This Mystery Ship Watched Titanic Sink

On the night of April 14th, 1912, not long after RMS Titanic struck an iceberg on the North Atlantic, several of her passengers and crew spotted the lights of a mystery ship on the horizon. Tragically, this ship, now thought to be the Leyland Liner SS Californian never responded to Titanic's distress signals. What happened on the Californian that night and did she watch Titanic sink?
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On a Sea of Glass by Bill Wormstedt, J. Kent Layton, and Tad Fitch
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Пікірлер: 1 100

  • @BigOldBoats
    @BigOldBoatsАй бұрын

    Thank you for watching! Fun(?) fact: Both the Californian and the Carpathia were torpedoed and sunk by German U-boats in World War I.

  • @jetsons101

    @jetsons101

    Ай бұрын

    Better for the Carpathia to go down in battle than in a "breakers yard" It seems that both the Titanic and Carpathia were both slow to give up the surface.

  • @dovetonsturdee7033

    @dovetonsturdee7033

    Ай бұрын

    @user-sf5vs1mc1f 'This however has never been proven.' Actually, it has. Proven false, that is.

  • @dovetonsturdee7033

    @dovetonsturdee7033

    Ай бұрын

    @user-sf5vs1mc1f My reply was to a post suggesting that the mystery ship allegedly near to Titanic was the sealer Samson, not to the sinking of Carpathia.

  • @dovetonsturdee7033

    @dovetonsturdee7033

    Ай бұрын

    @user-sf5vs1mc1f Quite agree. My posts occasionally disappear into the ether as well.

  • @ablestarofficial8117

    @ablestarofficial8117

    Ай бұрын

    It’s the California and it wasn’t close enough to watch it sink. That’s hyperbolic.

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101Ай бұрын

    The crew that stayed below deck keeping the lights and pumps on are heroes. They stayed at their posts knowing they would not survive the sinking, that is a sign of true heroes.

  • @jone8626

    @jone8626

    Ай бұрын

    not true. There is a movie about them on youtube, great to watch. Several of them survived and they gave testimony in the hearings. Forgot the name of the movie.

  • @jetsons101

    @jetsons101

    Ай бұрын

    @@jone8626 I watched it a few years back but can't remember the channel name. It was pretty good.........

  • @cardboardempire

    @cardboardempire

    Ай бұрын

    Most crew were released. Some chose to stay at their posts. Chef Engineer Bell was seen on the boat deck. Greaser Fred Scott mentioned it during the inquiry. Another mentioned that they followed Bell up the stairs topside though I cannot recall which survivor said this.

  • @commodorezero

    @commodorezero

    Ай бұрын

    @@jone8626 The Engineers running the pumps and keeping the power up all died not everyone below deck. The firemen and stokers in areas that were flooded had the best chance of survival because they evacuated long before the ship sank and were used to crew the lifeboats.

  • @raheemabdul1066

    @raheemabdul1066

    Ай бұрын

    I dont know, doing that bought enough time to save all that survived? or ws it not optimal or stupid to do?

  • @daverichmond3228
    @daverichmond3228Ай бұрын

    Hey Bob! I don't blame you for not wanting to cover Titanic before this. It's been done so many times it's basically a cliche now, but the angle you took to tell the story was well chosen. It felt fresh and new and engaging.

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Fear Allah

  • @SimonPetrikov12

    @SimonPetrikov12

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@@LisaJones-xk6xz fear icebergs

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    13 күн бұрын

    @@SimonPetrikov12 fire 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 never ends for disbelievers

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    13 күн бұрын

    @@SimonPetrikov12 don't die as a disbeliever

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    13 күн бұрын

    @@SimonPetrikov12 wife back door not allowed ect

  • @yudorapetraitis3490
    @yudorapetraitis3490Ай бұрын

    possibly the best explanation of the “shut up” incident i’ve seen on youtube. hats off

  • @TorontoJediMaster

    @TorontoJediMaster

    Ай бұрын

    One other error that Evans made, along with putting the the "MSG" header was that he committed a breach of wireless etiquette. He broke into Phillips' transmission without asking to do so. If one wanted (or needed) to cut into another operator's signal, you were supposed to give a quick signal and wait for a response. (It's the equivalent of raising your hand in a group chat.) Evans forgot to do so and just burst into Phillips' signal. He realized after his error and saw why Phillips told him off. He said that he took no offense from it.

  • @titanicgaming1148

    @titanicgaming1148

    Ай бұрын

    @@TorontoJediMaster Well another reason these guys probably were saying things like shut up and being buts was well a lot of them were friends. Marconi wireless operators were not ship crew in the traditional sense as they were all employees of the marconi company and all knew eachother to an extent, carpathia’s operator was to my knowledge friends with both wireless operators onboard titanic and was pretty saddened by the lost of Phillip. Also this was the early days of this device, standards were not really in place and these men bantered often on these devices.

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@titanicgaming1148 don't die as a disbeliever

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@TorontoJediMaster don't die as a disbeliever

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Fear Allah

  • @Daniel_Huffman
    @Daniel_HuffmanАй бұрын

    There was once a time when the _Californian_ herself was a source of excitement: While not a remarkable ship on the world's stage even when she entered service, she was then the largest ship constructed in the Scottish city of Dundee, to the point where her machinery damaged parts of the city's roads and telephone lines while being transported to the ship. Ultimately, the _Californian_ was just another vessel lost to the First World War. Damaged by a torpedo strike from the _U-34,_ the crippled ship was sunk during an attempt to tow her ashore by the _U-35,_ the most successful submarine to serve in the conflict.

  • @merafirewing6591

    @merafirewing6591

    Ай бұрын

    She was a very humble looking cargo ship.

  • @Daniel_Huffman

    @Daniel_Huffman

    Ай бұрын

    @@merafirewing6591 Indeed. I also really like the Leyland Line's choice of using salmon pink as the main color of their funnels. The detail that stands out to me is that the company used that _specific_ color.

  • @commodorezero

    @commodorezero

    Ай бұрын

    @@merafirewing6591 She was a small ship for the time but Dundee was not a place where large vessels were typically built. This is why Californian had that record. Also having 1 funnel makes ships look unimportant and small regardless of their actual size. Carpathia was a pretty big ship for 1912 but because she had 1 funnel shes seen as the little engine that could.

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@commodorezero don't die as a disbeliever

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@Daniel_Huffman suicide not allowed

  • @philiphumphrey1548
    @philiphumphrey1548Ай бұрын

    A lot can be explained by a thermal inversion caused by calm conditions, cold air over cold water and warmer air higher up. This would have bent the light from the Californian over the horizon and it is quite possible that Californian was 19 miles away or more and still saw the lights from Titanic (and vice versa). It could also explain why the lookouts in Titanic's crows nest failed to see the iceberg in time. A thermal inversion gives a raised misty horizon that would have hidden the shape of a large iceberg until it was too late.

  • @nakmuay7705

    @nakmuay7705

    29 күн бұрын

    Where I live on lake Erie in Canada they always said you can see the streetlights in Cleveland on a clear night. I thought it was bullshit due to the curvature of the earth. Would this explain that?

  • @codename1176

    @codename1176

    29 күн бұрын

    @@nakmuay7705yes look up pictures of floating super tankers that’s a good example.

  • @tjbooker8585

    @tjbooker8585

    23 күн бұрын

    Eric Dubay can explain ​@@nakmuay7705

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@nakmuay7705 suicide not allowed

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Suicide not allowed

  • @mithramusic5909
    @mithramusic5909Ай бұрын

    Regarding the "rude" message from the Titanic, it's not actually rude at all, it's like nerd speak. These wireless operators were tech nerds of the time. Their tone to one another was always blunt and aggressive. It's more like text speak to friends versus professional business communications. It's so unacceptable that Californian did less than the bare minimum. They saw a ship that looked strange with lights visible underwater shooting rockets and clearly attempting to communicate by Morse lamp, after they spent ALL DAY SENDING ICE DANGER WARNINGS. We can argue all we want about what Californian COULD have done, but it's not ok that they didn't even try.

  • @mattboy5296

    @mattboy5296

    Ай бұрын

    Agreed. If I was the Captain on the Californian, I would have at least ordered the wireless operator to be woken up so he could find out if anything was going on. Then they would have immediately heard all the distress calls from Titanic and the back and forth between her and the other ships she was in communication with and knew the situation.

  • @helenafarkas4534

    @helenafarkas4534

    Ай бұрын

    @@mattboy5296 as far as I know, Californian;s wireless operator WAS rousted from bed to check what was up - unfortunately he happened to tune in precisely when so many ships were trying to talk to each other that the signal was jammed - it's documented that there were several periods that night where that happened. faced with the jamming, he hung up his headset and went back to bed

  • @thing_under_the_stairs

    @thing_under_the_stairs

    Ай бұрын

    @@mattboy5296 Also, a captain's first duty is to his own ship, crew and passengers under maritime law. Making a midnight dash across an icefield on a moonless night, like Carpathia did, would be in contravention of this first, most important rule. If they had hit ice in their rescue attempt, there would have been two ships on the bottom and countless more lives lost. I'm not bashing Captain Rostron; his actions were undoubtedly heroic and saved hundreds of lives, I'm just saying that there were good reasons that Captain Lord stayed put that night.

  • @Justicia007

    @Justicia007

    Ай бұрын

    I agree and I find it interesting that the extremely rich men who perished on the Titanic were the same men who opposed the creation of the Fed. If they had survived, they would have provided strong opposition to the creation of the Federal reserve a little over a year later.

