

    @pantherplatform

    8 ай бұрын

    At least he had an additional hour or so to live before he went down with her...

  • @wayneantoniazzi2706

    @wayneantoniazzi2706

    8 ай бұрын

    She was a good ship, she stayed alive as long as she could.

  • @connorredshaw7994
    @connorredshaw79948 ай бұрын

    The final plunge may have been only 5 minutes but for those onboard or in the lifeboats it was probably the longest and haunting 5 minutes of their lives. 😢

  • @serafryer6785

    @serafryer6785

    8 ай бұрын

    Seriously. In the last half-hour, it always gives me the awe of how much the ocean needs to be respected. My heart always sinks (no pun intended), thinking of the people, and how even the biggest ships today (which are way larger than Titanic) aren't even a drop in the bucket that is the ocean. Could not imagine actually being there, and I can entirely see how it would cause survivors numerous mental health struggles for the rest of their life.

  • @25Erix

    @25Erix

    8 ай бұрын

    Disasters certainly have a way of stretching our perception of time when we're in the thick of one. The Miracle of the Hudson, when Flight 1549 had to ditch because of a birdstrike, only took four minutes from start to end. Pretty short amount of time in normal circumstances. But imagine being on that plane and knowing something went really wrong. That four minutes would stretch to eternity. Not only did Captain Sully and FO Jeff Skiles make decisions on the fly, they did it all right. Helps that Sully had glider experience to fall back on as well. Extremely successful ditching and no one died.

  • @jfmezei

    @jfmezei

    8 ай бұрын

    While in current times, we would definitely interpret this as you stated, I wonder how important the class distinction remained even during the final sinking. Is it possible a large percentage of the first class "snobs" ony cares about first class passengers and saw "steerage" as disposable workers and didn't "feel" the disaster happeining in front of their eyes? In Cameron's version, only Molly Brown seems concerned about thousands shouting as they are trhown into freezing water and the rest are happy to be comfy in their life boat and not wanting steerage people to board their boat. (I beleive that in Night to Remember, there was also the concept coveyed of first class folks not feelling a "human" need to rescue the 3rd class folks because more important to save themselves). While Cameron made it more dramatic, both movies were based on interviews with survivors, so there may have been some truth to that story. They may have had remorse afterwards but I have to wonder if, in the moment of the disaster, how they truly felt. This was truly a different era with different social values.

  • @cheapcraftygirlsweepstakes2338

    @cheapcraftygirlsweepstakes2338

    8 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@jfmezeiHardly. 67% of first class male passengers died.

  • @louise_rose

    @louise_rose

    7 ай бұрын

    Slow motion nightmare, indeed. It took about 2½ hours before the Carpathian arrived in the scene and picked up most of the people from the lifeboats, but by that time no one who had landed in the icy water and had failed to get up into a lifeboat (or on top the overturned Collapsible boat) had survived. 😥

  • @usaturnuranus
    @usaturnuranus5 ай бұрын

    That moment in the movie Titanic when the ice crashes down on the deck...we're taken from a warm, comfortable sense of life aboard ship to the immediate and jarring awareness of what we all collectively know will be their fate. That scene really sticks in my mind.

  • @GeminiJo

    @GeminiJo

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes the first 5 mins is sooo eerie

  • @robertkomanec2028

    @robertkomanec2028

    2 ай бұрын

    Especially the scene where some of the male passengers were kicking around the chunk of ice like a soccer ball, unaware of their fate. Makes what is to come all the more tragic.

  • @bergercookie
    @bergercookie4 ай бұрын

    Everything about The Titanic is compelling and riveting. No matter how many times I hear watch reenactments I’m still in awe of its stories. Chilling to try and comprehend what those poor souls suffered through. Being sucked deep down in the depths of the freezing cold ocean in the dark of the night is utterly terrifying. May god rest their souls. And as for the stunning Ocean Liner itself, it will forever be the most elegant ship ever built.

  • @Winter-Alpha-Omega

    @Winter-Alpha-Omega

    3 ай бұрын

    It's weird to think Titanic is as of now still in the deepest bowels of the ocean. In the darkness. Resting forever. Never to be seen again.

  • @jonathanbolz2449

    @jonathanbolz2449

    3 ай бұрын

    Ya but hey.....at least they saved the 'RICH'....right....

  • @robertofernandez7773

    @robertofernandez7773

    3 ай бұрын

    A lot of the rich died too. And a lot of the poor survived@@jonathanbolz2449

  • @jaynewton5278

    @jaynewton5278

    3 ай бұрын

    Riveting, hmm. Did you hear about the boy who fell to his death between the two hulls. Did you hear about the supposed cursed mummy that was smuggled aboard, I think not. No iceberg, just cursed.

  • @rogerhearn5243

    @rogerhearn5243

    3 ай бұрын

    @@jaynewton5278 Utter nonsense, It hit an iceberg and sank. Reality is dangerous enough there is no need for curses, witchcraft, voodoo, tea leaf reading or tarot cards. As you stated "I think not" a perfect example of not thinking.

  • @renown16
    @renown168 ай бұрын

    Hearing screams is terrifying, but hearing them disappear is worse.

  • @myroselle6987

    @myroselle6987

    6 ай бұрын

    That’s what the Mother of Titanic survivor Eva Hart said. Eva said she told her Mother that hearing the screams of the dying was so dreadful. Her Mother said….yes, but do you remember the silence that followed…?

  • @johnsmith-rs2vk

    @johnsmith-rs2vk

    5 ай бұрын

    Survivors haunted by these sounds for the rest of their lives .

  • @charliewatts6895

    @charliewatts6895

    5 ай бұрын

    @@johnsmith-rs2vk So true. One Titanic survivor who was living near a baseball stadium said the noise from the crowd reminded her of that fateful night.

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    25 күн бұрын

    @@charliewatts6895 That's right; I forget who that was but I remember hearing about that from the other doc

  • @marshamariner7897

    @marshamariner7897

    2 күн бұрын

    In JC movie...the scene they had 2 do in the ...body field...was one of the hardest they had 2 do...seeing a movie is one thing...just imagine living thru it😭😭😵‍💫

  • @QullVideo
    @QullVideo8 ай бұрын

    What strikes me the most whenever I see real time animations of Titanic's sinking IS how 'peaceful' those first 2 hours seem. To hear that people on board actually got a false sense of security from this peacefulness is quite haunting.

  • @louise_rose

    @louise_rose

    7 ай бұрын

    Some of the people in the lifeboats, especially younger people, didn't realize until the very last 10-20 minutes that the ship was really going to sink *and* that most of the passengers and much of the crew were still on board and were about to die.. They thought, like, "surely those will be taken care of soon too".

  • @kenthompson5723

    @kenthompson5723

    5 ай бұрын

    "What strikes me the most whenever I see real time animations ..." ------------------------------------ For me, the most haunting and terrifying part of this calamity is the complete desolation of the surroundings > dark except for the heavenly stars, nothing here but ocean, absence of human help, the cold night air, the foreboding sense of doom. The entire scene reeks of a lonely death.

  • @reubenmanzo2054

    @reubenmanzo2054

    4 ай бұрын

    A few years ago, I sent the real time sinking animation to my cousin who is a Titanic enthusiast and asked him "imagine yourself as a passenger, at what point would you have taken the threat of a sinking ship seriously?" He replied 12:23 - "Thomas Andrews, the designer of the Titanic, confirms the damage is too severe for the ship to survive. He estimates 1-2 hours before it sinks." Personally, my moment was 1:15 - "Water is up to Titanic's nameplate."

  • @Dani-ICU-RN

    @Dani-ICU-RN

    4 ай бұрын

    Like 9/11 til 2nd one hit😢

  • @Dani-ICU-RN

    @Dani-ICU-RN

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@kenthompson5723 & the complete darkness & mystery of the sea underneath.. 3 Miles down,blows my mind. This would be very diff had it been 11 AM..or, someone had the binoculars 😢😢

  • @LongTermCooking
    @LongTermCooking5 ай бұрын

    The anxiety just I experienced watching something that I already knew exactly how it ends… so well done.

  • @shawnhedman6561
    @shawnhedman65613 ай бұрын

    I usually do not like ads, but loved the energetic cruise line ad that came on for me in the middle of this tragic story.

