Titanic survivor recalls harrowing moment ship sank | BBC Global

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,9 тис.

  • @NateBlack96
    @NateBlack96 7 місяців тому +5621

    “You’d think I’m too old for nightmares, but you’d be amazed”
    Truer words have never been spoken. Mad respect

    • @Capri42PRG
      @Capri42PRG 7 місяців тому +92

      It's one of those quotes that's always stayed with me.
      Another is from an old cockney describing his experiences in the blitz. He leaned over the table and said with a stoney look "you can get used to anything", and it's proved itself true to me time and again since

    • @beckyf569
      @beckyf569 7 місяців тому +32

      I cannot imagine the suffrage from that incident and then the inevitable nightmares that would follow. As you lay your head to rest those events would play out over and over again. Would be incredibly painful.

    • @readmelancholystrumpetmaster
      @readmelancholystrumpetmaster 7 місяців тому +4

      Your point?

    • @phaedruslykos3249
      @phaedruslykos3249 7 місяців тому +2

      odly whenever i get cold or my head gets cold i have way worse nightmares

    • @Erutan409
      @Erutan409 7 місяців тому +35

      ​@@readmelancholystrumpetmaster The point:
      You're obtuse.

  • @kerrymillar1267
    @kerrymillar1267 5 місяців тому +2356

    A real gentleman. I can’t even imagine what he went though that night. I feel privileged to hear his story.

    • @swashington942
      @swashington942 4 місяці тому +32

      You don't need to imagine. He just told us.

    • @walkernick86
      @walkernick86 4 місяці тому +34

      ​@@swashington942Shut up!

    • @harryroberts2630
      @harryroberts2630 4 місяці тому +8

      He took the spot of a woman or child

    • @sascha12-e3e
      @sascha12-e3e 4 місяці тому

      so do i

    • @goydivision5311
      @goydivision5311 4 місяці тому

      Titanic was sunk to get rid of key opponents of federal reserve which was signed in a few days later. . Augustis Berg Bitchute does a good history channel.

  • @flashladderacrobat
    @flashladderacrobat 7 місяців тому +5931

    This gentleman survived not only the sinking of the Titanic, but also 2 world wars !!! Amazing!

    • @jandasalovich6469
      @jandasalovich6469 7 місяців тому +122

      Indeed. That is amazing.

    • @JohanWXC
      @JohanWXC 7 місяців тому +289

      - along with an economic depression, the Spanish flu, the cold war, the Korean war, the Vietnam war, JFK's assassination, and the moon landing.

    • @nc8507
      @nc8507 7 місяців тому +190

      ​@JohanWXC how did he survive the jfk assassination or moon landing?

    • @JohanWXC
      @JohanWXC 7 місяців тому +125

      @@nc8507 You're misinterpreting the first comment. He survived the period during which those took place. He didn't actually fight in both world wars.

    • @robertcottam8824
      @robertcottam8824 7 місяців тому +155

      @@JohanWXC
      You are correct in that he didn’t fight in both world wars. However, Frank Prentice DID serve in WW1, winning a Military Cross (MC) for bravery with The Tank Corps in which he was a major.
      He was a very brave but very modest man.
      Best wishes

  • @MsCrossfire911
    @MsCrossfire911 3 місяці тому +520

    His last word's broke my heart! “You’d think I’m too old for nightmares, but you’d be amazed”

    • @patstokes7040
      @patstokes7040 2 місяці тому +15

      The whole thing comes around again.

    • @aeptacon
      @aeptacon 2 місяці тому +8

      i hope that doesnt mean he frequently has nightmares of that time.

    • @robindis6274
      @robindis6274 Місяць тому +5

      @@aeptacon im sure he had.

    • @roxannerodriguez7075
      @roxannerodriguez7075 Місяць тому +14

      ​​@@aeptaconhe probably does... My dad was on the USS Oriskany during the Vietnam War. His ship had a fire, that's about all I knew. Only because he had nightmares all the way until he passed away. I was caring for him during the last maybe 3 years, taking him to the doctors. That's how I found out about the nightmares he was still having very often, of the fire on the ship. 😢

    • @blazinchalice
      @blazinchalice 14 днів тому

      @@roxannerodriguez7075 My father was a WWII vet. He was a translator, and yet he still had nightmares until his last. He used to move about so much that he'd fall off the bed. As he was of advanced age, he spent his last five years sleeping on the floor so as not to injure himself when he dreamed of the war.

  • @lemuellachica4991
    @lemuellachica4991 Місяць тому +181

    "I didn't want to die, and I didn't see much chance of living" Send shivers down my spine. God bless you sir.

    • @jeff7764
      @jeff7764 3 дні тому

      Cringeworthy comment

  • @bisonkambaine5628
    @bisonkambaine5628 6 місяців тому +3832

    For all the criticism UA-cam gets, you have to admit, its how we use it. This somehow ended up in my feed and I am incredibly grateful for that. It's very moving and touching.

    • @SleepyArcticBirds-ft4lb
      @SleepyArcticBirds-ft4lb 6 місяців тому +44

      Me too! Great video ❤

    • @doctorbohr1585
      @doctorbohr1585 6 місяців тому +33

      Very true. There is much great content.

    • @CatherineAKennedy
      @CatherineAKennedy 6 місяців тому +26

      same here - I'm not sure why it came up for me but I am pleased it did - and so sad from the moment he started talking...