  • @dfuher968

    @dfuher968

    Ай бұрын

    U should also consider when dizzing the Californian, that distress rockets were red. The Titanic fired off white rockets, which were used for celebrations. Furthermore, distress rockets were to be fired at fixed intervals, 1 per minute, but the Titanic only fired a total of 8 rockets over a period of an hour and at random intervals. Combining that with very abnormal weather conditions causing the presence of, what we now know to be super refraction and thermal inversion (also why they couldnt see the iceberg until just b4 hitting it, it had nothing to do with binoculars, which were not used at night anyway, as they would actually harm the visibility of the lookouts in darkness), everything they saw was distorted, tho they didnt know it. Sure, u can always say later, why not wake up the wireless operator, and Im sure, Captain Lord regretted that for the rest of his life. But as @helenafarkas4534 says, he was eventually woken up, but did not find out, what was going on due to jamming. Im sure, he also regretted for the rest of his life, that he did not stay up longer and attempt to find out, why the signal was jammed. But its understandable, since he likely had almost as long of a shift as Captain Lords 17 hours. Its always easy to cast blame afterwards, but they really had no reason to suspect anything, yet they still tried several times to contact the, to them, unknown ship.

  • @th8257
    @th8257Ай бұрын

    There's a huge extra issue regarding the weather conditions around Titanic at the time of the disaster. It's covered in a recent documentary and in historian Tim Maltin's book. There's fairly firm evidence that two phenomena, known as super refraction and thermal inversion, were present that night. Super refraction was also deemed by the additional 1992 British Inquiry to be likely a factor in the disaster (they also considered the position of the Californian - it's interesting that the 1992 British inquiry is so rarely referenced). In short, super refraction and thermal inversion are caused when warm and cold currents meet. It creates a set of conditions which create a false horizon, thoroughly distort visibility, masking things near the horizon (hence the reason the iceberg wasn't seen earlier), and making things further away (which would often otherwise be invisible over the horizon) seem very much closer and smaller. it's highly likely that the ship in question was the Californian, but the visibility distortions made the rockets, morse lamps and actual shape of the Titanic and Californian look completely different to each other. Whatever you think of the theory, there are some amazing pictures online, showing examples of how refraction and thermal inversion thoroughly distort visibility at sea. Any ship experiencing them, especially at night in that era, would have huge problems. As Captain Lord of the Californian said "it was a very deceiving night".

  • @TheSaneHatter

    @TheSaneHatter

    Ай бұрын

    Yep; that's exactly what *I* was going to post. Thank you. That class of illusion, called, "fata morgana," has indeed been theorized as not only why the Californian failed to clearly see Titanic's distress, but part of why Titanic hit the iceberg in the first place. And by all accounts, that evening's conditions were perfect for the illusion to occur. Another point worth noting: a man who narrowly missed being aboard Titanic, as one of its wireless operators, was Jack Binns, whose own heroism had saved the lives of White Star passengers just a couple of years earlier, when the SS Republic hit the SS Florida. (He declined the Titanic assignment because he was getting married that weekend.) But while it's not likely that his individual presence could have changed the events of that day, a suggestion of his, made after the earlier accident, could have changed things: a recommendation that from then on, wireless stations should be manned 24/7. If Evans had a relief officer, things might have been different.

  • @chrismarley3536

    @chrismarley3536

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this information & education.

  • @davidhollingdale5408

    @davidhollingdale5408

    Ай бұрын

    Greetings from England. Thank you for sharing these pertinent phenomena, of which I was ignorant. Titanic has held a particular fascination for me since I have two (extremely peripheral) connections to the disaster. First,my ex-partner's great-uncle helped build her and second I am sending this from my home town of Bolton...also the birthplace of Stanley Lord. 👍

  • @mtlicq

    @mtlicq

    Ай бұрын

    @@TheSaneHatter Thank you ! I learned something today ! fata morgana boats that float in the air video on youtube shows it well

  • @thing_under_the_stairs

    @thing_under_the_stairs

    Ай бұрын

    @@TheSaneHatter I have seen fata morgana mirages over the Great Lakes in the winter more than once, and even in full daylight, they're strange and deceiving things. I honestly can't say whether I've seen one at night because of their deceptive nature, as the experiences of the Californian's crew suggests. Because of this experience, I don't place so much blame on Captain Lord's inactivity as some people do.

  • @krisgray8124
    @krisgray8124Ай бұрын

    Here's a postulation to the unidentified ship. It was a group of time traveling tourists who paid handsomely to witness the sinking of the Titanic. They could not assist aid at risk of disrupting the space time continuum. Furthermore a temporal static shell surrounded their ship, ensuring that no interference would be rendered by the tourists. I think Casper Van Dien wrote a treatise on this.

  • @markwilliams8369

    @markwilliams8369

    Ай бұрын

    I've suspected the same 🙂

  • @ald1144

    @ald1144

    Ай бұрын

    Impossible. You can't get a ship up to 88 miles an hour.

  • @spo616

    @spo616

    Ай бұрын

    🍑😮👍🏻👎🏾🤣

  • @fishingmasterstudios9481

    @fishingmasterstudios9481

    Ай бұрын

    you serious or joking?

  • @haredr6511

    @haredr6511

    Ай бұрын

    Well, time traveling into the past is impossible, BUT, if it were possible, it’s 100% within morbid human nature to set-up a tourist excursion to witness the incident.

  • @TheOfficial007
    @TheOfficial007Ай бұрын

    One of the things that is neat about "A Night to Remember" is they portray the sinking differently because that was what surviving witnesses had disputed based on what had happened in the darkness during the phase after the lightning was lost. Really shows the difference in theories that still cover the final moments before she reached bottom.

  • @kellybreen5526

    @kellybreen5526

    Ай бұрын

    One odd fact is that the sinking ship footage is recycled from a Second World War propaganda film produced by the Nazis. The director died before the film was released by apparent suicide.

  • @marhawkman303

    @marhawkman303

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah first movie about the sinking didn't even try to explain the sinking, it just captured the thoughts of the passengers as they ran for their lives.

  • @dfuher968

    @dfuher968

    Ай бұрын

    Well, actually "A Night to Remember" was filled with misinformation, that was known to be false even then. They went for drama, not facts. And they went for the false premises, that was claimed at the inquest of the Titanic sinking in 1 piece, claimed by so-called experts, in complete contradiction with witness testimonies. Every survivor, who actually saw the sinking, said, that the Titanic broke in half, but the so-called experts condescendingly dismissed them and claimed, that was impossible, and the inquest went with the opinion of those, who were not there, over the opinion of every1, who was there. In fact, "A Night to Remember" is the cause of the vast majority of the countless false myths about the Titanic, that still flourish today, despite that most of them were already either known to be false at the time of the sinking or proven to be false long b4 the film was made. That movie and the vindictiveness and pettiness and greed of William Randolph Hearst are by far the worst causes of lies told about the Titanic, even worse than the conspiracy nuts of today.

  • @unbearifiedbear1885

    @unbearifiedbear1885

    Ай бұрын

    My favourite movie of the event. First saw it at age 4 or 5 (first time I'd heard of Titanic) and it never left me Really gets the sheer terror and absolute helplessness of the event across.. a purely "human" account of the tragedy I love that Camerons "Titanic" paid homage with so many shot-for-shot recreations and nods to ANTR

  • @markwilliams8369

    @markwilliams8369

    Ай бұрын

    @@unbearifiedbear1885 In Cameron's Titanic none of the crew have any redeeming features, they are all portrayed as villain's, shooting the poor Oirish.

  • @greenthing99100
    @greenthing99100Ай бұрын

    Thank you. What I enjoyed most about this account of the sad story of the Titanic and the iceberg is that you tread a very careful line between fact and speculation, and avoid overdramatising what was already quite dramatic enough. My grandfather worked all his working life on the Cunard liners, including being part of the crew of the Queen Mary on her epic solo troopship voyages during WW2, protected by nothing except her speed and the guile of her officers.

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Don't die as a disbeliever

  • @JobberBud
    @JobberBudАй бұрын

    I think it shows tactful restraint on your part to go so long without covering the Titanic; and when you finally did, you covered a unique aspect of the tragedy. Very well done.

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Dog not allowed ect

  • @girl1213
    @girl1213Ай бұрын

    Drowning is one of my greatest fears when it comes to thinking about death. It's why it's hard for me to watch anything related to sea disasters like the Titanic. But it fills me with appreciation for the men and women who decided to willingly stay on the ship. I don't know how brave you have to be to accept that fate, be it to keep the lights and pumps running or to not be separated from your loved one.

  • @Orly90

    @Orly90

    Ай бұрын

    Most people froze to death. Maybe a few drowned like the engineers, but most passengers froze to death. Anyone that remained inside the stern would have been killed by pressure on her descent.

  • @david-spliso1928

    @david-spliso1928

    Ай бұрын

    Read the story of John Harper and the Titanic passengers.

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@david-spliso1928 suicide not allowed

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@Orly90 suicide not allowed

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Suicide not allowed

  • @kellybreen5526
    @kellybreen5526Ай бұрын

    This story about the inability to use the Morse lamps adds to my belief that the weather conditions created a superior mirage. Warm air and cold water causes light to bend. It would explain why the iceberg was not seen until too late. If you check “superior mirage - images” there is a photo of a thousand foot cargo ship and the hull has disappeared. Only the fore cabin and the tip of the funnel at the stern are visible. If I were smarter I would figure out a way to attach the image. It is remarkable.