  • @BoldActionSkitty

    @BoldActionSkitty

    3 ай бұрын

    Unfortunate ad placements

  • @fruitypebblez4309

    @fruitypebblez4309

    5 күн бұрын

    Youtibe algorithm assumes we are booking a cruise while watching the titanic sinking.

  • @empirestate8791
    @empirestate87918 ай бұрын

    I swear Mike Brady has a Ph.D. in Titanic Studies. The interesting content never stops!

  • @FirebirdFreak87

    @FirebirdFreak87

    8 ай бұрын

    Maybe he and Historic Travels should do a collab someday.

  • @EnjoySackLunch

    @EnjoySackLunch

    8 ай бұрын

    @@FirebirdFreak87 and irate gamer

  • @highlander723

    @highlander723

    8 ай бұрын

    The interesting part is with all the stories he's told us about this and all the intricate details I feel like I saw it with my own eyes, didn't experience it but saw it.

  • @paulhowse6169

    @paulhowse6169

    8 ай бұрын

    It’s probably all self taught which it makes it all the more incredible. His interest probably peaked with the 1997 film like many others and it sent him into a rabbit hole from which he has not escaped lol

  • @NeedtoSpeak

    @NeedtoSpeak

    8 ай бұрын

    His work certainly could be a doctoral dissertation.

  • @nonsensicalnauticalramblin3994
    @nonsensicalnauticalramblin39948 ай бұрын

    It’s amazing how different things looked after just 20 minutes. at 2:00 Am, she looked like she could have still potentially remained afloat for another hour and a half, but in less than half an hour, she was gone, along with 2/3 of those onboard.

  • @fidan2fast

    @fidan2fast

    8 ай бұрын

    That means the compartments held well and did their job as much as they could, once the weight of thw water started to pull the ship apart it was over

  • @jesperhammarlund300

    @jesperhammarlund300

    8 ай бұрын

    Yeah thats the thing with ships. Once the buoyancy balance is broken the ship goes down like a rock. In this case for Titanic it was Boiler room 4 flooded which it began to do around 2AM or so. She went down like a rock.

  • @sillyone52062

    @sillyone52062

    8 ай бұрын

    Sinking looked so unlikely at 20 minutes that lifeboats were launched with very few people in them.

  • @maxonite

    @maxonite

    8 ай бұрын

    I wonder how long she could have stayed afloat if she didn’t break in half

  • @tomemeornottomeme1864

    @tomemeornottomeme1864

    8 ай бұрын

    @@maxonite Probably wouldn't have made a single difference; the ship broke in half in the middle of its plunge. If the ship had never broken apart, she'd have just dove to the bottom all the same, maybe even faster, as there wouldn't be a pause like there was when the stern settled and the flooding had to start over.

  • @natalie8212
    @natalie82125 ай бұрын

    It's so easy to forget the human element of this . We hear the stories of course, but putting ourselves, our lives there on that ship... it's as impossible to imagine what is essentially your home, or a hotel disappearing out from underneath you as you cling to life. With no safety or safe place to "go" in sight. This video truly brings the human element into the mythos of the story.

  • @LuckyJackson2020

    @LuckyJackson2020

    3 ай бұрын

    ? how is it easy to forget? the band was still playing music!! lmao ill never forget that dumb shit

  • @chad_b

    @chad_b

    2 ай бұрын

    It's not easy to forget at all. That's gotta be one of the dumbest things I've heard someone say about this tragedy

  • @mansitiwari2050

    @mansitiwari2050

    2 ай бұрын

    So true

  • @Gitfiddle
    @Gitfiddle3 ай бұрын

    Titanic’s Horrifying Last 5 Minutes. Video time: 26 minutes

  • @alleon-yp9cj

    @alleon-yp9cj

    9 күн бұрын

    Hahahahahahaha same thought

  • @paulelverstone8677
    @paulelverstone86778 ай бұрын

    I've been an enthusiast of this ship for nearly 40yrs and two things particularly strike me about that night. One: the band never ran - how could they not? They did their best as only musicians and entertainers could. They died with respect, I hope, from all those who remembered them. Two: Carpathia was good for 14.5 knots IIRC. That night she hit 17. A feat that the ship never repeated by all accounts. Many other noble and respectful episodes happened that night in the face of abject terror but these two stick in my mind particularly...

  • @kvol1668

    @kvol1668

    8 ай бұрын

    The Carpathia never repeated a 17 knot run because they permanently damaged the engines that night coming to the rescue. 🫡

  • @paulelverstone8677

    @paulelverstone8677

    8 ай бұрын

    @@kvol1668 ah, wow - I never knew. Thanks so much for that... *thumbsup*

  • @peterj5106

    @peterj5106

    8 ай бұрын

    When the Chief Engineer of the Carpathia was later asked how they dealt with the high pressure of running the engine past max power he apparently replied "by putting his cap over the pressure gauges".

  • @andrewreynolds912

    @andrewreynolds912

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@kvol1668o never knew that it's amazing 👏

  • @EnjoySackLunch

    @EnjoySackLunch

    8 ай бұрын

    The band could not leave their station as they were chained to the deck by their corporate overseers

  • @LilDiabloRob
    @LilDiabloRob8 ай бұрын

    For those that have never been on a cruise ship, yes the darkness is surreal. Back in 2022 I took my first cruise. After being a huge titanic fan and finally having the money to go, I wanted to take one. The second night aboard, I went for a walk around midnight on the the boat deck. A quote from SpongeBob, “…this is ADVANCE darkness.” Yes I was a moonless night. Only had the stars and the lights from the ship. I completely understand the panic they must have endured.

  • @toomanyuserids

    @toomanyuserids

    8 ай бұрын

    Idling down the Mississippi at 11pm into the Gulf on something smaller than a hotel is impressive with all the dock facilities and then the oil rigs. Slipping into the Straits of Juan de Fuca heading for Vancouver at midnight likewise.

  • @colintraveller

    @colintraveller

    8 ай бұрын

    You don't really need to get a sense of panic . Looking over a large river in the dark is enough to put the fear in you at the best of times

  • @danielkinton7193

    @danielkinton7193

    8 ай бұрын

    What cruise is that? When we went on carnival it felt like city light pollution level, I wanted advanced darkness :(

  • @colintraveller

    @colintraveller

    8 ай бұрын

    @@danielkinton7193 Well you would cruise on a lightbulb

  • @oliverkopplin8795

    @oliverkopplin8795

    7 ай бұрын

    What cruise ship did you go on? Cruise ships are lit up like a christmas tree. You can't even have a starfilled sky. If you ever want to see what a dark night at sea looks like go on a yacht about 10 miles out so all the light polution is gone and turn all lights off.

  • @wherezenith2856
    @wherezenith28564 ай бұрын

    There is something so profoundly fascinating about this story in every single aspect right down to how the ship got ripped in half.

  • @mks9469

    @mks9469

    4 ай бұрын

    Agreed….there are some thousands of ships sinking in history, but there is something fascinating about Titanic.

  • @STORMDAME

    @STORMDAME

    2 ай бұрын

    I think it's because so many things had to go precisely wrong in exactly the right way for it to happen. If even a couple of things that went wrong that night had not gone wrong she may well have survived.@@mks9469

  • @FreeTheOne1996
    @FreeTheOne199611 күн бұрын

    Your rendition made me cry for the loss of life. 1496 is a lot of people in one place to die after two hours of terrorizing thoughts of what they would do what would happen and if they would live or die. Was a long time ago. Things have greatly changed to our benefit. No words can say how I truly feel. It was a very sad, sad, sad occasion, and those who live to tell us the truth, we’re gratefully blessed to have them. 😢❤

  • @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars
    @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars8 ай бұрын

    It is reckoned that a lot of the people actually died from hypothermic shock. The plunge into freezing water causing massive heart failure. Virtually instantaneous and, in my opinion, better than drowning.

  • @bobpierce115

    @bobpierce115

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes. I would think it may have been comparable to going 'out' under anesthesia at the actual time of death itself, but certainly not in the minutes leading up to it. Terrifying. I was born 45 years after the event (May '57) and have always found it to be shocking, and still do. Even with shocking things happening all the time now, it doesn't lessen the Titanic's horror.

  • @Riteaidbob

    @Riteaidbob

    7 ай бұрын

    They had a horrific death. Every nerve in their body was screaming from the cold. Their heart would stop when their core temp went to +/- 90F. Drowning would have been faster. Life vests just prolonged the agony.