    • @mindeloman
      @mindeloman 6 місяців тому +19

      Watch very little television program any more and watch informational videos like this.

    • @buckyboy000
      @buckyboy000 6 місяців тому +5

      Yes, don't use the app because of auto play. Focus and search for what you want and ignore what they throw at you-if possible🤔🥴

  • @lilytyler80
    @lilytyler80 7 місяців тому +2014

    Interviews like this are why I love UA-cam.

    • @MsBatbird
      @MsBatbird 6 місяців тому +24

      That's how I feel as well. It's crazy the things I've not only learned more about but things I had never known anything about until I saw it on youtube. It's weird how some things can be so good in many ways yet bad in others. Some of the best inventions ever, the internet, cell phones and video games. Some of the worst inventions ever, the internet, cell phones and video games.

    • @lilytyler80
      @lilytyler80 6 місяців тому +20

      @MsBatbird I agree. We are privileged to watch this man tell his story about the Titanic from the comfort of our homes. Many people before us never had the opportunity to experience UA-cam.

    • @mariomiranda8217
      @mariomiranda8217 6 місяців тому +8

      Me too! I love to see this kind of thing because I’m so grateful to GOD for the life he has given us! Just like he said “ grateful to God”

    • @davidprins5504
      @davidprins5504 6 місяців тому +10

      I always love the interviews from the 1930's with old people who tell about growing up in the wild west and about serving in the civil war just mind blowing

    • @davidprins5504
      @davidprins5504 6 місяців тому

      ​@@mariomiranda8217amen 🙏

  • @chipps1066
    @chipps1066 7 місяців тому +2130

    The most candid interview of a Titanic survivor I have ever listened to,God bless this gentlemen.

    • @JeninNH
      @JeninNH 7 місяців тому +21

      Search Edith Russell titanic interview. Her account is very candid also

    • @Gamevet
      @Gamevet 7 місяців тому +46

      @@JeninNH Very eloquent!
      My brother-in-law was from England. He'd lived in the US for some 40 plus years. I always loved listening to his accent and delivery. He passed away about 12 days ago, after a drawn out battle against Dementia. We miss you John.

    • @chrisholt2474
      @chrisholt2474 7 місяців тому +11

      @@Gamevetsorry for your very recent loss, Chris, from UK.

    • @mariospensieri941
      @mariospensieri941 7 місяців тому +5

      God's Mercey To all those People and there Familys
      Forever In time....
      RIP......

    • @mem1701movies
      @mem1701movies 7 місяців тому +1

      @@Gamevethow old was he?

  • @highlander5170
    @highlander5170 2 місяці тому +761

    This gentleman was 23 years old at the time of the sinking of the Titanic his name was
    Frank Winnold Prentice Frank Winnold Prentice MC was a British merchant seaman and the assistant storekeeper on the ocean liner RMS Titanic during her maiden voyage. He survived the sinking and at the time of his death was the second-to-last surviving
    crewmember of the disaster. He was I believe 90 at this interview.

    • @MissMellyDi
      @MissMellyDi 2 місяці тому +50

      Thank you for leaving this comment

    • @Andy-wx4wx
      @Andy-wx4wx 2 місяці тому +45

      He was a lovely old chap going by this interview....

    • @h0welss
      @h0welss 2 місяці тому +76

      He looks very good for 90 here

    • @ElizzzaB
      @ElizzzaB Місяць тому +16

      ​@@h0welss Especially for all he's been through.

    • @ElizzzaB
      @ElizzzaB Місяць тому +15

      Glad he made it.

  • @HassaanQ
    @HassaanQ 5 місяців тому +932

    I’ve seen comments like “UA-cam is the closest thing we have to time travelling” and there’s no doubt about that. I’m laying in my bed in 2024, imagining a 1912 era disaster scenario being narrated by someone who has lived through that trauma and that too who’s no more irl but he’s right in front of me from 1979 like he’s talking to me.
    Thank God for technology, software and internet.

    • @Runner8617
      @Runner8617 5 місяців тому +29

      Books always existed even before technology and UA-cam. They take you back in time even more so than technology and UA-cam. At least that was my experience growing up and reading some biographies or autobiographies. Books are incredible. It's a shame people don't read much anymore.

    • @fredfredburger5150
      @fredfredburger5150 5 місяців тому +44

      @@Runner8617 Words spoken will have more resonance than words written. Posting a transcript of the man in the video's words won't have the same impact.

    • @randomworld4662
      @randomworld4662 5 місяців тому

      your God is dead he didn't make technology and thanks to men

    • @JoanBrown-j3e
      @JoanBrown-j3e 4 місяці тому

      The internet and social media are now abused to the point of destruction. It has made humans lazy, greedier, selfish and evil. Read ‘Last Days’ by Carleen W. Called a dystopian masterpiece and a call to action it’s available at Amazon and dozens of major sites. First thing to go on Monday October 28th is ALL technology…..the beginning of the end.

    • @JoanBrown-j3e
      @JoanBrown-j3e 4 місяці тому +8

      @@fredfredburger5150I couldn’t disagree more. The written word is far more powerful and lasting.

  • @mikeweston7947
    @mikeweston7947 7 місяців тому +2325

    This stoic man is holding a lifetime of sadness. God rest his soul.