  • @Sassymouse88

    @Sassymouse88

    Ай бұрын

    Just looked it up, that. Is. NUTS!

  • @l.l.2463

    @l.l.2463

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for that info. Very interesting.

  • @washingtonradio

    @washingtonradio

    Ай бұрын

    The mirage theory has been around for awhile, also atmospheric conditions could have caused the Morse lamp signals to be in decipherable for both ships.

  • @Rfk1966

    @Rfk1966

    Ай бұрын

    A flat sea might have acerbated a low level inversion which *might* have led to this effect. Conversely, an inversion may have also increased the range of the Marconi system. Hard to know for sure, but it’s a distinct possibility that an inversion was present as it was a clear night with light winds and the temperature was reported to drop rather quickly when the ship neared the ice field.

  • @thing_under_the_stairs

    @thing_under_the_stairs

    Ай бұрын

    They're called Superior Mirages after Lake Superior, because they're actually not uncommon on the Great Lakes when the water temperatures drop in the autumn. I've seen a few, and they're a strange phenomenon to put it mildly.

  • @Thesiouxempirepodcast
    @ThesiouxempirepodcastАй бұрын

    I hadn’t watched in a while and you popped back up in my recommended messages yesterday, I spent the whole day binge watching a bunch of your videos. Love your channel. Then this new one drops right in the morning oh man that’s so great.

  • @DelbelOfTheVoid

    @DelbelOfTheVoid

    Ай бұрын

    Happened to me as well!

  • @weareallmadhere417

    @weareallmadhere417

    Ай бұрын

    Same

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@weareallmadhere417 dog not allowed ect

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@DelbelOfTheVoid dog not allowed ect

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Dog not allowed ect

  • @diannebdee
    @diannebdeeАй бұрын

    No matter the issue, Captain Lord's conduct was deplorable during both hearings. And remember, "I was sleeping." That's the same thing as "I was just following orders" from Nuremberg. Also, where was the scratch log? Where did it go? There was also some speculation the ship's log itself had been tampered with. My take is that after Titanic sank, Lord ordered his men to cover up what they knew. There may be no villains, however, Lord didn't help himself by his reticence to act to go to Titanic's position, or to admit The Californian was the "mystery ship." Anyone of the Titanic crew who survived told of the "mystery ship." I think we know who that was and why they didn't respond, "I was sleeping."

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    Ай бұрын

    In contrast to Cpt Rostron's testimony which was prompt and forthright Lord's was very hesitant. I, too, have a feeling that he might've ordered a coverup I have a feeling he just didn't feel like giving up on his nice and toasty warm bunk. He thought it was all he would ever have to do to tell the court that he took what he saw was the prudent step of laying stopped for the night while the Titanic was careening recklessly through the ice. As it turned out, that slap on Cpt Smith's face didn't work. And then there was also not only Ernest Gill's affidavit but also the Californian's carpenter James McGregor who stated that he was close enough to see the Titanic's lights and distress rockets.

  • @MrDaros89

    @MrDaros89

    25 күн бұрын

    @@jeffreyloll4291 Also a major convenience how some of the biggest opponents of the Federal Reserve Act was travelling on the same cruiser.

  • @ikatmax
    @ikatmaxАй бұрын

    This video was so well done I just realized that 14 April 2024 fell on a Sunday just like 1912. You did a great job with this one ❤🎉😊

  • @priyv8710

    @priyv8710

    Ай бұрын

    omg...cant believe I came across this comment that spoke my mind....when he mentioned in the video that on 14 th April Snday, I immediately checked the calender to verify the day...

  • @ikatmax

    @ikatmax

    Ай бұрын

    @priyv8710 after this video i saw how many Titanic videos were put up and I was like wasn't yesterday the 14th so I also had to double check hehe

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@ikatmax dog not allowed ect

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@priyv8710 dog not allowed ect

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Dog not allowed ect

  • @MvPruett003
    @MvPruett003Ай бұрын

    "White stars slowly descended back down to sea" is an amazing line, @BigOldBoats!

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Dog not allowed ect

  • @johnjephcote7636
    @johnjephcote7636Ай бұрын

    I understood that Lightoller interpreted 'Women and children first' as 'Women and children only', resulting in some lifeboats with room to spare. I recall that Walter Lord's book (containing inaccuracies) stated that one of the Californian's officers had noted that rockets were often fired in the Tropics for amusement...which sounds a crazy observation in this latitude.

  • @amystubby
    @amystubbyАй бұрын

    I've been on a binge of your channel lately, absolutely love your videos. You're a natural story teller.

  • @davinp
    @davinpАй бұрын

    Also, after the Titanic sinking, laws were passed to require enough lifeboats for all passengers and that lifeboat drills were mandatory. Captian Smith canceled the lifeboat drill that was scheduled for the morning on April 14, 1912.

  • @dovetonsturdee7033

    @dovetonsturdee7033

    Ай бұрын

    There had been a lifeboat drill in Southampton before Titanic sailed. I assume you know that such drills involved the crew only, not passengers?

  • @SofaKingShit

    @SofaKingShit

    Ай бұрын

    Due to the fact that lifeboats are a an extremely important part of a ships safety system that can safely shelter many dozens of people out on the open ocean in potentially appallingly hazardous weather conditions in what could possibly be, at least in the worst case scenario, an extended period of time potentially lasting several weeks and in spite of the fact that modern lifeboats are made of very durable and tough materials designed to successfully ride out hurricanes and even survive collisions with rocks or ice l don't think that there should be any drilling going on around the lifeboats, especially with power drills. It only takes one mistake and somebody could drill right into the hull.

  • @dfuher968

    @dfuher968

    Ай бұрын

    The lifeboats are the subject of so so many lies and conspiracy theories. As is Captain Smith. As @dovetonsturdee7022 said, there was a lifeboat drill in Southampton, b4 they sailed. Captain Smith was not negligent, he fully complied with the safety regulations of the White Star Line, which were actually far more stringent than the legal regulations of the time. Just like Titanic had twice the number of lifeboats, they were required to have. It is correct, that laws were passed after the Titanic sinking, and not just regarding lifeboats. The vast majority of the safety regulations, we have today, came about due to the Titanic. Unfortunately most ppl never consider the regulations of the time, they only consider modern regulations and hence have a very distorted view of it. Just like most ppl have a very distorted, dishonest view of Captain Smith. Courtesy of William Randolph Hearst, who just made loads of stuff and deliberately smeared Bruce Ismay (who he had a personal grudge against, since Ismay had once refused an interview with his paper, coz apparently he was that petty and vindictive) and Captain Smith as an extension. The records of the time say something completely different, yet ppl still spread Hearst's lies today. He was the original fake news perpetrator.

  • @DistractedGlobeGuy

    @DistractedGlobeGuy

    Ай бұрын

    He didn't actually cancel it-he rescheduled it for 9:00AM the following morning, the exact time Captain Rostron was closing _Carpathia's_ gangways and preparing to leave the site of the disaster with the survivors.

  • @mariamatheson5300

    @mariamatheson5300

    Ай бұрын

    @@dovetonsturdee7033 I thought that was when she did her sea trials.

  • @daphne8406
    @daphne8406Ай бұрын

    Yes, it is a company signal for sure when a ship sends up rockets in the middle of the night in the middle of nowhere in the middle of the ocean 😑 I do not understand this thought process 🤷‍♀️

  • @stevenkarnisky411

    @stevenkarnisky411

    Ай бұрын

    Well, @daphne8406, you were not yet born in 1912! As our narrator says, "Safety regulations were rather vague at the time."

  • @ShortArmOfGod

    @ShortArmOfGod

    Ай бұрын

    Well when you tell another ship there's icebergs, and that you're stopping, and then you see the other ship, stopped, what are you supposed to think?

  • @mynameiswritinwater

    @mynameiswritinwater

    Ай бұрын

    for one 10-12 miles (nautical miles that is 20 rough 19-22km.) distance makes even a largeship liks Titanic a TINY blip on the horizon, and mostly hidden by the curvature. Movies never get that (since the audience feels a need to see the ship itself - the screen shown here for the movies show a ship at best 2-3 miles away, at an almost flat 90° angle ). Same goes for rockets reaching up into the sky for a few hundred, even a thousand feet - that's barely a fingers width above the horizon at that distance and they only shine for almost a minute , and they might also have been fired for other purposes like illuminating the water to assist navigation or rescue (as in man-overboard ) situations. As a personal note I live on the outsskirts of a large port city in Europe, and I can see the harbour up river from where I live (that being 18km - it's a mostly straight run ). I can see the harbour and some cranes, and even the harbour bridge, but making out a signal rocket (or firework at that distance, say New Years ) is pretty hard, even in perfect visibility - which obviously was not the case on April 14th 1912. I can certainly NOT see a ship in the harbour except for the most giant of current Container-freighters (in the +12k units ) , which utterly dwarf Titanic, and evem then I see only the bridge, funnel and abovedeck structures, but not the hull unless they are halfway down the river. At 20km only object at 31metersabove sea level are visible to me... de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erdkr%C3%BCmmung#:~:text=78%20mm%20auf%201%20km,85%20m%20auf%2010%20km Also stringency and directness of naval safety signals got much updated after the Titanic, starting with changed Morse codes (from CQD to now Standard SoS ) and strict regulation on rocket use, colour indications and burn durations. compare : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SOS SOS became the standard signal in 1914