  • @michellealinateague9892

    @michellealinateague9892

    7 ай бұрын

    Thermal shock of any kind is not a fast death. It lasts minutes where as drowning takes seconds

  • @stevencooke1027

    @stevencooke1027

    7 ай бұрын

    I hope for many the ending was quick. Facing inevitable death and being incredibly uncomfortable at the same time is too much to contemplate.

  • @rachaelclarke9951

    @rachaelclarke9951

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank god 🙏

  • @dennyfahle7351
    @dennyfahle73517 ай бұрын

    As a 12th-grader in 1970, I read the book "A Night To Remember", written only 20 years after the sinking. The book is a minute-by-minute account. I couldn't put it down. I read it in one sitting of a few hours.

  • @aj6954

    @aj6954

    7 ай бұрын

    That book was written about 1954, the film in 1958.

  • @kenthompson5723

    @kenthompson5723

    5 ай бұрын

    A Night To Remember is inferior in almost every way to the 1953 film, titled simply "Titanic". The former is available, gratuitously, on KZread. The latter one you must pay to see it. The 1953 film is superior in its script (which won the Oscar that year for best writing), its casting, its acting, and its special effects. But what makes the 1953 film terrific is its emotional ending. KZread does contain brief snippets of the 1953 film, which starred Clifton Webb and Barbara Stanwyck.

  • @manicmonochrome7098

    @manicmonochrome7098

    5 ай бұрын

    One of my favourite pieces of Titanic memorabilia is one of the early editions of that book.

  • @tonyfriend7413

    @tonyfriend7413

    5 ай бұрын

    @@aj6954 i got that version of it and one other of the 1950s? maybe 1960 on vhs 12/09/23 6.00 Pm cst USA

  • @aj6954

    @aj6954

    5 ай бұрын

    @@tonyfriend7413 We once had the ANTR book, also the VHS. There was another film made in 1953 with the name Titanic starring Clifton Webb and Barbara Stanwyck. It was one of those that just used Titanic as the backdrop. Did see it but can`t remember a thing about it. Whether the timing of it might have prompted Walter Lord to write the book I wouldn`t know.

  • @ezza88ster
    @ezza88ster4 ай бұрын

    I always find myself wondering what the best moment to jump off the ship would have been. A tragic story that always survives re-telling and you did a great job. One can't help but imagine the horror.

  • @nole74

    @nole74

    3 ай бұрын

    Easy. Before it left port.

  • @robbhahn8897

    @robbhahn8897

    3 ай бұрын

    @@nole74 Classic!

  • @pc_buildyb0i935

    @pc_buildyb0i935

    3 ай бұрын

    Ride it down into the water.

  • @SgtScorpious

    @SgtScorpious

    2 ай бұрын

    Given how freaking cold it was I dono

  • @andreagriffiths3512

    @andreagriffiths3512

    2 ай бұрын

    With the lifejackets in 1912? Better not to jump - broken necks were an issue. In modern jackets and holding the neck? Jump but not when you’re really high out of the water.

  • @xelumbra
    @xelumbra5 ай бұрын

    Imagining being there and watching this massive ship disappear into the dark water is so eerie. Can’t imagine how horrifying an experience it must have been for those people.

  • @camelliainzurich1262

    @camelliainzurich1262

    7 күн бұрын

    It would be impossible to reconcile the fact that just hours ago you had been having dinner, safe and warm with your family members. And then being left alone in the darkness, freezing cold and silent, wondering where the other lifeboats were. Wondering if your lifeboat would drift too far away and never be found, or if rescue ships couldn't find the location. It must have been just horrific. What if you knew your father, brother(s), husband or son(s) were still onboard with no lifeboats left? I wouldn't have left them, I couldn't leave them to die without me. How could you leave your teenage or young adult son(s) behind to suffer that awful fate? How could you live with yourself after that and expect to carry on? I'd never recover and wouldn't want to live without them, so I would stay and be with them in death.

  • @andybrockbank3027
    @andybrockbank30278 ай бұрын

    My grandmother was aged 6 at the time Titanic was lost. She told me that when news broke of the sinking that people were disbelieving of the magnitude. She lived to see the discovery of the wreck by Ballard and that promoted her recollections of the fateful time. Another excellent production. Well done.

  • @lolabelle4959

    @lolabelle4959

    8 ай бұрын

    Omg was grandma was born in 1906 + was 6 yrs old when the titanic sank too. She remembered it being in the papers!!

  • @Eusoik

    @Eusoik

    7 ай бұрын

    My Great Grandmother was born in 1910, I was born in 2008. So sadly, I weren't in quite that age to ask her questions if she heard anything about the Titanic, she was 2 when the infamous Titanic sank, and I was 2 when she died.

  • @meeeka

    @meeeka

    7 ай бұрын

    My Oma was 5 at the time. She told me her father used to let her read from the big story in the paper. She started but then he took it away from her. She then introduced Titanic to me when I was 5 and when it was found she wanted me to "quick! Buy me a ticket to see them!" We watched it on TV later and then the movie, second only to Gone With The Wind.

  • @stephendacey8761

    @stephendacey8761

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Eusoik Boy, do I feel old. You were born in 2008? That makes you only 15. Wow. You were not even alive during 9/11. It was way before your time. To me, it still feels like yesterday.

  • @PraveenSriram

    @PraveenSriram

    7 ай бұрын

    I was born in 1983 and will turn 40 years old this Friday

  • @olivergarner1746
    @olivergarner17468 ай бұрын

    No matter how many times I read about the sinking, or watch documentaries, or the films, it never looses any impact, and the sheer scale of the horror is always like the first time I’ve read it. Incredibly humbling.

  • @isabellind1292

    @isabellind1292

    4 ай бұрын

    I agree. This is why the Titanic's resting place shouldn't be turned into a money-making tourist destination. People don't pay to visit memorial sites for a reason and this is a memorial site. It's so tragic. RIP to the people and animals lost aboard the Titanic.🌹❤

  • @AutismusPrime69

    @AutismusPrime69

    4 ай бұрын

    Calm down

  • @isabellind1292

    @isabellind1292

    4 ай бұрын

    @@AutismusPrime69 If you think people should be less empathic & feel less heartbroken about the lives lost in tragic events in history, that's your problem. The only thing you've accomplished is in using your disability against yourself by trying to tone-police people who express how they feel because you lack empathetic traits.

  • @bergercookie

    @bergercookie

    4 ай бұрын

    Same here, I’m captivated yet terrified . It’s that tragedy so massive that I can’t look away or ever forget about. Such a shame, it was a gorgeous elegant ocean liners that will never be replaced in its mystery and magnificence. All those souls aboard never imagined such a ship would sink. They were on their journey of a lifetime to America and were violently stripped of their lives by the dangers of Mother Nature. Never disrespect Mother Nature and think we can overpower her bc she is the most powerful force on earth.

  • @isabellind1292

    @isabellind1292

    4 ай бұрын

    @@AutismusPrime69 Since when are people suppose to stop caring about events in history? The only thing you've accomplished is in using your disability against yourself by tone-policing how others feel because you lack empathy.

  • @designchik
    @designchik3 ай бұрын

    How awful. Those poor people. I’ve watched tons of Titanic videos, but this one is terrifying.

  • @JackTheSauceGod
    @JackTheSauceGod4 ай бұрын

    I remember reading somewhere that there was a survivor of the Titanic who had PTSD from the accident that morning. He couldn't go to baseball games because the cheers and roars from the fans at the stadium sounded exactly like the screams of despair and terror from the thousands of people who would drown in just a matter of minutes. Imagine listening to the voices of thousands of people screaming and then in a split-second, all that noises turns to absolute silence.

  • @spiff1

    @spiff1

    4 ай бұрын

    screams of terror sound different

  • @Webedunn

    @Webedunn

    Ай бұрын

    There was one survivor pulled from the water after 2.5 hours in 30 degree water. Weird thing is the guy drank a half bottle of Bourbon just prior. We’re taught that alcohol makes it worse but for him it saved his life.

  • @toddkurzbard

    @toddkurzbard

    Ай бұрын

    @@Webedunn That was Charles Joughin (mentioned as the one who stepped off without getting his hair wet).