    • @Mel-en2ep
      @Mel-en2ep 7 місяців тому +46

      Respect and admiration for him

    • @tracesprite6078
      @tracesprite6078 7 місяців тому +47

      Thank you, men, for allowing us women and children to go first. Not sure why we should go first. It's so generous of you.

    • @Mel-en2ep
      @Mel-en2ep 7 місяців тому +9

      Kind of you to mention it 🤗

    • @M3Busssin
      @M3Busssin 6 місяців тому

      @@tracesprite6078I child needs their mother, men are disposable

    • @annnee6818
      @annnee6818 6 місяців тому +10

      ​@@tracesprite6078 Actually the ratio of men and women that survived sinkings aren't very different. It's more of a chivalrous myth than reality...

  • @EmmaPeacock-cc9fl
    @EmmaPeacock-cc9fl 6 місяців тому +595

    This is one of the most moving things I have ever heard. Told in the most calm and dignified way. A true gentleman. "I saved her life and she saved mine". 😢

    • @carolynm9638
      @carolynm9638 4 місяці тому +31

      The fact that he feels they may have saved each other may have helped save his sanity. My god what a thing to have endured.

    • @quicklykay
      @quicklykay 2 місяці тому +2

      The fickle hand of fate?

    • @Sportliveonline
      @Sportliveonline Місяць тому +1

      this guy has love

  • @CaesarDarias
    @CaesarDarias 7 місяців тому +1324

    Almost seven decades after the sinking of Titanic, Mr. Prentice described the terrible night as if it happened that morning. His precision and detail enables the viewer to imagine the horrifying and unimaginable visuals and ghastly sound of that giant ship rising out of the water like a monster. Thank you for the account and RIP, Mr. Prentice. Incidentally, the interviewer did a great job by mostly listening and not talking.

    • @McCarthy0000
      @McCarthy0000 7 місяців тому +4

      Seven decades? More than that!!

    • @mtibrands
      @mtibrands 7 місяців тому +59

      @@McCarthy0000 This interview was airplayed in 1979... 67 years!!

    • @thierryminet9682
      @thierryminet9682 7 місяців тому +16

      @@mtibrands 1912 to 1979= 67

    • @mtibrands
      @mtibrands 7 місяців тому +15

      @@thierryminet9682 Corrected. Thanks!

    • @ROOKTABULA
      @ROOKTABULA 7 місяців тому +6

      Not completely accurate: He said it listed to Port but it was the Starboard side that the ship listed to, same side as the impact.

  • @Zeus.thunder
    @Zeus.thunder 4 місяці тому +291

    he is 90 in this interview. He doesnt look a day over 70. Incredible!

    • @EfremHayes
      @EfremHayes Місяць тому +9

      They aged so much better back then.

    • @B0R0M1R
      @B0R0M1R Місяць тому

      people ate real food back then not so many processed trash packed in plastic and aluminum

    • @ronkei6
      @ronkei6 Місяць тому +14

      @@EfremHayes Good food, less stress.

    • @wadsworth2351
      @wadsworth2351 Місяць тому +8

      @@ronkei6 They were a different breed. A breed of gentlemen, toughened through many hardships of life.

    • @dafaq05
      @dafaq05 Місяць тому

      @@EfremHayes really? i think it's the opposite! to me it seemed people looked older back then (because of smoking and alcohol) and people seem to be looking younger than their age nowadays (for example brad pitt is 60 and does not look like a grandpa!)

  • @JSp4wN
    @JSp4wN 3 місяці тому +145

    I can't believe this guy was 90 at the time of recording.... He looks and sounds Incredible!!! I wish I could thank him for sharing his story of that fateful day, Rip good sir.

  • @fables4564
    @fables4564 6 місяців тому +721

    I feel honored he decided to share this. Vocalizing traumatic events is not easy.

    • @hoodplays9380
      @hoodplays9380 6 місяців тому +5

      It's not hard either

    • @MR.SKANDAL0121
      @MR.SKANDAL0121 6 місяців тому +2

      I think being involved in a famous story like this & surviving to tell the tale would bring your happiness not trauma

    • @primetime_mitch
      @primetime_mitch 6 місяців тому +9

      @@hoodplays9380 what was the point in that?

    • @hoodplays9380
      @hoodplays9380 6 місяців тому

      @@primetime_mitch harsh truth

    • @Pazaluz
      @Pazaluz 5 місяців тому +10

      @@MR.SKANDAL0121 How is thinking back about nearly freezing to death and seeing (and hearing) hundreds of people die, including children, supposed to bring you happiness

  • @lucabrazi3067
    @lucabrazi3067 7 місяців тому +960

    I saw an interview with a 92 year old man who stormed the beaches at Normandy. He was asked when was the last time he had a nightmare about that day. He said last night.

    • @joycegibbs5267
      @joycegibbs5267 6 місяців тому +33

      💔

    • @cynthiacullen9695
      @cynthiacullen9695 5 місяців тому +35

      😢I can’t imagine, living your life with those horrible memories . True heroes those men were ❤️💔❤️‍🩹

    • @Mike-01234
      @Mike-01234 5 місяців тому +31

      War vets my mother had a friend who went to Vietnam normal 19 year old kid when he came back she said he was different. About a year later he committed suicide shot himself. He never spoke to my mother about the war all he said it was terrible situation she never really learned about what happened there.