  • @dfuher968

    @dfuher968

    Ай бұрын

    Well, let me enlighten u then. Distress rockets were red. Titanic fired off white rockets, which were used for celebrations. Furthermore, while safety regulations were vague (most of what we have today is courtesy of the Titanic sinking), there were rules, including that distress rockets be fired at fixed intervals, that being 1 every minute on the minute, but Titanic only fired a total of 8 rockets over the period of an hour and with random intervals. There was nothing to say, that those were distress rocket, and everything to say that it was either entertainment for the passengers or communication with another company ship. Simple as that. Dont be denigrating, when u dont know the rules, they sailed under. Oh btw, I almost forget. Even if the Californian had somehow guessed, what we know in hindsight, they never wouldve made it to the Titanic in time. They had stopped for the night, the boilers were not lit. The Titanic wouldve sunk, b4 they even got the boilers lit and got underway. And then theres the weather conditions, that caused, what we now know as super refraction and thermal inversion. In simple terms, the weather caused optical illusions with severe distortions, which among other things hid things close to the horizon, such as the iceberg, hence why they only saw it so late. That had nothing to do with missing binoculars, binoculars were never used at night, as they would only decrease the field of vision in the dark. And the optical illusions also bent and distorted the light of far away ships, making them look much closer. The Californian may have looked to be only 5 miles away from the Titanic, but as was established in the 1992 British Inquery, the ships were actually around 20 miles apart. And the Californian being a small cargo ship would have been hours covering that distance, even if she had been ready to sail at a moments notice, which, as I outlined, she was not. And she was much smaller than Carpathia, the ppl claiming, she couldve taken all ppl off Titanic most be smoking something interesting, coz that was not physically possible, even if she couldve reached the Titanic in time. Which, again, for the reason I mentioned and several more, has been proven definitively, that she could not. She wouldve been hours too late, likely even if she had had her boilers up and running, and Captain Lord had decided to risk his ship, crew and his few passengers, like Carpathia did (and got very lucky, she didnt end up like the Titanic), she wouldve arrived well into the morning, long after Carpathia.

  • @mynameiswritinwater

    @mynameiswritinwater

    Ай бұрын

    just checked some stuff about HMS Carpathia coming to the rescue - she was also firing rockets both to illuminate passage through the icefield (Growlers and actual bergs,one of which she narrowly missed - possibly she was only going at 15knots instead of Tinatics 20+ - on the way to Titanic and announcing her approach to the sinking giant. And I trust the re-estimated assessment of the MIA from the 1980ies with Titanics exact position more than the takes of historians doing assessments on positions which were factually false , many of the historians which have little or limited background in actual maritime sailing and endeavours. Good historians, maybe... good mariners ? Versed with actual conditions at sea ? Less likely. It's easy to claim from the comfort of a desk that seeing something at 20+km at night is "obvious". Would like to see their actual take on a cold April night on the Great Banks

  • @jenniferlevine5406
    @jenniferlevine5406Ай бұрын

    Beautifully written. You did a wonderful job on your (1st) Titanic documentary! I really appreciate your take on this tragic sinking. You are so right, much better to focus attention on the heroes instead of seeking out blame and fault. I am sure I'll watch this many times. Thanks for all your efforts making this video!

  • @marcuscarana9240
    @marcuscarana9240Ай бұрын

    In the 1997 Titanic film, the Californian is shown in one scene as a very tiny dot of light far away in the distance. The dot of light was so tiny you had to zoom in just to see it in the scene.

  • @gregorydahl

    @gregorydahl

    Ай бұрын

    A whaling ship was illegally hunting whales with flare parachute rockets but would not answer because they were illegal and titsnic was called unsinkable . The emlty ship california was farther ahead waiting for titanic as planned but titanic was stopped signaling the whaling ship . The carpathia came the next morning . The ship labled titanic was in fact the older beat up and bent olympic with tin plated hand painted letters over the name olympic . Olypic was so damaged from numerous wreck one of which was a collision with the hms hawk navy ship that would not pay . So white star lines swithched the nameplates and planned on sinking the olympic and say it was the new titanic and collect insurance .

  • @thatoneguy9666

    @thatoneguy9666

    Ай бұрын

    @@gregorydahlnot true, the titanic was the titanic

  • @AntiContradiction

    @AntiContradiction

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@gregorydahl what a lame theory with no evidence to back it up to this day

  • @kainhall

    @kainhall

    Ай бұрын

    ​@gregorydahl which has been debunked

  • @HazmatUnit

    @HazmatUnit

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@gregorydahlYou don't think Captain Smith would of realized it was the Olympic, he was also a captain of the Olympic at one point in his career

  • @chaffiebombs
    @chaffiebombsАй бұрын

    Glad you finally added the titanic to the channel. Well done btw. I too was fascinated by the titanic leading to interest in ships

  • @fmyoung
    @fmyoungАй бұрын

    21:55 I did notice; "A Night to Remember" is a good film in its own right. Speaking of which, this might be a fun fact: its soundtrack composer, William Alwyn, died on September 11, 1985, ten days after Robert Ballard's expedition found the wreck.

  • @randomrazr
    @randomrazrАй бұрын

    even if the californian got titanics distress call, by the time titanic sent its first distress call the calofornian would have never made it. it would have taken time for it to build up steam to start her engines, and then navigate around hte ice field they were in. By that time the titnic would have went under. however it may have been possible to save a couple more lives at it would ahve arrived earlier then carpathia as some people did die waiting int he lifeboats

  • @tgfabthunderbird1

    @tgfabthunderbird1

    Ай бұрын

    Precisely this. Robert Ballard wrote a commentary about Captain Lord's behavior. The practical standpoint was as you said--there would have been little for him to do, but Ballard also pointed out that Lord failed to act "when action was required."

  • @PassiveSmoking

    @PassiveSmoking

    Ай бұрын

    Whether he would have got there in time to make a significant different to the outcome is moot. The real failure is that he didn't even attempt to determine what was going on. Had he given Cyril Evans a tap on the shoulder and said "Sorry to bother you but there's a ship that seems a bit odd out there. Could you get on the wireless and see if there's anything going on?" then we would not be having this conversation because the news would have got to the bridge, Lord would have made a rescue attempt, and regardless of its outcome history would have recorded that he did his best to render assistance.

  • @gohanangered9650

    @gohanangered9650

    Ай бұрын

    Even so, it's still a taboo not to make a attempt to help out a ship. There's been other stories, where ships did that in history. And the captains weren't treated well.

  • @crazyeddie1981

    @crazyeddie1981

    Ай бұрын

    The californian had half of her engines running which was common pratice for ships stopped like that. They need to make headway to avoid drifting with the currents. Studies have shown that if she reacted when she seen the first rocket she could have made it in under an hour. The ice fields between titanic and californian was sparse and would have been easily navigatable

  • @Borninthe80s.

    @Borninthe80s.

    Ай бұрын

    @@crazyeddie1981 she would have reached the area the same time as the carpathia

  • @p.k.5455
    @p.k.5455Ай бұрын

    There are so many times in life that are "gray" with lots of what it's but no villains and sometimes, no good guys as well. Trying to explain this to kids is so hard as they see the black and white! You did a great job on your first Titanic video! The voice you added was well spoken, and intelligent!

  • @sirrliv
    @sirrlivАй бұрын

    A more recent line of speculation that's caught my attention is: What could Californian have done if she *had* picked up Titanic's distress calls? And while it's easy to say "She could have saved everyone! She was so close, surely she could have been there in no time at all, perhaps in time to take people off the doomed ship while she was still above water", when considering Californian's situation and status that night, the reality is a bit more complicated and the truth is more likely that she couldn't have done much at all. Firstly, consider that Californian was not a speedy liner like Titanic or even Carpathia. She as primarily a cargo ship with a top speed of maybe 12 knots on a good day. She had cabin space for some 47 passengers plus uncomfortable, poorly ventilated bunks for 55 officers and crew. In short, even if she had been at full readiness, Californian wouldn't be "racing" anywhere. And she wasn't at full readiness when she spotted the mystery steamer that cold April night. Remember, Californian had stopped due to being surrounded by field ice. Although her engineers had been told to remain on standby, her boilers were still kept in only light steam, enough to keep the power running and to be able to be stoked back up to full pressure fairly quickly, but still roughly half working pressure to avoid wasting coal or keeping everyone awake all night with blowing safety valves. If she'd gotten the distress calls from Titanic or understood what the rockets truly meant, it would have taken time to stoke the boilers back to full readiness, and more time still to accelerate from a dead stop and turn back towards Titanic's position. In short, even if Captain Lord had somehow had a psychic premonition the exact moment Titanic hit the iceberg and immediately ordered his crew to head to her rescue, there's no possible way Californian could have gotten to Titanic before her final plunge. But say Californian *had* made a mad dash to the rescue. We return to the first point with the question: Now what? You're surrounded by desperate, injured, freezing survivors. What do you do with them? Again, Californian was not a passenger ship; she had extremely little if any space to put anybody. Those in the most critical condition might have been put in the empty cabins. But for the majority of people, the only place for all those 760-off frozen people would have likely been the cold, drafty cargo holds, atop a load of cotton bound for New Orleans via Boston. Titanic's passengers would have been stuck for maybe another week as the slower ship plodded its way into Boston. And that's not even getting into unknowns, like how much food and stores the Californian had left for her journey and what medical services would have been available. The best case scenario I could see if Californian could have reaches the site even shortly after Titanic sank is that she would have picked up as many survivors as she could, her crew obviously doing everything in their limited power to help them without adequate food, drink, or medical supplies for so many. And, upon learning from Titanic's officers that Carpathia was on her way, rather than taking off for New York herself, Californian would simply have waited for Carpathia to arrive and transferred all the survivors she could to the larger, better equipped liner, before returning to her own course for Boston, perhaps with a few Titanic passengers still aboard, those either too injured or too traumatized to move. But the idea of this ship, so close and yet to far, sweeping in to be the big damn hero that saved everybody is sadly just as far fetched as the opposite notion, that she stood by aloof and did nothing as hundreds died just out of sight. For Captain Lord and the Californian, their legacy was to be placed in a tragic Catch-22 situation; they didn't recognize the distress signals for what they were, but even if they had there wasn't much they could have done. Damned if they did, damned because they didn't.