  • @Fluttermoth
    @Fluttermoth8 ай бұрын

    My late father was fascinated by Titanic, so me and my two sisters grew up hearing about her and her passengers and crew. This level of recreation and detail would have thrilled him,; I'll watch in his memory, and thank you all for your hard work and dedication in bringing this to life so vividly xxx

  • @jackkennedy70

    @jackkennedy70

    8 ай бұрын

    In fact it wasn't Titanic that sank but it's bet up old sister ship the Olympic

  • @jackkennedy70

    @jackkennedy70

    8 ай бұрын

    @@justinloveday2410 What the hell has tinfoil got to do with anything 😐

  • @jackkennedy70

    @jackkennedy70

    8 ай бұрын

    @@justinloveday2410 Its no conspiracy when you do a basic investigation and notice something is not right.

  • @jackkennedy70

    @jackkennedy70

    8 ай бұрын

    @@justinloveday2410 Whatever

  • @juliethompson340

    @juliethompson340

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jackkennedy70 The Titanic actually had 2 sister ships: The Olympic was scrapped in 1935 the other was the Britannica sank in 1916.

  • @tedneb3459
    @tedneb34598 ай бұрын

    After decades of books, movies, television documentaries and videos about this very topic, it's difficult to understand how anyone could expect to experience this with any unexplored dimension of emotion. Somehow, Mr. Brady manages to do just that, with the perfect blend of facts, humanity and respect. Well done.

  • @KrosanBeast315
    @KrosanBeast3154 ай бұрын

    James Cameron's Titanic movie truly captured the horror and brutality of its sinking. I remember watching it in the theater and seeing people fall off the stern and hit metal rails or the deck as the stern pitched high up. Watching the one or a few people hit the propellers was particularly disturbing. In all likelihood, they were killed immediately before hitting the water. I remember watching other documentaries describing many passengers who jumped off and broke the necks when they landed in the water because of their life vests, making them dead upon impact. What was most disturbing to me was in the theater because that several parents brought in children under 6 years old to see this film. So, I can't imagine the possible scars Titanic left on them...

  • @Kiernanglynn20

    @Kiernanglynn20

    3 ай бұрын

    I remember seeing it when I was 4 or 5. The boobs were fantastic

  • @apersonwiththoughts

    @apersonwiththoughts

    3 ай бұрын

    I was one of the 6 year olds. I’m miserable at 33. Would be hilarious if it was the Titanic movie that f*cked me up.

  • @KrosanBeast315

    @KrosanBeast315

    3 ай бұрын

    I wouldn't be surprised if it contributed to it. To see that kind of horror and brutality as a child, but not truly grasping it until much later would cause a lot of problems in teen years and adulthood. How can a parent later tell a child who saw the entirety of the sinking that all of that horror and death REALLY HAPPENED and happened THAT violently? How can any parent think letting an extremely young child see that is acceptable?@@apersonwiththoughts

  • @MirkoC407
    @MirkoC4074 ай бұрын

    Regarding being unsinkable, one of the most emotional moments in the 1997 film for me is, when Bruce Ismay says "This ship cannot sink!" And chief designer Thomas Andrews answers "She was made from iron, I assure you she can... and she will!" (Translated back from German, sorry if I did not hit the exact quotes). Maybe it is because since then I have become a master of engineering myself and can imagine how horrible it must be for an engineer to confess his masterpiece is doomed to be destroyed.

  • @VelociraptorsOfSkyrim

    @VelociraptorsOfSkyrim

    3 ай бұрын

    The translation is fairly accurate. Only the first line is _technically_ a little wrong. The exact wording is "But the ship can't sink!"

  • @karenc4544

    @karenc4544

    16 күн бұрын

    It broke Ismay. He admitted afterward that he was a believer in unsinkable ships but realized there never would be one. It’s really sad that he’s been portrayed as a villain all these years. He never said “it cannot sink” on the boat and spent the rest of his life struggling with guilt and working to compensate the victims.

  • @agarnetsadvocate3586

    @agarnetsadvocate3586

    14 күн бұрын

    Bilingual, incredible. Your translation is impressive :)

  • @kaneki-ken96
    @kaneki-ken968 ай бұрын

    "The screams will go unheeded into the night" 😢😢 Gentleman, it has been a privilege watching your video today

  • @jonathanallard2128
    @jonathanallard21287 ай бұрын

    My god. I was always fascinated by Titanic's demise. The movie has sent me into hours of research and many books, and that fascination has never died. The ship's fate is one of the most horribly and sadly impressive stories I've ever heard of. I cry every time I get sucked in the stories of her passengers. What. A. Story. R.I.P. everyone on board.

  • @alexshatzko1381

    @alexshatzko1381

    6 ай бұрын

    the problem is the route taken-----------if the ship went toward new york at a south east angle --Hopefully no iceberg would be seen---and by lowering the speed at NIght ..more daylight would be had ...TO SEE CLEAR SEAS

  • @jonathanallard2128

    @jonathanallard2128

    6 ай бұрын

    They took a route that had been taken hundreds of times before. They knew there was going to be ice present. There was really no problem with the route and no surprise to find an iceberg. The super calm seas that prevented the crew from spotting bergs with the water splashing on it's base, the stupid mistake that made binoculars unavailable (IIRC) to the lookouts in the crow's nest, the reckless high speed in known ice-water, the ship's size preventing it from turning quickly, the fact that ''waterproof' compartments weren't actually waterproof up to the top of the bulkhead (facepalm) and the length of the gash from the iceberg impact all teamed up to create the catastrophe that night. But really, at the time, there was no reason to choose a different route, especially since it would've taken more time to accomplish the detour, and (again IIRC) Capt. Smith wanted to arrive in New York as fast as possible. Only with the power of retrospect could we suggest they'd take a different route. But with that same retrospect, all of the other factors I mentioned, if changed, could've saved the day too (careful speed, building the ship with actual waterproof bulkheads, having binoculars available)@@alexshatzko1381

  • @callieb1082

    @callieb1082

    2 ай бұрын

    @@jonathanallard2128🤓

  • @frankdepellette
    @frankdepelletteАй бұрын

    Probably the most powerful narative of that nnight I've ever heard. Well done sir.

  • @imthegrinchthatstolechrist4384

    @imthegrinchthatstolechrist4384

    8 күн бұрын

    Except, he was not an eyewitness, ever! Whoops!

  • @kennyr3751
    @kennyr37517 ай бұрын

    If your ever in Orlando Florida, visit the Titanic Museum...The tour is excellent, and you can see many artifacts and actually touch a piece of the hull with your hand. (bring a crying towel) I needed one... 😢😢

  • @Tomb-Wraith

    @Tomb-Wraith

    7 ай бұрын

    There's one in Pigeon Forge Tennessee as well.

  • @sellers737

    @sellers737

    2 ай бұрын

    saw the hull door and dining plates at the exhibit in Baltimore years ago. was hard to wrap my head around the fact I was looking at a piece of the most famous shipwreck in history. incredibly somber yet unreal experience

  • @Yassified3425
    @Yassified34258 ай бұрын

    The crowds of people running to the stern during the plunge would’ve been quite something.

  • @EnjoySackLunch

    @EnjoySackLunch

    8 ай бұрын

    I would have surely filled my pantaloons!

  • @dalewilliams2063

    @dalewilliams2063

    8 ай бұрын

    😢

  • @OceanlinerDesigns
    @OceanlinerDesigns8 ай бұрын

    The amazing graphics and animations for this video come from our friends at @TitanicHG who are working on recreating Titanic in exquisite detail. Visit their KZread channel or website at www.titanichg.com/

  • @pantherplatform

    @pantherplatform

    8 ай бұрын

    What about Jack and Rose?

  • @britannicman9995

    @britannicman9995

    8 ай бұрын

    Great video Mr. Brady And Titanic honor and glory I'm glad that the Olympic class liners are getting so much love Hey Mr. Brady if you get this message I ordered a print from you about a month ago I On the 26th of June It's September 3rd I still haven't Tracking number I email through ocean liner designs if you could get back to me that would be greatly appreciated thank you

  • @britannicman9995

    @britannicman9995

    8 ай бұрын

    Hey Mr. Brady great video always I ordered a print 26th of June I got the confirmation number but I still haven't got the tracking number and it's September 3rd if you can get back to me that would be greatly appreciated I've tried emailing your ocean liner design email But I got no response If you could let me know what's going on that would be greatly appreciated thank you

  • @PelsckoPelesko

    @PelsckoPelesko

    8 ай бұрын

    @@pantherplatformvruh

  • @TheLeathlobhair

    @TheLeathlobhair

    8 ай бұрын

    @@pantherplatform Hard truth here: Reminder that Jack and Rose are fictional characters. This project's focus is more like a digital museum, so we're going to be seeing real historical aspects of the ship, its sinking, and the real-life stories of the people who were there. There won't be any references to the fictional aspects of the Cameron movie or any other fictions related to the story of Titanic. You should take some time and actually read about the content these people are creating, as the real story of Titanic is arguably just as fascinating as the fictions. And perhaps most importantly, knowing *and recognizing* what is real and what isn't.