    • @Runner8617
      @Runner8617 5 місяців тому +4

      @Mike-01234 - how is it that you could use the "s" word and my comments keep getting taken down when I use the "s" word?? 🤔 I don't get UA-cam! 😡

    • @Runner8617
      @Runner8617 5 місяців тому +20

      @Mike-01234 - I read that a lot of survivors of the Titanic also ended their own lives because they couldn't bear the fact that they survived and others didn't. 🥺 Really sad.

  • @PatriotSteve
    @PatriotSteve 7 місяців тому +904

    He has a melodic way of speaking. Seems like a fine chap.

    • @brionyhall4250
      @brionyhall4250 6 місяців тому +58

      His generation usually did. My grandparents did too.

    • @juandef4115
      @juandef4115 6 місяців тому +56

      People were much more refined then, despite less technology in their hands

    • @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist
      @MorganHayes_Composer.Pianist 5 місяців тому +15

      @@juandef4115 or maybe because of less technology -without wishing to be too reactionary!

    • @fridaclaxton
      @fridaclaxton 5 місяців тому

      HE WAS SASSY!!!

    • @8830wjs
      @8830wjs 5 місяців тому +3

      good storyteller

  • @paul9745pdb
    @paul9745pdb 4 місяці тому +174

    It’s amazing to hear from a Titanic survivor 112 years after the incident.

    • @KeepTheCoolHead
      @KeepTheCoolHead 2 місяці тому +1

      Do you not see the 1979 top right

    • @paul9745pdb
      @paul9745pdb 2 місяці тому

      @@KeepTheCoolHead but I’m listening to it 112 years after the incident jerkoff.

    • @quicklykay
      @quicklykay 2 місяці тому +27

      ⁠​⁠@@KeepTheCoolHeadWhat’s 1979 got to do with it, save for the fact the interview was conducted? The poster was pointing out that this gentleman was onboard the ship and 112 years later we’re listening to him tell the tale.

  • @teetoo3790
    @teetoo3790 4 місяці тому +627

    This man lived to 93. There IS a REASON why he lived so long. God bless him.

    • @AtomicPunk1995
      @AtomicPunk1995 4 місяці тому +43

      Yes there is. Healthy lifestyle, good diet, probably didn’t smoke later in life, exercise.

    • @Centermass007
      @Centermass007 4 місяці тому +33

      @@AtomicPunk1995and at the end of the day all of that simply comes down to pure luck. Lifestyle doesn’t matter as much as luck.

    • @krispeekream
      @krispeekream 4 місяці тому +38

      So was God just not as happy with the hundreds of people that died?

    • @sovietonion72
      @sovietonion72 4 місяці тому +5

      What a wonderful man

    • @billybunter3753
      @billybunter3753 4 місяці тому +10

      ​@@Centermass007 Genetics...Not luck...

  • @MrSychnant
    @MrSychnant 7 місяців тому +475

    What an amazing character, he has such empathy for the event and shares it like a real gentleman.

    • @martinc.720
      @martinc.720 6 місяців тому

      as opposed to the way a "non gentleman" would share it???

    • @NoNeed2No
      @NoNeed2No 3 місяці тому

      ​@@martinc.720A non-gentleman would be the type of soyboy "man" we have these days, crying and whining about his "traaahhhhhhmmaaaaaa"

  • @jgibbs651
    @jgibbs651 7 місяців тому +1051

    British understatement at its finest. Matter of fact, no drama.

    • @RtB68
      @RtB68 6 місяців тому +73

      ..."and she moved off and that was that."

    • @naveedrahman6603
      @naveedrahman6603 5 місяців тому

      There is no such thing as british understatement. You losers need to get over yourself.

    • @Threadbow
      @Threadbow 5 місяців тому +49

      He was so good the way he convinced the wife to leave her husband.
      Calming her.
      He left it til it was time and jumped, a fine man who has morals and was prepared to lose his life for his lady passengers.
      Such a gentlemen.
      🎩

    • @Lardenoy
      @Lardenoy 5 місяців тому +13

      Oui, c'est vrai ! Remarquable !

    • @fanatamon
      @fanatamon 3 місяці тому +3

      What a champion.

  • @GayorgVonTrapp
    @GayorgVonTrapp 7 місяців тому +328

    Preserved forever, a true eyewitness account. Incredible.

    • @anniebananie8224
      @anniebananie8224 6 місяців тому +5

      Only as long as the fragile internet exists.

    • @chrisbirch4150
      @chrisbirch4150 6 місяців тому +3

      Absolute hardcore account as well. On the boat as it lifted and went into the water as well. Basically a real life Rose Dawson 😂 Mad respect to the guy

  • @thomasweatherford5125
    @thomasweatherford5125 3 місяці тому +68

    What a storyteller. I could listen to him all day - amazing tragedy to have survived.

  • @alexk73
    @alexk73 7 місяців тому +468

    He lived to the age of 93…..survived the Titanic sinking and service in WW1. Incredible! His wife lived to the age of 99. What longevity for this couple that really should have never been since it appears they did not marry until 1919.

    • @Bonzi_Buddy
      @Bonzi_Buddy 6 місяців тому +16

      If they had a large family, odds are their children may still be alive. Grandchildren almost certainly so.

    • @desertweasel6965
      @desertweasel6965 5 місяців тому +7

      Yeah, but I don't ever want to die. 100 is nowhere near enough.