  • @dovetonsturdee7033

    @dovetonsturdee7033

    Ай бұрын

    Carpathia was only around five knots faster. She was hardly an ocean greyhound herself. I suspect most of the dead would have preferred the 'poorly ventilated bunks' of Californian to the freezing Atlantic, especially since other ships would be arriving in a matter of hours. You seem to think that Titanic & Californian were the only ships in that particular area at the time.

  • @NoewerrATall

    @NoewerrATall

    Ай бұрын

    What an insightful and clear-eyed analysis of the situation. As Bradley himself mentioned in the close of the video, people want stories to have heroes and villains, and everything to have clear answers. It's difficult to get the average listener to a story like this to understand that real life is shades of grey and uncertainty.

  • @ct1762

    @ct1762

    Ай бұрын

    you really think there was only room in the hold? that thing had a massive salon, dining area, and multiple lounge areas all well above the hold. there was plenty of food and water for another 2 day voyage to NY or Boston. thats not remotely an issue. it would only take 45 minutes tops to reach the survivors, and most of them died because of hypothermia. eye witnesses said there were hundreds still alive 30 minutes after being in the water, and that would be far less if the Californian had been on the scene, but most likely hardly anyone would even get their feet wet as the longboats would've set up a ferry system and let the other in titanics boats be loaded last.

  • @takashitamagawa5881

    @takashitamagawa5881

    Ай бұрын

    Good points. I think there is also the question of whether the CALIFORNIAN could have steered a direct course to the ship seen on the horizon. Walter Lord, in his book "The Night Lives On", relates how when Californian finally got back underway she had to find a path around the ice and approached TITANIC's position from the south. Remember that CARPATHIA came to the rescue of TITANIC's position from the south as well, after a harrowing dash where she barely avoided the ice in her path. The ice north of TITANIC, through which CALIFORNIAN would have had to pass were she to steer a direct course, was undoubtedly even thicker. Captain Stanley Lord couldn't have helped much if he seriously damaged his own ship trying to reach the TITANIC. All this doesn't mean that the CALIFORNIAN shouldn't have done something, at least the crew should have tried to communicate with the other ship and seen what they COULD do. But it's certainly not a given that CALIFORNIAN could have saved everybody.

  • @ct1762

    @ct1762

    Ай бұрын

    @@takashitamagawa5881 everybody yes. or nearly everyone thats almost certain. you are making it sound way more complicated than it actually was, no offense at all. there was some ice around, but thats why they used caution. it wasnt enough to seriously consider any sort of aborted rescue.

  • @user-jz3ft9pg1h
    @user-jz3ft9pg1hАй бұрын

    As always, thank you for this amazing video and keep up the great work!

  • @darlenejohnson2662
    @darlenejohnson2662Ай бұрын

    Thank you for this take on this horrible tragedy

  • @randomlyentertaining8287
    @randomlyentertaining8287Ай бұрын

    So the crew of the Titanic were barely able to get their 20 existing lifeboats away in time. How exactly would 20 more have helped? Sure, a few more could've maybe been launched. But we're talking 1500 people. It would barely have made a difference, if any.

  • @jgs1703

    @jgs1703

    Ай бұрын

    They might have launched the boats faster if they knew there was more boats available. They also could have used gotten into the boats once the titanic sank much like the ones that were overturned in the water. I see this NPC thought and comment shared everywhere among titanic videos that more lifeboats would have made zero difference.

  • @juliadagnall5816

    @juliadagnall5816

    Ай бұрын

    ⁠@@jgs1703There is a limit to how quickly you can manually launch a lifeboat, especially since the boats were not motorized and took time to get clear of the ship. Improperly launched life boats have killed many, many people. The introduction of motorized davits and boats would make a big difference, but even in more modern maritime accidents it’s pretty rare for a passenger ship to be able to evacuate the entire ship’s complement without having outside assistance.

  • @jgs1703

    @jgs1703

    Ай бұрын

    @juliadagnall5816 they could have launched them quicker. There was plenty of people who could have helped launched who didn't help that night. They also could have gotten on top of the lifeboats if they flipped just liked they did that night.

  • @juliadagnall5816

    @juliadagnall5816

    Ай бұрын

    @@jgs1703They launched 20 lifeboats in roughly 1 hour and 35 minutes, that’s an average of one boat every five minutes. Launching lifeboats was skilled work, if the boat got tangled in the lines or became unbalanced it could capsize, sending its passengers to their deaths. It’s kind of amazing all of Titanic’s lifeboats (other than collapsible B) were successfully launched. More collapsibles might have helped, since they could theoretically be floated from the deck, but clinging to an overturned boat would have only helped the very physically fit. The water temperature that night was 28 degrees, under those conditions the average person will lose consciousness in 15 minutes and pass away from hypothermia in 45. A swimmer in the water only had a very brief window before they lost muscle control and a number of those who started off in the swamped collapsible A or the capsized collapsible B didn’t make it.

  • @jgs1703

    @jgs1703

    Ай бұрын

    @@juliadagnall5816 they could have assembled additional crews to launch more lifeboats. It's not rocket science.

  • @m0bilemechanix
    @m0bilemechanixАй бұрын

    It was likely the federal reserve guys making sure it went down

  • @dovetonsturdee7033

    @dovetonsturdee7033

    Ай бұрын

    Odd, then, that no-one mentioned this possibility until the appearance of social media in the 1990s, isn't it?

  • @paulfri1569

    @paulfri1569

    Ай бұрын

    Bingo!

  • @fitmesslife

    @fitmesslife

    Ай бұрын

    Genau

  • @codysnider7017
    @codysnider7017Ай бұрын

    I’ve been looking for a documentary like this about the Californian/mystery ship controversy and am so glad to have stumbled across this one! Very informative - I had no idea that the wireless on the Titanic had malfunctioned and that the rules stated that a ship had to wait until it docked before it could be fixed and how if they didn’t fix it the Titanic story would be completely different! Learn something new every day! Again, THANK YOU for this wonderful documentary! I wish there were more like this that focused on the Californian and other possible “mystery ships” that were in the area detailing their parts in the Titanic lore. I’d love to see a video like that!

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101Ай бұрын

    Great watch, top-notch narration and information. First time I saw A Night To Remember was on late night TV when I was a real little kid, that night I had a hard time falling asleep. You have a gift of storytelling, also I could feel the cold from the "Dark, starry night" you used in the vid.......

  • @mbvoelker8448
    @mbvoelker8448Ай бұрын

    For the most part I avoid anything about the Titanic because of all the hype, conspiracy nonsense, and over-romanticism of the tragedy. But since it was you, and you were focusing on an aspect of the story that hasn't been over-hyped, I watched this one. Good job.

  • @NonsensicalNauticalRambings
    @NonsensicalNauticalRambingsАй бұрын

    So many what ifs in Titanic’s story. So much was destined to happen, and so much was changed. If she had her original departure in March, then she still would have collided with the burg, as her 2nd voyage to New York was on April 10th. Had she of collided with SS New York at Southampton, the voyage would have likely been delayed, or even cancelled. Had the mystery ships near her sent out for help, more could have been saved. But, all we do truly know is the events that happened, as they happened. Fate intervened with a standard voyage, and made it the most famous in the world, alongside Columbus’s famous trip in 1492. Titanic was cursed to sink, but blessed to be remembered. Thank you Bradley for another good video.

  • @2mi_o897

    @2mi_o897

    Ай бұрын

    Depends they could’ve used a different route either more northern or southern on the return trip, the trip back also could’ve been delayed so it’s really who knows

  • @commodorezero

    @commodorezero

    Ай бұрын

    @@2mi_o897 The Titanics destiny was set by Captain Smith changing course when Titanic turned the corner late due to an ice warning he received. He was moving south but early climate change put ice into regions that Smith believed was safe based on his experience.

  • @jkephart4624

    @jkephart4624

    Ай бұрын

    Hard to say. .im guessing the second voyage would Have they been a little different. Im guessing after they beat Olympics record they would have been more chill. And the ice warnings probably wouldn't be as backed up because they would have had the machine working properly (most likely)

  • @jayxfrost8987

    @jayxfrost8987

    Ай бұрын

    had she been switched with Olympic (as someone conspiracy theorists believe she was) this wouldn't have happened because "The Old Reliable" Olympic was a bad ass.