  • @bigalrockstheparty
    @bigalrockstheparty3 ай бұрын

    Mike you are a superb storyteller, with your articulate calm voice you draw your listener into the narrative. Your research is impeccable!

  • @P0thila
    @P0thila4 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Much better than other videos where the final plunge contradicts witness statements. 70-90 degree stern rise. Great job.

  • @toddkurzbard

    @toddkurzbard

    Ай бұрын

    You have to remember, before the 1985 discovery of the wreck, that is exactly what was believed happened. I remember it well: It was always said she rose to a 90 degree angle, settled back slightly, and sank intact at that angle. The sounds of the breakup were attributed to the boilers and engines unseating and tumbling through the bulkheads and out the bow, destroying everything in their paths. I CLEARLY remember it. That was ALWAYS the way the end was described. When the discovery came in '85, I remember how shocked I was (as was everybody else) to hear she had broken. We ALL believed she would be found intact. If you read Clive Cussler's book "Raise The TITANIC" (my first source of learning in the late '70's), written a few years before the wreck discovery, he depicts the sinking in this exact way. Even in the 1979 movie, the raised TITANIC (in which the ship is towed into New York Harbor, with the World Trade Center clearly visible in the background), the raised wreck is in one piece, with three of her 4 funnels (curiously, the 1st is there, and the SECOND missing. I was at one of the '80's THS conventions, where Ken Marschall, who had been a technical advisor to the film, said he had protested this vigorously to the director's\producers, but he was overruled by them, who thought that a missing funnel 2 would look more dramatic. Let's just say that, when I saw this in the theater, I "objected badly").

  • @YgorCortes
    @YgorCortes8 ай бұрын

    Oh man this was HARD to watch. I can't even begin to imagine how traumatising this must've been, especially for those who stayed in the stern until the very end. Absolutely horrifying!

  • @stringjazz2937

    @stringjazz2937

    8 ай бұрын

    Sinking ships are tales of absolute horror. What a horrible way to go.

  • @adamirishconundrum851

    @adamirishconundrum851

    6 ай бұрын

    Ted Bundy would have loved watching the Titanic go down

  • @89kilemal

    @89kilemal

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@adamirishconundrum851 why

  • @jamieroach5755

    @jamieroach5755

    4 ай бұрын

    @@89kilemal hes sick

  • @KG-gq9it

    @KG-gq9it

    4 ай бұрын

    Hard to watch? Really? I must desensitized to the max

  • @stoned9874
    @stoned98748 ай бұрын

    Idk why but seeing a ship sinking makes me sad, seeing a beautiful art made from hard work, calculations and imagination slowly disappear is just upsetting. Especially the Titanic she was the pride of her builders and it’s like she have her own personal, young, beautiful, majestic, POWERFUL but also confident, too confident.

  • @EnjoySackLunch

    @EnjoySackLunch

    8 ай бұрын

    You’re cursed with empathy and a good heart, I fear

  • @Siddingsby

    @Siddingsby

    8 ай бұрын

    It's an allegory for entropy itself.

  • @TheSaneHatter

    @TheSaneHatter

    8 ай бұрын

    A sinking ship is, indeed, one of the saddest of sights: I've felt the same way for a long time.

  • @nampyeon635

    @nampyeon635

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, the loss of the beautiful vessel makes me very sad, but it's eclipsed by the loss of life.

  • @rich_edwards79

    @rich_edwards79

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, there's an old Pathé newsreel clip of the Andrea Doria sinking where the very well-spoken British announcer says something similar as she slips below the waves. "All the majesty that is a ship, all the pride embodied in her being, all gone forever". Always stayed with me for some reason. ETA: found it, it was Movietone not Pathé, and the quote was slightly off, but the point stands. kzread.info/dash/bejne/do2eyLWwgqzXfrQ.htmlsi=0CyGsgHxWNMAjvYz

  • @RobertDavis-qh1ry
    @RobertDavis-qh1ry6 ай бұрын

    It's simply impossible to fully imagine the fear, the terror, and last, but worse of all, the unavoidable despair, heartbreak, grief, remorse, and agony of heartbroken hopelessness of those who saw their lives coming to the inevitable end in utter darkness.

  • @imthegrinchthatstolechrist4384

    @imthegrinchthatstolechrist4384

    8 күн бұрын

    Just like every tragedy you never were a part of, duh

  • @TheFluffyWendigo
    @TheFluffyWendigo3 ай бұрын

    I've been a machinist for over a decade, and I've seen all sorts of things, hearing metal shear itself apart is very unnerving

  • @HonkHonkler
    @HonkHonkler7 ай бұрын

    The image of the stern all the way up as it's being dragged down with the starry night sky in the back gives this sickly beautiful tragic cosmic fate image.

  • @imthegrinchthatstolechrist4384

    @imthegrinchthatstolechrist4384

    8 күн бұрын

    Did that actually happen how you described?

  • @IntrepidMilo
    @IntrepidMilo8 ай бұрын

    It is unimaginable to know what those final moments were like for those still on Titanic. We can make educated guesses, but we will never know what it was truly like that night. I think Mike you managed to capture a small part of that tragedy with this video, it was well-written, and a beautiful tribute to those lost that night.

  • @Cakeboy99

    @Cakeboy99

    8 ай бұрын

    It was likely a thousand times more chaotic than any film or documentary could reproduce.

  • @juliethompson340

    @juliethompson340

    7 ай бұрын

    I think that one of the things that would haunt me for the rest of my life would be the screams and crying. Not to mention the noise the ship would make as it was starting to break up. The roaring noise of the water filling the ship, the sounds of glass busting out. The smoke stacks being ripped off and landing in the Ocean. The total helplessness the passengers were suffering from. RIP

  • @jackwilliams5474

    @jackwilliams5474

    7 ай бұрын

    Great analysis.@@juliethompson340

  • @gtaitz

    @gtaitz

    7 ай бұрын

    It's a horrible thought, but little did they know that they would actually be making history that awful night.

  • @chriscavy
    @chriscavy4 ай бұрын

    I've watched dozens of Titanic videos but this one, for some reason, gave me chills. Thank you for the great content.

  • @Himawariyoung
    @Himawariyoung3 ай бұрын

    This will always be the most beautifully heartbreaking story I could ever know. Thank you for the effort put into this video.

  • @tobys_transport_videos
    @tobys_transport_videos8 ай бұрын

    To use the word *_"horrific"_* in order to describe those last 5 minutes on _Titanic,_ would be an understatement!

  • @terrycooper4149
    @terrycooper41497 ай бұрын

    Wow. Graphics are amazing. Even the proper stars and constellations are properly located.

  • @imthegrinchthatstolechrist4384

    @imthegrinchthatstolechrist4384

    8 күн бұрын

    Says who?

  • @AugustinTomasOBrienCaceres
    @AugustinTomasOBrienCaceres3 ай бұрын

    These 5 minutes are impossible to explain in less than 25 minutes. Crazy all of this happened in only 5 minutes. Excellent video. This is the first time I've seen it explained in detail. I never understood the stern went up that high twice even watching this collapse so many times.

  • @Hirundo-demersalis
    @Hirundo-demersalis2 ай бұрын

    Recently fell down the Titanic Rabbit Hole after watching two movies about it (both James Cameron's 1997 historical fiction drama set during the voyage and Roy Ward Baker's 1958 docu-drama about the night of the sinking). What I found particularly interesting about both films vs this video is how the physical sinking of the ship was depicted: the 1958 film showed the ship sinking intact, while the 1997 film had it split in half, then bob around vertically in the water before it went down like an elevator. So it's fascinating to see the updated modern analysis of the ship's final plunge rendered in this video, and even if the movies are now inaccurate, they still stand as a testament to how the knowledge evolved over time. Well done, sir! The one story that's stood out as particularly harrowing to me is Charles Lightoller's near-death with the intake vent; being sucked underwater and into the mouth of a pipe that went straight to the furnace, the ship going down along with it, completely unable to swim free…only to be miraculously blown free from the final blast from the furnace, then struggling to get to the surface…sounds like an absolutely indescribable and horrific experience! And then later that same night, going on to save several more people's lives by helping them stay afloat on a capsized lifeboat!