    • @mickeymouze5
      @mickeymouze5 5 місяців тому +9

      @@desertweasel6965 unfortunately death is certain at any moment we cannot escape it I hate speaking about it cause I don't need to know until, my time will come for me to experience myself but its gonna be all of us, If you wanna live a good life, don’t think about the end of things… think and appreciate what life gives you..! because these are moments that won’t last forever, appreciate everyone and everything around you, Do you know being happy and not stress will help you live a little longer its healthy, so again don’t take everything in life serious and act like you’re immortal to everything cause you’re not. Live love laugh. Eat healthy, stop smoking and drinking its bad for your body..take care of your body find natural things. spend time with family and friends and just enjoy moments before they go before you. Humans aren’t made to be perfect we all have ups and downs imperfection so if anyone feels this way… don’t.

    • @stevem2323
      @stevem2323 3 місяці тому +1

      ​@@desertweasel6965 none of us do, but we will.

  • @gregmcgarry1
    @gregmcgarry1 2 місяці тому +100

    I don’t know how many viewers will have experienced open waters at night but the thought of being chucked into the middle of a freezing Atlantic at night… absolutely terrifying.

    • @AS-rk5vb
      @AS-rk5vb 5 днів тому

      When he spoke about the ship's stern tilting up and all of the clutter crashing down towards the bow. That alone, of itself must have been terrifying.

    • @gregmcgarry1
      @gregmcgarry1 5 днів тому +1

      @@AS-rk5vb100% I wouldn’t have suffered for long… the sight of that would have brought on the banger fairly lively! 😬

  • @CalvinTennessee
    @CalvinTennessee 7 місяців тому +338

    Can you imagine being 23 years old when this new, spectacular ship you’re on, goes down in pitch darkness? In frigid, freezing temperatures at 2am? We will never grasp the true fear those souls felt.

    • @MundiaKamau
      @MundiaKamau 6 місяців тому +11

      Well put. Regards, Michael M Kamau, Nairobi, Kenya, East Africa, 10th May 2024.

    • @Hihoweryew
      @Hihoweryew 6 місяців тому +1

      His shock is comparable to that of being a victim of domestic violence. DV is worse, actually because it happens everyday in many homes. DV abuse and trauma leaves you in the same shock - it has been said- as the the shock and PTSD as what a soldier experienced in the Vietnam war

    • @LukeAlexan
      @LukeAlexan 6 місяців тому +29

      @@Hihoweryewcompletely irrelevant.

    • @martinc.720
      @martinc.720 6 місяців тому +2

      What is it with yet another "can you imagine" comment? We just watched the video, and ffs, everyone understands what water is.

    • @garymardle2120
      @garymardle2120 5 місяців тому +7

      @@Hihoweryewwtf are you talking about

  • @wetasaurus
    @wetasaurus 2 місяці тому +22

    The clock resting on the time it froze in the ocean is so haunting.

  • @njplr
    @njplr 5 місяців тому +106

    Told in such a calm, undramatic tone, yet one of the most dramatic stories ever told by any human. Remarkable, and 110 years after it happened, it is STILL absolutely riveting.

    • @Bri-b8z
      @Bri-b8z 2 місяці тому +1

      Very British “keep calm and carry on”! 🇬🇧

  • @IconTitan
    @IconTitan 7 місяців тому +373

    What a lovely old man, absolute gentleman, few and far between these days sadly.
    RIP sir.

    • @i.m.askance7996
      @i.m.askance7996 6 місяців тому +10

      I too was struck by his pleasant demeanor.

    • @JosedeJezeus
      @JosedeJezeus 6 місяців тому +12

      Surely, he didn’t grow up listening to gangster rap.

    • @Robotina-e8u
      @Robotina-e8u 6 місяців тому +2

      @@JosedeJezeus 🤣

    • @joycegibbs5267
      @joycegibbs5267 6 місяців тому +5

      inredibly rare now. Just dumb, loud, entitled, aggressive anarchists now !

    • @emmaknitty8748
      @emmaknitty8748 3 місяці тому

      You don't have to be so hostile, Joyce. ​@@joycegibbs5267

  • @rpkett
    @rpkett 7 місяців тому +151

    The most haunting part of this amazing interview is at the end when Mr. Prentice explains how the nightmares never end.

  • @callumclarke1733
    @callumclarke1733 7 місяців тому +155

    RIP to this Gentleman what a Amazing Man God bless him in eternity

  • @oscoe
    @oscoe 2 місяці тому +32

    RIP Mr Prentice. Thank you for having the courage to share your story so it could be understood just a little bit better now all these years later…..

  • @GeoLunar
    @GeoLunar Місяць тому +20

    In absolute awe of this gentleman. His ability to communicate the horror he experienced on that night was outstanding.
    He also won a military cross in WW1.
    History's loss is that he never wrote a book.
    May he rest now without nightmares

    • @coralharvey7957
      @coralharvey7957 4 дні тому

      Bless you Sir. You are a gentleman. Such awful horror. Disgusting shame about the lack of life boats. So even filled to capacity there would still be 1500 deaths . I do hope there were some attempts at compensation. Not that it nullifies the horror. God bless all who went down that night and those who survived the horror.

  • @acebrandon3522
    @acebrandon3522 7 місяців тому +472

    This man has PTSD, it shows in his voice and body language. One blessed man to survive that incident plus 2 world wars and then some.