  • @77biker777
    @77biker777Ай бұрын

    Just yesterday I watched A Night to Remember for the first time. Way better than i expected it to be

  • @dfuher968

    @dfuher968

    Ай бұрын

    Just as long as u dont think, its factually correct. Coz that movie and the lies of William Randolph Hearst and his yellowpaged "news"papers are the prime perpetrators for the vast majority of the many many falsehoods about the Titanic, that ppl still believe today. And even in 1959 most of it was known to be false, so no excuse.

  • @mariamatheson5300

    @mariamatheson5300

    Ай бұрын

    A great movie. Good actors too.

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    Ай бұрын

    It is a good film

  • @clintonreisig
    @clintonreisigАй бұрын

    The complacency of so many crew & officers in one incident is shocking

  • @shawnkeith1164
    @shawnkeith1164Ай бұрын

    Unfortunately more lifeboats would not have helped. They barely had time to launch the ones they had.

  • @bri-manhunter2654

    @bri-manhunter2654

    Ай бұрын

    I never thought of that.

  • @aliciabrinkofski386

    @aliciabrinkofski386

    Ай бұрын

    @@bri-manhunter2654 Thimk of it this way. The last two boats were floated off the ship. One upside down.

  • @bri-manhunter2654

    @bri-manhunter2654

    Ай бұрын

    @@aliciabrinkofski386. You are totally right! A lot of navy vessels that sank in WWII were the same way, not enough time to use the lifeboats.

  • @commodorezero

    @commodorezero

    Ай бұрын

    Correct. If they had a timer and went as fast as they could maybe they could done 1-2 more but it is clear they didn't have time to launch 48 boats if they had them. The logic behind not updating lifeboat regs for superliners was sound because an incident where help couldn't arrive in time is not likely to be one where you have the time to launch all the boats.

  • @tinypoolmodelshipyard

    @tinypoolmodelshipyard

    Ай бұрын

    Another thing most dont realize about lifeboats is most ships sink leaning to one side or other. Making the boats on the higher side useless. Titanic is one of the only ships to sink on a mostly even keel. Most capsize or roll on their damaged side before the final plunge. Titanic is a anomaly in shipwrecks. The thought behind 48 lifeboats shouldnt have been to fit all, but to sure there was enough on each side incase one side became inoperable. Also advances in davits made this less of a concern also. But most ships sink faster than all the boats can be put into use

  • @Ci-D3
    @Ci-D3Ай бұрын

    Beautifully done, thanks for the video

  • @_KRose
    @_KRoseАй бұрын

    The fact that they saw the rockets but nobody thought to wake the wireless operator to try communicating is one of those unfortunate bits of negligence. Everything else can be excused. I guess there wasn't much in the way of regulation back then to state "hey, these rockets mean one thing and ONLY one thing and this ship needs help" so there was a lot of room for guessing and assuming.

  • @commonwombat9171

    @commonwombat9171

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, the one item where Captain Lord of the Californian warrants censure was his failure to have his wireless operator woken and go "back on the air". Would they have got there before Titanic went down ? No, Californian WAS too far away and not fast enough plus the reality of having to safely negotiate their way there through an ice field at night. Remember that Rostron on the Carpathia slowed down once he reached the ice field. Might a few more lives been saved ? A "Maybe" at very best.

  • @NoewerrATall

    @NoewerrATall

    Ай бұрын

    Wireless radio communication aboard ship was still a pretty new situation at the time of the Titanic sinking. As Bradley himself mentioned in the video, the radio on Titanic was considered to be mostly a first-class perk, and not a critical system aboard ship. It's likely that Captain Lord on his bridge that night didn't understand the possibilities that the radio set on board represented and so never occurred to him to wake the radio operator.

  • @helenafarkas4534

    @helenafarkas4534

    Ай бұрын

    @@commonwombat9171 he was. he happened to tune in during one of the periods of jamming due to so many ships trying to talk at once(there was only one available frequency).the transcript shows that happened MULTIPLE times that night. unable to make sense of the din, he went back to bed.

  • @tominsley787

    @tominsley787

    Ай бұрын

    @@NoewerrATall "It's likely that Captain Lord on his bridge that night didn't understand the possibilities that the radio set on board represented and so never occurred to him to wake the radio operator." OR ... Captain Lord, finding himself in sea ice for the first time as a captain, had the following thought process: "Hm. What Stone is telling me sounds like it _might_ be a distress signal ... or it might not. I'm not 100% sure, and as long as I'm not 100% sure then I can stay put for the night. But if I wake up Evans, and he finds out that it really is a ship in distress ... well, then I'm committed." And he rolled the dice that it would be okay to wait until daybreak to figure out what was going on ....

  • @DistractedGlobeGuy

    @DistractedGlobeGuy

    Ай бұрын

    The unfortunate thing is that Third Officer Lt Charles Groves was actually an amateur radio hobbyist himself, and he'd had Mr Evans show him how to power the system on and take down incoming messages. Lt Groves went into the office and put on the headphones at one point to listen and didn't hear anything. He had unknowingly forgotten one switch that would have brought the reception array online, but he reported to Lt Stone that there were no signals being sent-which in turn only would have made Stone less confident that what he was seeing was anything all that serious, and that Evans needed to be roused and brought back on duty. There were at least a good half-dozen factors at play that left _Californian's_ crew both horribly confused about the situation, and yet also frustratingly blind to just how little they actually understood about it, and almost none of those elements can be reasonably classified as negligence on their part. Had any one of literally hundreds of uncontrollable non-human factors been just the slightest bit different, we wouldn't be here more than a century later.

  • @trj1442
    @trj1442Ай бұрын

    Great narration. One of my favourite channels. Thankyou.

  • @bradparker9664
    @bradparker9664Ай бұрын

    Very well done. I especially like the emphasis at the end on "there are no villains.". People can only do they best they can with the information they have at that moment. My time in law enforcement also proved another of your points...tragedy is rarely the result of a single misstep. It almost certainly occurs after a series of events that, in their totality, result in disaster. Remove any one contributing factor and that disaster is avoided. So one person, or even a small number of people, can rarely be blamed for any given calamity. Excellent film, sir. You have a new subscriber.

  • @dees3179
    @dees3179Ай бұрын

    That was so eloquently put. Raising a glass to you. Well done.

  • @plaidzebra5526
    @plaidzebra5526Ай бұрын

    18:09 You should do a video on all the theories of the mystery ship. Weather if it was the California or not.

  • @moosifer3321

    @moosifer3321

    Ай бұрын

    There are reports of illegal fishermen/sealers being present in the vicinity - any real evidence that these could have been the `Mystery Ship`?

  • @codysnider7017

    @codysnider7017

    Ай бұрын

    @@moosifer3321I believe you’re referring to the Samson and no, she couldn’t have been the mystery ship. Icelandic port records indicated that the Samson was docked on April 6 and April 20, which would’ve made it impossible for the schooner to be in the area of the sinking on April 14-15. Furthermore, there was nothing illegal about seal hunting on the high seas in international waters in 1912, and the area where the Titanic sank was hundreds of miles from “territorial waters” and far away from where most seals live in the Arctic Ocean Circle. Nonetheless, I think it is still possible that another third ship was in the area and was seen by both the Titanic and the Californian. I’ve read some testimonials from those in the lifeboats that claimed they saw another mysterious light but that it was from a ship much smaller than the light that was likely coming from the Californian and all who testified believed that it looked the light of a fishing vessel/schooner. It’s interesting to note that on the other side of the ice field, Captain James Henry Moore of the Mount Temple gave testimony about seeing a schooner only about a mile away from his ship and how he had to take extra precautions to avoid colliding with the mysterious schooner, which he said also blew a foghorn likely as a sign that the two ships were getting too dangerously close to one another. But from everything I’ve read on this topic of the light on the horizon, most Titanic historians do not believe the Samson was this other mystery ship.

  • @carloschristanio4709

    @carloschristanio4709

    Ай бұрын

    Monte temple is a favorite for mystery ship

  • @aj6954

    @aj6954

    Ай бұрын

    @@carloschristanio4709 It is THE favourite with evidence to support it. Californian was 19.5 miles from Titanic, wireless had shut down for the night, hence it took no action. There was a ship seen from Californian and although many think it was Titanic, it wasn`t.

  • @dfuher968

    @dfuher968

    Ай бұрын

    Check out Oceanliner Designs. Mike Brady has loads of videos about the Titanic, looking at all kinds of aspects and details, including the theories of the mystery ship.

  • @farfle
    @farfleАй бұрын

    Thank you for using clips from A Night to Remember, imho the best Titanic film!

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    Ай бұрын

    That is a good film no doubt

  • @Rheneas
    @RheneasАй бұрын

    Love your content!!

  • @doublevideos5424
    @doublevideos5424Ай бұрын

    You did a fantastic job for your first RMS Titanic video!!!😄

  • @stevenkarnisky411
    @stevenkarnisky411Ай бұрын

    A sensitive and thorough account! Well done!

  • @bmikula1861
    @bmikula186119 күн бұрын

    Beautiful presentation. I especially love the end of this video though it included mine eyes to cry . Again, very well done. Thank you .

  • @miketackabery7521
    @miketackabery752122 күн бұрын

    Wonderful video. It's almost elegiac. Perfect wrapping it up with Boxell. Thank you. I'll remember this for a long time.

  • @mychaldbeausoleil3043
    @mychaldbeausoleil3043Ай бұрын

    Growing up I had the pleasure of meeting and talking with one of the survivors.

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    19 минут бұрын

    Which ones?