  • @jamespike5161
    @jamespike51618 ай бұрын

    This … is why the depths terrify me. They can just swallow up a ship like that - or one magnitudes greater even - like it was nothing. The darkness below is haunting. Horrifying. Beautiful. It DEMANDS respect.

  • @thomasackerman5399
    @thomasackerman53998 ай бұрын

    Good to see someone actually for once go into detail on why getting Collapsibles A and B from off the roof of the officers quarters took so long. It was actually really, really difficult because the tools for doing so had not been retrieved from the bow and so the crew really had to struggle mightily to get them down, wasting precious time in the process. I have no doubt that had those two boats been sitting each at davits like C an D, at least one of them would've been launched safely fully filled before the final plunge.

  • @floxy20

    @floxy20

    7 ай бұрын

    Why not release any ties and just sit in the boat where it rested and let the water reach high enough. And then just float off.

  • @thomasackerman5399

    @thomasackerman5399

    7 ай бұрын

    @@floxy20 That was their idea for at least one of the two boats when they realized they weren't going to have any time to get it to davits and launch it that way. But the problem is that with the deck rising higher and the chaos caused by the huge wave of water that swept over the boat deck as the plunge occurred, it's likely it would've been swamped. Where that makes any sense at all is if Titanic had been outfitted with more lifeboats or collapsible boats. But then you might have big heavy boats sliding all over the deck. It's the same as with any raft that people say the crew should've built.

  • @rabbitramen

    @rabbitramen

    4 ай бұрын

    I'll never understand why the two remaining collapsibles weren't simply allowed to float off the roof of the officer's quarters as collapsible A eventually did off of the boat deck. It was a miracle that collapsible A landed right side up at all using the oars as jury rigged ramps. Sixth Officer Moody seemed to be the only one keeping his head in having the right idea of suggesting to let the boat float off the boat deck when everyone else was struggling with water around their feet to drag the boat to the davits, which were already level with the sea. Both boats could have had their canvas sides raised, filled with people and rowed away when afloat. Unfortunately, Sixth Officer James Moody didn't survive the sinking. It is not known exactly where he met his end and seems to have disappeared somewhere in the final chaos. He was the most junior officer and one of the four of the eight deck officers to perish. RIP: Captain Edward John Smith, Chief Officer Henry Tingle Wilde, First Officer William McMaster Murdoch, Sixth Officer James Paul Moody.

  • @robertgladstein
    @robertgladstein5 ай бұрын

    That was the best rendition of Titanic's plunge into the sea I have ever seen..thank you

  • @marshaprice8226
    @marshaprice8226Ай бұрын

    This is a more detailed description of the Titanic’s final minutes than I have ever heard before. Excellent presentation! Thanks so much!

  • @RobertLydonReviews
    @RobertLydonReviews7 ай бұрын

    I’ve been a Titanic enthusiast for years and have found Maritime disasters fascinating and rightfully horrifying. I really enjoyed this video the editing, script, animation are top quality. ive never had to pause and reflect while listening to a historical piece but this just added an extra layer to my Titanic appreciation

  • @Mark-ly4lq

    @Mark-ly4lq

    7 ай бұрын

    Titanic and Fitz are my go to case studies. Fascinating indeed

  • @HammerHeart3229

    @HammerHeart3229

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Mark-ly4lq Very recently I've been looking more into losses of the Edmund Fitzgerald, Carl D Bradley and Daniel J Morrell... The Great Lakes seem like a terrifying place to be during a storm for sure!

  • @jowah

    @jowah

    4 ай бұрын

    Like you, I've also studied everything I can find about the Titanic for decades. Somehow I missed the fact that the ship's steam whistles were recovered several years ago. I learned about that today from a video Mike Brady posted on his other channel (Mike Brady). Look it up if you haven't already... Hearing them is awesome.

  • @ellyj5670
    @ellyj56707 ай бұрын

    The nightmare of Titanic's sinking has always fascinated and haunted me. I think of those lost souls and the horror they experienced. My own brother drowned. A painful frightening end. RIP

  • @user-no1st8zv6v

    @user-no1st8zv6v

    7 ай бұрын

    frightening only if you let it be

  • @PraveenSriram

    @PraveenSriram

    7 ай бұрын

    I’m really sorry for your loss of your brother 👦. That sounds awful 😞

  • @mariefricchione437

    @mariefricchione437

    Ай бұрын

    Sorry for your loss 🙏

  • @janemcfadden4801

    @janemcfadden4801

    25 күн бұрын

    ❤❤❤

  • @obifuntoknowme
    @obifuntoknowme6 ай бұрын

    I must congratulate you - this video was excellent. So haunting though. Big well done on a truly great piece of work, I was riveted throughout.

  • @KTChamberlain
    @KTChamberlain3 ай бұрын

    During the editing process on my second book Angel Overload, my editor posed a good question to a high-speed chase scene that had happened late at night in the book. My response was that eyewitness testimonials can be very unreliable, especially at night--in the fog no less--and in the heat of the moment like the scene in question. My case in point that backed up my argument was Titanic's sinking. I told her that contrary to the cinematography of the James Cameron movie, it was actually much darker and eyewitness accounts were split (no pun intended) whether if she went down in one or broke in two because of how dark it was. This is one of the perks of being a history buff because sometimes history can back you up in storytelling.

  • @PainHurtss
    @PainHurtss8 ай бұрын

    I’ve always wanted to know what happened during the final moments when the ship was afloat, and now this video exists for further information. Thank you, Mike!

  • @donnydogpiss4533

    @donnydogpiss4533

    8 ай бұрын

    I'll recommend something that was recommended to me countless times, before I finally caved in and did it: Get a copy of and read the book _"On A Sea Of Glass: The Life & Loss Of The RMS Titanic"_ which covers everything that happened that night (along with the entire history of the Titanic before and after) in such painstaking detail by using compiled rare/unique survivor accounts (well beyond just the typical, famous or well known accounts) to paint a profoundly vivid and exhaustive picture of what took place that night. It's like _THE_ book to read - even if you're only interested in the actual sinking of the Titanic and not necessarily the entire history.

  • @andydoms2001
    @andydoms20018 ай бұрын

    I can’t even imagine what it was like to be one of the people still on the Titanic when it broke apart and disappeared. Those people were clinging onto a sinking ship, while its pitch dark and freezing cold, watching the frigid ocean water rise towards you, just waiting for when your likely about to die. Such an eerie feeling to think about.😳😰😢

  • @AllRequired

    @AllRequired

    7 ай бұрын

    And springtime had barely started, another serious minus in the conditions the sunken were dealing with.

  • @jackwilliams5474

    @jackwilliams5474

    7 ай бұрын

    you're not your, but ya.

  • @josephfrechette9916

    @josephfrechette9916

    4 ай бұрын

    A few years ago someone recreated the sinking in the VR game rec room. Even thought it was made to be more light hearted so it was suitable for all ages it was still a sobering experience.

  • @Cheximus

    @Cheximus

    3 ай бұрын

    Take a cold plunge. And imagine not being able to get it. And then have people screaming around you. And being parted from loved ones. That's what it would've been like.

  • @Lucy-yc4bc

    @Lucy-yc4bc

    Ай бұрын

    @@jackwilliams5474no one fucking cares.

  • @Him_He_Me
    @Him_He_Me2 ай бұрын

    So well done. Ive heard the tale soooo many times over the years. You had my goose pimples up. RIP to those who lost their lives.

  • @manugamer9984
    @manugamer99844 ай бұрын

    One should really take a moment to imagine being pulled down in an enormous whirlpool, deep down to the ship’s boilers. Lightoller was damn lucky... I can’t even think of those who weren’t

  • @trackpackgt877
    @trackpackgt8777 ай бұрын

    Benjamin Guggenheim that dude had balls he famously said " we're dressed in our best and prepared to go down with the ship" dude was in his nicest suit with a fine glass of Brandy and went out like a man never showed fear or anger just stoic!!! unreal they don't make men like that anymore!