    • @MegaLBreezy
      @MegaLBreezy 7 місяців тому +14

      No sht, Sherlock! You got some online degree where he can "click below" to get " cured"? 😂

    • @heatherstephens9295
      @heatherstephens9295 7 місяців тому

      @@MegaLBreezyyou are pathetic 😡

    • @rorzasrestorations
      @rorzasrestorations 7 місяців тому +10

      @@MegaLBreezy Some people think they know everything.

    • @acebrandon3522
      @acebrandon3522 7 місяців тому +60

      @@MegaLBreezy Tone down a wee bit, your sarcasm. Just an observation when watching his interview. Poor man's been through a lot more than normal given his experiences in life. He is a survivor.... 🤨

    • @aaronantonio8280
      @aaronantonio8280 7 місяців тому

      @@acebrandon3522you’re fine. People are dicks.

  • @keithmartin1328
    @keithmartin1328 7 місяців тому +401

    For many "Titanic" is a movie or a TV show, one of many made over the last century. However, for this man it was a reality that would effect him for the rest of his life. He passed away, aged 93, in May 1982, 3 years before Dr Ballard found the wreck.

    • @geometricart7851
      @geometricart7851 6 місяців тому +22

      I don't discount the tragedy here, but there were other maritime sinkings that were much more tragic, yet everyone keep going back to the Titanic because it is the most famous. Lets not forget the hospital ship Wilhelm Gustloff where 9400 souls perished in about an hour by a soviet navy ship!

    • @italiangypsy79
      @italiangypsy79 6 місяців тому

      @@geometricart7851 why there always gotta be people like you? It's FOCKING video about Titanic survivor. If you wanna see something about Wilhelm Gustloff then go to a William Gustloff video! Or if you wanna see other videos about maritime sinkings go look them up, there's plenty!

    • @gilliankingston8259
      @gilliankingston8259 6 місяців тому +14

      Bless him, perhaps he met Mr and Mrs Clark again in 1982.

    • @SunsetBoulevard111
      @SunsetBoulevard111 6 місяців тому

      Well, here is a good venue to tell us about it ​@@geometricart7851

    • @eily_b
      @eily_b 5 місяців тому +5

      While listening to him I asked myself what the survivors would have to say about the movie if they could have seen it. The actual sinking was described by all of them similarly, so that is probably pretty accurate

  • @fh346
    @fh346 7 місяців тому +179

    Mr. Prentice Spoke about Having Nightmares. Poor Soul He is a Hero. Saved a Life and had his Saved too.

    • @benfisher1376
      @benfisher1376 3 місяці тому +2

      I bet most of the survivors had nightmares about it for the rest of their lives. Such a huge trauma to experience. I bet it was far more frightening in reality.

    • @fh346
      @fh346 3 місяці тому +2

      @benfisher1376 That's a Realistic Assumption. Many Probably Had PTSD.

  • @laurastone6578
    @laurastone6578 4 місяці тому +23

    He seems like a kind person…and a gentleman.

  • @escapevelocity434
    @escapevelocity434 3 місяці тому +34

    Always amazed at the level of articulation, humility and conversational skills these old timers had.

  • @kittybitts567
    @kittybitts567 7 місяців тому +125

    What a lovely gentleman! His level headed approach to what was going on after the iceberg was hit is so admirable. God bless his soul. May he rest in peace. May perpetual light shine upon him and everyone who sailed on that ship.

  • @candymurphy6964
    @candymurphy6964 6 місяців тому +440

    In 1972 I met a woman who was a survivor of the titanic. She had been celebrating her 18th birthday. When the ship began to sink someone picked her up and threw her into a lifeboat. Her main memory was of the awful silence after all the people in the water had ceased their crying and calling for help.

    • @sadepennbrook
      @sadepennbrook 5 місяців тому +12

      😢

    • @southlondon86
      @southlondon86 5 місяців тому +8

      😢😢

    • @КириллКасьян-с8я
      @КириллКасьян-с8я 5 місяців тому +14

      It's heartbreaking, but it's good that she survived..

    • @dalegrant9282
      @dalegrant9282 5 місяців тому +11

      Yep, all the men dying

    • @Lisa1987lisa
      @Lisa1987lisa 4 місяці тому +36

      @@dalegrant9282not really , a lot of women and children from 3rd class didn’t survive. As some of them didn’t make it to the life boats in time. 1st and second class had priority.

  • @jillwanlin9558
    @jillwanlin9558 7 місяців тому +105

    How wonderful to have this resilient gentleman giving a first person account of his harrowing experience on the night Titanic sank. The terror for all on board must have been unimaginable. This was recorded in 1979, 67yrs after she went down. Bless Mr. Frank Prentice for sharing this for the benefit of generations to come. May he RIP

  • @mattdeans9873
    @mattdeans9873 Місяць тому +4

    No actor could ever duplicate the words of these extraordinary survivors. Thank you for posting them. Breathtaking and frightening and heart breaking.

  • @JT-hs2xt
    @JT-hs2xt Місяць тому +11

    35yr old man here crying like a baby. I recently took a cruise with my wife and 3 children from Southampton to Bruges stopping at Cherbourg (I had no idea the titanic stopped there) I can’t begin to imagine what these poor people went through. God bless their souls 😔 Salute to Frank, spoken like a true gentleman ❤

  • @easystar123
    @easystar123 7 місяців тому +69

    This was wonderful to hear from an an actual survivor of the Titanic. This man recalled everything so vividly about the tragedy and did it so nicely. God bless his soul. Rest in peace Mr Prentice.