  • @htos1av
    @htos1avАй бұрын

    Pretty cool to cover this from the crew's perspective. Good stuff.

  • @Inkling777
    @Inkling777Ай бұрын

    Many thanks for the best research on this issue I've seen.

  • @StephenCole1916
    @StephenCole1916Ай бұрын

    "If only..." If only one single thing happened differently, the disaster may never have happened. This was something writer Walter Lord said in a documentary years ago, "If only..."

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    Ай бұрын

    He did say that both in his '86 book "A Night to Remember" (one of the first chapters) and also towards the end of "Titanic: The Complete Story" from A&E; he said "all these if-onlys" stirred him "more than anything"

  • @StephenCole1916

    @StephenCole1916

    Ай бұрын

    @@fmyoung I just watched that the other night!

  • @Feline_Frenzy53
    @Feline_Frenzy53Ай бұрын

    "On a Sea of Glass is a wonderful book and "A Night to Remember" is the BEST Titanic movie. Thank you for presenting Joseph Boxhall's story.

  • @dfuher968

    @dfuher968

    Ай бұрын

    Its only the best Titanic movie, if u dont mind, that its almost completely fact free, that it is based on false "facts", that were already then known to be false, and that it has perpetuated the vast majority of all the falsehoods still being believed today, despite that most of it was known at the time of the sinking and certainly long b4 the movie was made. I like old time movies. I dont like, when theyre used to distort or outright falsify history and spread conspiracy theories and lies.

  • @FraudulentEarth68

    @FraudulentEarth68

    Ай бұрын

    @@dfuher968 so what's the truth in the Federal Reserve hypothesis?

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@FraudulentEarth68 dog not allowed ect

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@FraudulentEarth68 dog not allowed ect

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@dfuher968 dog not allowed ect

  • @tomcurda4203
    @tomcurda4203Ай бұрын

    In case anyone is wondering, the movie clips are from "A Night to Remember".

  • @jamescharlton4915

    @jamescharlton4915

    Ай бұрын

    What night I can’t remember

  • @pandap4ntz

    @pandap4ntz

    Ай бұрын

    He does include that info at the end of the video, just fyi, not tryna b mean or anything.

  • @jamescharlton4915

    @jamescharlton4915

    Ай бұрын

    @@pandap4ntz lmao peeps who said “ not trying to be mean” are just melts

  • @triplek-dysongamingwithdan7771

    @triplek-dysongamingwithdan7771

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jamescharlton4915 I mean it's good to clarify you're not just being a glasses pusher "well acshually" person. Nothing to do with being a melt.

  • @jamescharlton4915

    @jamescharlton4915

    Ай бұрын

    @@triplek-dysongamingwithdan7771 oh so you be a melt too I got ya

  • @workingunderwater
    @workingunderwater28 күн бұрын

    Love this! Great job man! Well done.

  • @wm7089
    @wm7089Ай бұрын

    I love your videos and your calming voice..please don't stop with your great content 🙌

  • @user-pj5by8lx2m
    @user-pj5by8lx2mАй бұрын

    Thank you love your videos.

  • @davinp
    @davinpАй бұрын

    It was a series of mistakes and bad decisions that lead up to the disaster. Someone said "Everything that did could go wrong, did go wrong for Titanic"

  • @ChaplainDMK

    @ChaplainDMK

    Ай бұрын

    Honestly, it feels like a lot of this could have been avoided with better labor regulations - I can totally understand Captain Lord making incorrect decisions if he was sleeping after 17 HOURS ON SHIFT. And simply having a few more wireless operators on duty so one guy isn't working nonstop from 7 in the morning until 11 in the evening, and is the only guy doing the job on the entire ship. Or same for Titanic, having 2 wireless operators for a 45000 ton ship. It feels basically everyone was completely overworked and not at all rested enough to be able to make correct decisions reliably, especially at the time where you had so many vague and confusing regulations and rules.

  • @thing_under_the_stairs

    @thing_under_the_stairs

    Ай бұрын

    @@ChaplainDMK I think that it's also worth remembering that at the time, much like now, technology was advancing so quickly that they were often making up the rules as they went along. The sinking of Titanic was one big reason that the rules for maritime safety were greatly improved.

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@thing_under_the_stairs dog not allowed ect

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    @@ChaplainDMK dog not allowed ect

  • @LisaJones-xk6xz

    @LisaJones-xk6xz

    19 күн бұрын

    Dog not allowed ect

  • @susancoddington6393
    @susancoddington6393Ай бұрын

    Great video really enjoyed it!!

  • @lellyt2372
    @lellyt2372Ай бұрын

    A Night to Remember kicked off my fascination of the story of the Titanic, from her building to her demise and everything in between. I do like the movie Titanic but, A Night to Remember, although inaccurate in certain places, (especially where it has Titanic sink intact, which was the accepted wisdom at the time based on the inquiries' insistence of this regardless of multiple passengers and crew stating the fact she broke apart) just stirs my emotions on a different level. Probably because I was a young child when I first saw it. Great video and worthy of being added to the pantheon of videos made about this magnificent ship and crew and a testament to the people who lost their lives that night.

  • @aliciabrinkofski386
    @aliciabrinkofski386Ай бұрын

    This is very well done. I thought this was going to be filled with conspiracy theories and misinformation. So glad to see that was not the case. My only question is what is your source for the passengers being near and getting in the way of the rockets being fired as this is the first time I've heard about it.

  • @BigOldBoats

    @BigOldBoats

    Ай бұрын

    This detail came from On a Sea of Glass (Page 203)

  • @purcascade

    @purcascade

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@BigOldBoats Citations! ❤

  • @roberthoffhines5419
    @roberthoffhines5419Ай бұрын

    Wow, the telling of the interment of Vauxall's ashes brought a tear to my eye. It's been a long time since I've done that for the victims and story of Titanic. But imagine had California heeded the first indication, built-up steam and gotten there in what...5-10 miles...better part of an hour. Titanic was already in a panic state, and hard to imagine the chaos of shuttling passengers in and out of the limited lifeboats between ships. We imagine California "sidling right on up" next to Titanic, but it doesn't happen that way.

  • @moosifer3321

    @moosifer3321

    Ай бұрын

    BOXHALL!

  • @mikedicenso2778

    @mikedicenso2778

    Ай бұрын

    But Californian could've well gotten there in time to save perhaps several dozen people who died of exposure in or on Collapsible A and B, as well as few others fished out of the water by two of the other lifeboats to return to help. That much is very likely. That and Captain Lord his crew would be the celebrated heroes of the tragedy instead of Captain Rostron and Carpathia.

  • @moosifer3321

    @moosifer3321

    Ай бұрын

    This Tragedy highlights the Immature attitude to new Technology, namely the elitist use for Passenger Communications rather than as a Lifesaving, 24hr means of rescue - how many 3rd class utilised this service to advise ETA? I suspect, NONE. Fortunately things DID change, ultimately saving more lives than those lost in the Titanic Disaster.@@mikedicenso2778

  • @dfuher968

    @dfuher968

    Ай бұрын

    @@mikedicenso2778 No, they couldnt have gotten there. The 1992 inquery proved once and for all, that the Californian was actually around 20 miles away, the optical illusions that night made her look closer, her boilers were at low steam and wouldve needed some time to get to full steam, and the Californian was a small cargo ship with a top speed of just 12 knots. Even in clear weather and daylight they couldnt have made it there, even if Boxhall had calculated the correct position, which he did not, and while they might have used their eyesight for navigation, that wouldve been extremely dangerous in an icefield on a very dark night full of optical illusions, tho they didnt know about that at the time. And the myth about how all the ppl couldve been shuttled from the Titanic to the Californian is just that, a myth. It wouldve been physically impossible to do for various reasons, even if the Californian had been close enough to reach the sinking Titanic, not the least being that filling lifeboats, sailing to the Californian, unloading lifeboats, sailing back after more wouldve taken many many hours. As it was, the Titanic didnt even manage to launch all lifeboats, b4 she sank. And the Californian was far too small to take anywhere near the number of ppl, we're talking about. In hindsight, if all things had lined up perfectly, and Californian couldve gotten there in time, could they have saved some ppl? Yes. Could they have saved them all, as so many claim? Not a chance. But again, the 1992 inquery proved beyond doubt, that the Californian could not have gotten there in time to make any difference. And they had no reason to think, something was wrong, yet they repeatedly tried to contact the unknown ship, which were firing off white celebrations rockets, not red distress rockets, at random intervals, 8 rockets over an hour, rather than 1 rocket per minute fixed interval as the rules perscribed. And they used both the morse lamp for way more than an hour and woke up the wireless operator, who turned it on, heard a jammed signal due to so many ship talking at the same time, turned it back off, reported he could get nothing and went back to bed. Yes, it wouldve been nice, if Captain Lord had been clairvoyant and gone racing through an icefield, risking his ship and the lives of his crew and his few passengers to arrive too late to be of any help. But thats not, how life works. And the 1992 inquery considered all, that Ive mentioned, all the original documentation, all the original witness accounts (which were largely ignored in the original US inquery) and much more, and they fully exonerated Captain Lord. And Carpathia was actually really lucky not to suffer the same fate as Titanic. It was good, that she did, coz Captain Rostron got lucky, and they did make a difference. But by all the evidence Captain Lord not just did everything, that the rules and customs of the time required of him, he went above and beyond. Without the knowledge, that Captain Rostron had, Captain Lord could not have done more, and even had he known, it would not have made any difference. No matter, what the numerous clickbait grifters claim, so they can continue to make money off the Titanic.