  • @jacksons1010
    @jacksons10108 ай бұрын

    There’s a crucial point to observe: the crew barely managed to get all the rigid lifeboats away. The argument about having enough lifeboats for all misses this point - the crew would have had to mount the second set of lifeboats on the davits before loading and lowering. It might have been accomplished where some of the first boats had been lowered to open up the davits, but unlikely it would have been many more. Perhaps the crew would have had the presence of mind to simply cut the boats loose so people could climb in out of the water, but we note that in the case of Collapsible A the thought of cutting the boat loose came very late.

  • @haycockjeff

    @haycockjeff

    8 ай бұрын

    Exactly. Lightoller knew this. Never, ever, let lifeboats go down with a ship. That’s why he launched them as soon as possible regardless of number. He was also working with an assumption of 1 to 2 hours sink time as told to him by Andrews. He did exactly the right thing. If anything, he should have launched them faster with a few less people in. The lack of lifeboats was irrelevant. Even modern cruise ships wouldn’t be able to fill their emergency lifeboats in 2 hours with 6,000 people on board at that time. People everywhere in the ship. Drunk people, separated families, panic etc.

  • @bellairefondren7389

    @bellairefondren7389

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, because the crew was not effectively trained for a complete evacuation of the ship.

  • @haycockjeff

    @haycockjeff

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bellairefondren7389 Would have made pretty much no difference. They had a hard time to convince people to get in….

  • @bellairefondren7389

    @bellairefondren7389

    8 ай бұрын

    @@haycockjeff There were a lot of 3rd class passengers who were not given instructions to evacuate. Lightoller did not allow men into the lifeboats who wanted to go.

  • @haycockjeff

    @haycockjeff

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bellairefondren7389 They wouldn’t have had time to get to the boat deck in a organised manner vs rate of deploying the boat. Lightoller knew men were more likely to be able to survive and swim for a lifeboat after the ship had sank. He had done the grim on the spot calculations based on the knowledge he had.

  • @Itsa.CruelWorld
    @Itsa.CruelWorld5 ай бұрын

    I can't imagine how horrifying this must have been.

  • @luke5100
    @luke51005 ай бұрын

    Oh this was just stomach-turning, an incomprehensible horror. I was left in tears. Excellent video of such a horrific tragedy

  • @Cosmic_Espeon
    @Cosmic_Espeon8 ай бұрын

    It's scary to see just how fast Titanic went once her bow and bridge were under. Even in the Cameron film, you can see how it pitched down so rapidly. Those final moments were the most harrowing ones of those people's lives, watching their fellow man being swept away, fighting to get into the final boats, watching the forward funnel collapse, trying desperately to run to the stern in a vain attempt to save themselves, people jumping into the water. I hate to imagine how awful those moments were. People tend to romantize this tragedy but when you think about it, there's nothing romantic at all. I truly hope those souls have found peace wherever they went, going the way they went is something I don't wish on my worst enemy. Fantastic job as always Mike, I love seeing your videos man.

  • @realname5127
    @realname51277 ай бұрын

    As a deckand on a tug, this shit is horrifying. Just a decade or so ago there was a breach which caused the boat to capsize. The water tight doors did nothing and the captain drowned, luckily the other hands were out on deck and not trapped...Shit happens QUICK.

  • @Pullman88-pr4cs
    @Pullman88-pr4cs3 ай бұрын

    Yep, that ship picked the deepest part of the ocean to sink in, 3 miles deep, and then a sub, last year, also blew up, that was trying to visit the Titanic.

  • @Texas_Made_

    @Texas_Made_

    2 ай бұрын

    😬😬😬😬😬

  • @clioadams3091
    @clioadams30918 күн бұрын

    If anyone watching this is ever in Belfast, Ireland, visit the Titanic Quarter. It's a museum overlooking the docks where the ship was built before it made it's Maiden voyage. The part of the museum that describes its final hours down to the last radio transmissions, was eerie.

  • @austinreed5805
    @austinreed58058 ай бұрын

    Being aboard the ship in those last 5 minutes must’ve been absolutely terrifying. Keep in mind: the ship had been sinking slowly for over two and a half hours before its final plunge.

  • @seanbillington3287

    @seanbillington3287

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah no shit

  • @debbiejarus1723
    @debbiejarus17238 ай бұрын

    It's an amazing and devastating video. The final few minutes of her life are always glossed over in accounts of her sinking. I actually found myself tearing up while watching. The devastation and utter destruction have always been difficult to comprehend........until now! An absolute masterpiece of filmmaking. Congratulations, Mike!

  • @annsumner8570

    @annsumner8570

    7 ай бұрын

    There is an excellent old movie called Titanic. It didn't hold back on the human tragedy, in this account. However it was long before woke.

  • @amyglisson3

    @amyglisson3

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@annsumner8570?

  • @genemurphy6061

    @genemurphy6061

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@annsumner8570ll

  • @dcsquared69

    @dcsquared69

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@annsumner8570everything i don't like is woke!!!

  • @joshuacampbell289
    @joshuacampbell2892 ай бұрын

    You have a gift brother…narration of tragic horrific events with attention to every conceivable detail

  • @Mike920T
    @Mike920T4 ай бұрын

    Great video, great music choices, great commentary and analysis! She was a beast 💯

  • @nathanlerma9891
    @nathanlerma98918 ай бұрын

    Every time I see her in this state it hurts to know that no one will come to help the grand liner in her darkest moment,It's hard to imagine that Titanic was actually struck in the place that would allow her to last the longest and yet it wasn't enough for rescue to arrive,may the brave passengers and crew of the RMS Titanic rest in peace

  • @spikespa5208

    @spikespa5208

    8 ай бұрын

    Perhaps the place where she could have hit to last longer would have been straight bow-on collision. Would have probably smashed the hull perhaps as far back as the foremast and would have been one hell of an impact (at 20+ knots) for everyone and everything not bolted down. But possibly could have survived with only 2-3 compartments flooded.

  • @bookemdanno5596

    @bookemdanno5596

    7 ай бұрын

    Ships came to help her, they were just too far to come in time before she sank. To say "no one will come to help the grand new liner in her darkest moment" is absolutely untrue.

  • @jonathanallard2128

    @jonathanallard2128

    7 ай бұрын

    @@bookemdanno5596 I think they meant no one came *in time* to help.

  • @nathanlerma9891

    @nathanlerma9891

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jonathanallard2128 exactly

  • @dylshkibab
    @dylshkibab7 ай бұрын

    I watched this movie at the cinema 15 times... and then bought the VHS tape when it was released and watched it some more... But this... WOW! I sat breathless as if I knew nothing of this historical gasp. You have put this together so beautifully and with such a nuanced respect. Thank you. I'm crying now, but still: thank you 💜

  • @stephendacey8761

    @stephendacey8761

    7 ай бұрын

    I just got off a cruise from Southhampton. The Titanic left from that port. As I boarded the ship I couldn't help but remember the Titanic.

  • @Rick_King

    @Rick_King

    4 ай бұрын

    Wow, you're worse than I am! I saw Titanic 10 times originally, then twice more in 3D. And yeah, countless times on VHS and then DVD.

  • @kathythompson2434

    @kathythompson2434

    4 ай бұрын

    I can enjoy watching a good film again once or twice but 15 times ??? Maybe over a period of many decades… or a lifetime.

  • @Rick_King

    @Rick_King

    4 ай бұрын

    @@kathythompson2434 Kathy, every time I watched Titanic, I saw something new. In fact, I still do. When a film is such a masterpiece, it's worth watching over and over again, at least by me!

  • @kathythompson2434

    @kathythompson2434

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Rick_King High Rick, …. ok yes l can understand that and hope you continue to get enjoyment out of it many more times in the future.👍

  • @banditpredator
    @banditpredator20 күн бұрын

    One of the most accurate sinking animations I ever saw. Great! Thanks a lot for that video.

  • @user-cq5ez3ft4e
    @user-cq5ez3ft4e9 күн бұрын

    EXTRAORDINARILY excellent video! The time and effort you put into this re-creation is STUNNING!

  • @MusgraveRitual
    @MusgraveRitual8 ай бұрын

    This was so well done. I am always so touched to tears by the orchestra continuing to play. What a brave and noble way to face terrifying events. May God rest their souls.