  • @GamingLifers.M
    @GamingLifers.M 7 місяців тому +199

    What a fantastic bloke a lost generation people are not this classy anymore

    • @thedigitalemotion
      @thedigitalemotion 6 місяців тому +11

      Exactly what I was think too! Last of a generation this sadly.

    • @carolynm9638
      @carolynm9638 4 місяці тому +1

      That’s a fact.

  • @gerardmackay8909
    @gerardmackay8909 6 місяців тому +53

    Frank Prentice 1889 - 1982. He was 90 when this documentary was broadcast and he looks amazing and speaks like someone 30 years younger.

    • @swiftheathgardens
      @swiftheathgardens 2 місяці тому +5

      Thank you for clarifying that! I was wondering 🤔

  • @ziff_1
    @ziff_1 5 місяців тому +387

    His watch, stopped at 2:20 AM, should be in a museum.

    • @tinam6357
      @tinam6357 4 місяці тому +28

      Why- it’s his

    • @ewade244
      @ewade244 4 місяці тому +34

      ​@@tinam6357You are aware that he's been dead for decades, right?

    • @a9029k
      @a9029k 4 місяці тому +35

      @@ewade244if I were him I would've kept it in the family. He probably left it to his children

    • @tinam6357
      @tinam6357 4 місяці тому +7

      @@ewade244 his families- yes I’m aware but that property of his/ family- but yes that would be nice-
      I went to Titanic museum they had in one of the casinos and I can’t believe how it moved me

    • @thajman
      @thajman 4 місяці тому +46

      It is in the Titanic Museum in Southampton UK.

  • @ellisc.foleyjr9778
    @ellisc.foleyjr9778 5 місяців тому +11

    I'm 81 yrs old and have heard about the Titanic all my life. but thanks to You Tube I get to see and hear the actual people that were there on that horid night. The thing that would haunt me the most as he said was the sounds of the ship breaking up . Giving out its last crys of fate and precedent to its upcoming silence. God RIP Mr. Prentice. ECF

  • @ericchambers5827
    @ericchambers5827 4 місяці тому +84

    Watching this old man telling the story really broke my heart. Im sure he has long passed away R.I.P. SIR

    • @mackmccord3743
      @mackmccord3743 2 місяці тому +5

      He passed away in 1982. 3 years before they found the shipwreck buried in the ocean in 1985

  • @tamiwatchesstuff
    @tamiwatchesstuff 7 місяців тому +209

    I can’t imagine the PTSD these survivors lived with. 😢 RIP for those who perished.

    • @mokele7283
      @mokele7283 7 місяців тому +12

      I think the one who he told about from the lifeboat, who wanted to get off was deeply in shock. 😢

    • @LimerickWarrior1
      @LimerickWarrior1 7 місяців тому +12

      You can see the pain in his face.

    • @cjhoward409
      @cjhoward409 7 місяців тому +5

      I met Edgar Harrell. He wrote a book called Out Of The Depths. He was a Marine on the Uss Indianapolis that got torpedoed. He just passed away a year or 2 ago. The last surviving Marine on that vessel. Riveting story of survival.

    • @fenrislegacy
      @fenrislegacy 7 місяців тому +3

      @@cjhoward409 The Indianapolis was a whole different level of hell, reading about it is enough to give one nightmares.

    • @CookiExMonster1
      @CookiExMonster1 7 місяців тому +13

      Heres the thing. Old school people lived with it and didnt use it as a crutch like todays sissys. Thats what i picked up from these old videos of tragedies. Something is to be gained from pain and sorrow. And how to deal with it make you into this man who can remember everything and went on being tough. No excuses

  • @pho3nix-
    @pho3nix- 7 місяців тому +120

    Finally they posted a proper clip of this interview. Thank you.

  • @FrankIsAlwaysRight
    @FrankIsAlwaysRight 7 місяців тому +78

    The definitive gentleman. Well educated and well read. A charming man in the way he communicates his feelings. They don’t make them like this very much anymore.

    • @doctorbohr1585
      @doctorbohr1585 6 місяців тому

      He's probably well read. I doubt he was well educated, serving as a crew member. He probably learned the trade to escape poverty. His life was an education, however.

    • @joycegibbs5267
      @joycegibbs5267 6 місяців тому +1

      that's what a proper education looked like. Not like now !

  • @KyleCorwith
    @KyleCorwith 5 місяців тому +9

    Never have listened to a recounting more clear than this. Bless this man's soul.

  • @roberthobo4871
    @roberthobo4871 4 місяці тому +10

    What beautiful Karma. He saved Mrs. Clark and helped her get on the life boat. Then her life boat scoped him out of the frozen water and she wrapped him up. He said she probably saved his life as he was about frozen solid. Crazy how life works sometimes. You have to stop and appreciate everything.

  • @dudoklasovity2093
    @dudoklasovity2093 5 місяців тому +36

    I like this old man, they way he talks, his gestures and the remarkable situation recovery his memory is very good.