  • @mikedicenso2778

    @mikedicenso2778

    Ай бұрын

    @@dfuher968 But the problem with that is that the Californian herself did, in fact, risk going through the icefield 13 nautical miles to the west in response to the incorrect Boxhall CQD position and then when Lord realized it was wrong, he had to take the ship down along it and around up to where Carpathia was at and was just about to get underway after finishing up rescue operations. We know when Californian got Cyril Evans up, when she was gotten underway, and when she got to Where Carpathia was. It was just a couple hours and some change. And this after they went through a very circuitous route and picking their way through the ice pack to the west! Also, you seem to be misrepresenting my scenario. Never once did I say that they could've gotten there in time to save everyone, just a few dozen souls who died after the sinking due to exposure in or on the lifeboats, particularly Collapsible boats A and B. Unlike what actually happened, they would not have had to go through the ice to the west, but down south more directly to Titanic, following her lights and distress flares. Assuming 12 knots over 20 nm, that's 1.6 hours to reach Titanic. They get there in time to pick a few people out of the water and save dozens of people who would have perished on boats A and B.

  • @michekids
    @michekids22 күн бұрын

    Kudos to your coverage. I especially appreciated your decision to seek out the heroes and give them their due. Thank you

  • @starrnell4497
    @starrnell4497Ай бұрын

    And you did a great job. Newer and fresher material. Good job. 🎉

  • @sakonaga1
    @sakonaga1Ай бұрын

    @19:26, the villains in the Titanic story are Mr William Carter who abandoned his family and Crewman Robert Hitchens who refused to go back for survivors and frightened the passengers in his lifeboat.

  • @blevinsfrank5453

    @blevinsfrank5453

    Ай бұрын

    I heard lightoller killed many that night. He murdered several italians.

  • @PhluXx1
    @PhluXx1Ай бұрын

    So basically the Californian chose not to help because it was only misdemeanor to ignore distress signals.

  • @c-man7740
    @c-man7740Ай бұрын

    As always, a wonderfully done video

  • @cosmicdebris42
    @cosmicdebris4218 күн бұрын

    Excellent documentary. This story has been told many times but you still made it well worth hearing again. Thanks.

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    42 минут бұрын

    The Titanic's story is unsinkable (unlike the ship) and I think it will be told many times for quite some time yet.

  • @josh656
    @josh656Ай бұрын

    The U.S. Postal Museum in DC has an exhibit on Titanic’s mail.

  • @cardboardempire
    @cardboardempireАй бұрын

    The Californian's crew had a meeting before the inquiry so they could get their stories straight. The testimony given was contradictory to the altered logs. Experts say Californian was roughtly 13 miles away from Titanic and was simply complacent on a very cold night.

  • @Martin07031

    @Martin07031

    3 күн бұрын

    Then why did apprentice Gibson stand for himself and didnt protect Lord or Stone? Gibson told his own story as it really happened.

  • @cardboardempire

    @cardboardempire

    3 күн бұрын

    @@Martin07031 Integrity my dear Watson, integrity

  • @Martin07031

    @Martin07031

    3 күн бұрын

    @@cardboardempire there you have your integrity www.titanicology.com/Californian/TaleOfTwoEyewitnesses.pdf

  • @Coyote1.618
    @Coyote1.61820 күн бұрын

    The sad part is there's other ships that sank that had a lot more people on it. Especially ships in that era that were torpedoed. But the Titanic the one and only.

  • @user-xf2tw4yj2h
    @user-xf2tw4yj2hАй бұрын

    Good documentary!

  • @jamess4869
    @jamess4869Ай бұрын

    I often wondered why, when they stopped the Titanic and realized the damage, they didn't order the engines to full power and head tword the California...At that point the engines still worked and California would have woke up having a ship closing in on them.

  • @dovetonsturdee7033

    @dovetonsturdee7033

    Ай бұрын

    When you ship is going down by the bow, steaming into the sea is really not all that good an idea.

  • @DistractedGlobeGuy

    @DistractedGlobeGuy

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@dovetonsturdee7033 ...as demonstrated just a few years later by her own younger sister HMHS _Britannic._ Besides, by the time the lights on the northern horizon were spotted, most of the pressure had already been vented out of the steam lines-there was barely enough left to keep the lights on and the radio running, which altogether used orders of magnitude less power than the main drive engines.

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms727Ай бұрын

    RIP THOMAS ANDERWS❤ never wanted to leave home🎉

  • @michaelschuette1743
    @michaelschuette1743Ай бұрын

    I've been watching this channel sense 9k subs thr content is always good

  • @americanlad434
    @americanlad434Ай бұрын

    Well done Ol' Chap! Loved the video!

  • @hughwalker5628
    @hughwalker5628Ай бұрын

    Beautifully presented, as always, and fair to all involved. You brought real humanity to the story which is a rare thing. As you said, there were no villains here. We weren't there to judge. So let's not.

  • @GrumpyMeow-Meow
    @GrumpyMeow-MeowАй бұрын

    Woohoo! Another Big Old Boats!

  • @Chord_
    @Chord_Ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this story. For all I know of Titanic and Carpathia and the actions that happened that fateful night, I've never seen anyone pay more attention to the Californian than a mere footnote. Hearing their side of the story, beyond the oft-repeated "they were the closest ship that night, and they never came," makes that night both more tragic and more human.

  • @spaceshuttledoorgunner125
    @spaceshuttledoorgunner125Ай бұрын

    Not only a great documentary. Also a masterful narration. Bravo.

  • @roypiltdown5083
    @roypiltdown5083Ай бұрын

    towards the end, the narrator speculates, "what if she had carried 20 more lifeboats?" in fact, because the crew had not trained in loading & lowering the boats they had (and there had not been a proper lifeboat drill with the passengers), the boats were lowered one by one, and the last ones were done at the very last minute. if she HAD carried more boats, they would have gone down, unloaded, with the ship itself.

  • @dovetonsturdee7033

    @dovetonsturdee7033

    Ай бұрын

    There had been a lifeboat drill, in Southampton.

  • @mariamatheson5300

    @mariamatheson5300

    20 сағат бұрын

    ​@@dovetonsturdee7033I thought those were only sea trials. And as far as the boat drill, captain Smith had taken the Olympic across a number of times, and the two ships were identical, maybe he felt a lifeboat drill wasn't essential.

  • @karenwiley9702
    @karenwiley9702Ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this. A Night To Remember is one of my favorite movies about the Titanic It is hard to believe that 112 years ago this beautiful ship sank on her maiden vogue Remembering those we lost

  • @dylancasey3787
    @dylancasey3787Ай бұрын

    This is really well done

  • @eyeessee
    @eyeesseeАй бұрын

    Great video ❤

  • @Brandyalla
    @BrandyallaАй бұрын

    More lifeboats wouldn't have helped, unfortunately

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    Ай бұрын

    They would've helped if the crew had been more organized and better prepared and if everyone had boat assignments

  • @mariamatheson5300

    @mariamatheson5300

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@fmyoungagreed.

  • @ajbianchi85
    @ajbianchi85Ай бұрын

    The iceberg was the villain

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    Ай бұрын

    No it wasn't the whole tragedy happened because of humans :D

  • @ajbianchi85

    @ajbianchi85

    Ай бұрын

    Honestly I don’t think captain Smith gets enough blame for ignoring the ice warnings and then kinda freezing up during the sinking. Plus him and Lightholler sticking to the woman and children only creedo instead of Murdochs more lenient woman and children first.

  • @mariamatheson5300

    @mariamatheson5300

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@fmyoungI think the poster was being sarcastic.

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    Ай бұрын

    @@mariamatheson5300 Maybe

  • @chubbyoo7
    @chubbyoo729 күн бұрын

    I loved the story you provided me, even though I have seen a lot about it, so thanks

  • @inigomartinezrubio
    @inigomartinezrubio20 күн бұрын

    Really good well informed video

  • @tinypoolmodelshipyard
    @tinypoolmodelshipyardАй бұрын

    The villian was the iceburg! Obviously 🤣

  • @fmyoung

    @fmyoung

    Ай бұрын

    The iceberg is not at fault the villains were some of the people involved in the story

  • @oganvildevil
    @oganvildevilАй бұрын

    Aw yiss, give us that big, old, boat story

  • @firstnamelastname6216
    @firstnamelastname6216Ай бұрын

    Great job B.O.B.!!! 👍✌️

  • @AliciaRenee5150
    @AliciaRenee5150Ай бұрын

    1st time watching your content. very impressive.

  • @LordFoxxyFoxington
    @LordFoxxyFoxingtonАй бұрын

    Time travellers.

  • @zainmudassir2964
    @zainmudassir2964Ай бұрын

    I love big old boats

  • @Nobody.exe50
    @Nobody.exe50Ай бұрын

    The reflection at the end hits hard along with the song and the fate of that man

  • @timbounds7190
    @timbounds7190Ай бұрын

    I read somewhere that the officers on the Californian thought the ship that they could see was generally similar to their own ie a Medium size Cargo/Passenger ship. I think that it would be surprising if professional seamen, employed in commercial navigation, failed to recognise the Titanic, which was the biggest, newest most prestigious liner on the planet - especially as they (presumably) knew that the Titanic was in their general area, unless visibility conditions were very weird.

  • @mariamatheson5300

    @mariamatheson5300

    Ай бұрын

    Good point.