  • @TheRibottoStudios
    @TheRibottoStudios8 ай бұрын

    One thing I feel like the movie DID get right was the sheer panic on the ship once people started to realize they might actually die a pretty terrible death. Like people jumping off the boat, people shouting shoving others, jumping into lifeboats from the lower decks, I'm sure SOME of that was exaggerated but as Michael said it's human drama. Like....I have NO doubt that once sht hit the fan it was literally a riot on a ship. And us humans can be VERY dramatic. And we tend to do things that don't make sense when trying to survive because all you're thinking about is to survive...So while jumping off the ship into the icy waters of the Atlantic might make one go "oh well that's just gonna help him die, why do that anyways?" to them at the time, it made sense to maybe try and get as far from the ship as possible, maybe chase after a lifeboat. It's just intense and we'll never really know what went on in these people's heads.

  • @TheLeathlobhair

    @TheLeathlobhair

    8 ай бұрын

    Check out Honor and Glory's most recent real-time sinking video. In several ways it's a demo reel of the game they're making, and it gets more realistic every time they update it. The true horrror of the sinking has always been known, but not at a visceral level. It's true that the closest anyone has gotten so far in encapsulating that horror has been Cameron's movie. But when the Honor and Glory game is finally completed, it might outclass Cameron's movie on the fright factor. The game will be VR-compatible so you'll be able to experience that horror from a first-person perspective.

  • @myridean2k4

    @myridean2k4

    8 ай бұрын

    Or they chose to die upon impact hitting the water instead of drowning. They reminded me of the jumpers of 9/11 who leapt to their deaths from the Twin Towers because they didn't want to get electrocuted (as some floors' sprinkling systems turned on and the ceiling crashing, releasing broken live wiring or to not be consumed by the flames. Instinct in these situations just take over during these horrific times. 😢

  • @TheRibottoStudios

    @TheRibottoStudios

    4 ай бұрын

    @@myridean2k4 I remember those who decided to jump vs stay in the towers...The Falling Man isn't something you're going to easily forget. Instinct is kind of funny; as Michael said it was instinctual for passengers to try and get as far away from the icy waters as possible. When fear overrides logic, then that's when things go to hell.

  • @gooondie
    @gooondie22 күн бұрын

    Thank you for that fine forensic analysis

  • @rma3_3_3
    @rma3_3_37 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the video. Always been fascinated by the story of The Titanic. Gosh, that freezing cold water! Amazing Grace any survived! Many years ago I lived in a place where survivors were taken. In our lobby was all the parafalalia of the Titanic and the history of The Titanic.

  • @titanicandothershipstudies4202
    @titanicandothershipstudies42028 ай бұрын

    Even tho I’m e heard the story over and over, the way Mike explained the the last minutes sent chills down my spine. This is amazing well done! Props to Jack from THG, the THG Team as a whole, and Mike Brady for this phenomenal video!

  • @JounLord1
    @JounLord18 ай бұрын

    Horrifying was an apt word for this, definitely. The stories of Titanic's final moments, the horrors that had to be avoided to survive, of death by seemingly everything. Hearing how people were killed by the steam funnels then others sucked into the maelstrom left behind by their fall or those who died from debris or their own life jackets jumping off. All that and more but then having to survive the icy waters until help arrived. Its no wonder the Titanic's body count was so massive. Thanks Mike for doing an amazing job exploring these moments and humanizing the tales of those involved.

  • @jhmarrio2972
    @jhmarrio2972Ай бұрын

    What an awesome recount of what happened and loved the visuals. Great video!! Thanks

  • @johnsmith-rs2vk
    @johnsmith-rs2vk5 ай бұрын

    A great video . But one can never recall the horror, the fear , the screams , of being on this sinking ship .

  • @jackeldridge1319
    @jackeldridge13198 ай бұрын

    Tragic story of course, but I really appreciate how accurate the modelling is. You even got the lino tiles right at 0:30, even Cameron himself couldn't get that right. Absolute props for knowledge and research

  • @hazyhope._.

    @hazyhope._.

    8 ай бұрын

    If you didn't know, this is TitanicHG's footage/model, and they've been partners with Oceanliner Designs for a while. Pretty sure most of the footage in these videos are from them. Props to them for all this research.

  • @user-lv7ph7hs7l

    @user-lv7ph7hs7l

    7 ай бұрын

    To be fair, at the time the way Cameron did it was a good guess. I forget if he had carpeting in the 1st class dining room, because Olympic didn't but Titanic did. According to a crewmembers in A Night To Remember, "you sank into it up to your knees". He seemed convinced Titanic was much better than Olympic, he said immense care and attention to detail and perfectionism went into Titanic with many little details, like the thick carpeting, the extended bridge wings etc..

  • @CzechMirco

    @CzechMirco

    5 ай бұрын

    @@user-lv7ph7hs7l Cameron got scammed by a company that claimed they actually created the Axminster carpet for Titanic's 1st Class dining room. But in reality Titanic didn't have a carpet in its 1st Class dining room she had it only in the reception area in front of it. WSL used linoleum as a floor cover in its 1st class dining rooms because in a room where a lot of food and drinks can be spilled at the rough sea a carpet would have been a nightmare to maintain. For the same reason the walls were covered with simple oak panels coated with washable white paint.

  • @user-lv7ph7hs7l

    @user-lv7ph7hs7l

    5 ай бұрын

    @@CzechMirco The stewards of Titanic disagree with you, the crew always insisted Titanic was much better, built with much more attention to detail such as the lush carpet inthe 1st dining room, "so deep you sank into it up to your knees" according to a 1st class steward, this is from the book A Night To Remembe by Walter Lord who interviewed many including that steward.

  • @246trixie

    @246trixie

    4 ай бұрын

    Thats not something i knew enough to realise so I appreciate this comment, and also appreciate this attempt at detail. May i say i found this the most touching recount from an interpersonal perspective as to the movements of the persons aboard and what they faced in their final moments. Perhaps it is irrelevant but i feel like the worst fate is being trapped and drowning and the idea of persons getting out and then being dragged back by suction horrifies me, id rather freeze than drown. Not that either fate is ideal…perhaps thats stupidity on my part…altho at that temp neither would be very slow, i believe those in the water had mere mins? But i could be mistaken

  • @penelopejoann
    @penelopejoann8 ай бұрын

    I have always wondered about the collapsable boats. The story here is so heroic, and I never knew how much of a struggle it was to get these two final life boats into the water. This is such a moving detail of Titanic’s final moments.

  • @FranssensM
    @FranssensM6 күн бұрын

    Brilliant, well done Mike and the team. This was informative and sensitive. Thank you

  • @jdrs4214
    @jdrs42142 ай бұрын

    You boys developing “Titanic Honor and Glory” are geniuses man!!!! Thanks!!

  • @PadraigTomas
    @PadraigTomas8 ай бұрын

    During the 1970s, I met a woman who had survived the sinking. I told her that I was very interested in the story of the Titanic. She laughed and said, "So am I."

  • @oceanexblve884

    @oceanexblve884

    6 ай бұрын

    What did she tell you

  • @Dakiraun
    @Dakiraun8 ай бұрын

    Incredible detail and information. I think it is an often misunderstood thing about Titanic in that people tend to forget she was so well built that she took a *_long_* time to get to that point where things started to happen quickly. Thanks to you and many like you, I hope their stories and memories are never forgotten, along with the harsh lessons learned.

  • @shona1578
    @shona15783 ай бұрын

    It is a testament to Titanic's design and construction that, tho' fatally wounded, she still took 2 hours 40 minutes to sink. I read somewhere that Cunard's chief naval architect at the time said that, if Mauretania had suffered the same damage, she would have rolled onto her starboard beam almost immediately and capsized, because of her longitudinal watertight bulkheads. Mauretania was also marketed as "practically unsinkable", as most of the big express liners were up to 1912...

  • @pc_buildyb0i935

    @pc_buildyb0i935

    3 ай бұрын

    While it's true Mauretania's chief architect did in fact say this, the assumption at the time was that Titanic had received a 300-foot gash from the iceberg and we know now that's not true. The Mauretania would have sunk in about 40mins to an hour with Titanic's proportionate iceberg damage.

  • @shona1578

    @shona1578

    3 ай бұрын

    @@pc_buildyb0i935 That's really good to know, thank you!

  • @justinlangley9522
    @justinlangley9522Ай бұрын

    You sir are an incredible narrator. Incredible video to watch! Titanic is immortalized in History.