  • @jeremypearson6852
    @jeremypearson6852 7 місяців тому +291

    You can tell by the emotion in his voice how much this still affects him. Terrible tragedy,

    • @Rob-zw5qs
      @Rob-zw5qs 7 місяців тому

      I dont think it still affects him

    • @petercarrington948
      @petercarrington948 7 місяців тому

      Why do you say that?​@@Rob-zw5qs

    • @johnnymichael1804
      @johnnymichael1804 7 місяців тому +3

      ​@petercarrington948 because this interview was conducted 45 years ago and dude was already in his 80's it appears.
      So unless he's 120 years old now, I doubt this STILL affects him.....

    • @petercarrington948
      @petercarrington948 7 місяців тому +14

      @@johnnymichael1804 oh that's SO Clever. 'dude'

    • @alanbellas513
      @alanbellas513 7 місяців тому +2

      @@johnnymichael1804 guess, you have never heard of historical present tense, hence ah so mathematically astute.

  • @user-fb3pu3qx3t
    @user-fb3pu3qx3t 7 місяців тому +85

    Amazing testimony.

  • @lindaraterink6451
    @lindaraterink6451 2 місяці тому +16

    "You lie in bed at night and the whole thing comes round again.." at this point it had been over 60 years or something. Trauma never goes away.

    • @Kinesiology411
      @Kinesiology411 2 місяці тому +1

      It can be relieved, just takes some work.

  • @FDguy343
    @FDguy343 2 місяці тому +9

    I wish I could just give this gentleman a good long hug. And just have a chance to say thank you.

  • @TheTemporalRealm
    @TheTemporalRealm 7 місяців тому +380

    he saved one life and then his life was saved

    • @donkey3187
      @donkey3187 7 місяців тому +12

      yes, we all heard that, but thanks anyway. lol

    • @fegstachops6746
      @fegstachops6746 7 місяців тому +8

      Yes , what goes around and all that . Your comment deserves the 70 likes so far.I’m not sure the sarcasm deserves 3 likes .

    • @BalrajTakhar-u7u
      @BalrajTakhar-u7u 7 місяців тому +3

      There were many others on that ship that saved others that perished. So much for karma. As he says himself it was pure luck he was picked up.

    • @donkey3187
      @donkey3187 7 місяців тому

      @@BalrajTakhar-u7u He helped that lady, then she helped save him...perfect karma story. It doesnt have to be this mystical thing...karma can just be others give back to you when you give to them.

    • @TheTemporalRealm
      @TheTemporalRealm 7 місяців тому

      @@BalrajTakhar-u7u He speaks his intuition

  • @renayeblack5906
    @renayeblack5906 6 місяців тому +36

    Thank you BBC this is a priceless little interview.

  • @MultiGreatescape
    @MultiGreatescape 7 місяців тому +71

    very sad..."i'll have another nightmare...you think I'm too old for that but you'll be amazed"

  • @RickBerg-b9k
    @RickBerg-b9k 4 місяці тому +32

    If this interview took place in 1979, Mr. Prentice was 90 years old. He died three years later in 1982.

    • @LouiseLm91
      @LouiseLm91 Місяць тому

      So he actually died before they found the wreckage 😢

    • @LouiseLm91
      @LouiseLm91 Місяць тому

      Just 3 years before they finally located the wreckage ❤

  • @maxaircraft5974
    @maxaircraft5974 2 місяці тому +6

    There are no words anyone can say today to match the words this mans says here. Such great historical footage.

  • @NeTxGrl
    @NeTxGrl 7 місяців тому +185

    RIP Frank Prentice.

    • @quietguy1948
      @quietguy1948 7 місяців тому +21

      And all the rest on board that terrible night/morning . . .

  • @JoeL-zb1yd
    @JoeL-zb1yd 6 місяців тому +45

    Wow. What a man. I take my hat off to him. Frank W. Prentice. He still hurts but manages a smile.

  • @1gbayfisher
    @1gbayfisher 7 місяців тому +46

    This man is a national treasure, God bless him.

  • @grandiosa86
    @grandiosa86 5 місяців тому +5

    This is why I love UA-cam, because sometimes clips of this caliber comes around like a priceless gift.

  • @morlin101
    @morlin101 3 місяці тому +5

    Oh my God I'm so happy this interview took place. It was breathtaking and chilling at the same time. Thank you for this experience

  • @mikebrice7255
    @mikebrice7255 7 місяців тому +66

    I had a customer whose father was on board the Carpathia the night she picked up survivors. He was quite young but apparently remembered that day quite vividly !

  • @DoubleDeckerAnton
    @DoubleDeckerAnton 6 місяців тому +28

    What an amazing interview. He thanked God for saving his life. It was great he helped that young wife too.

  • @dianaminnick8003
    @dianaminnick8003 7 місяців тому +56

    Poor man. It haunts him his whole life, but it would be a night mare for anyone.

  • @cellocat-sm8lx
    @cellocat-sm8lx Місяць тому +7

    God bless this sweet gentleman. God rest his soul and all those lost on the Titanic ❤

  • @zjjir
    @zjjir Місяць тому +2

    wow. so amazing to hear it from a person who was there. he speaks so eloquently.

  • @pocopico7409
    @pocopico7409 6 місяців тому +61

    I’m struck, while listening to this gentleman’s personal accounting of what happened, just how amazing the 1997 movie “Titanic“ was in recreating the disaster. Listening to this man talk brought back scenes from the movie that seemed to match exactly what this man was saying. Imagine actually seeing those scenes from the movie in real life! How horrible, yet so amazing that he lived to tell it.

    • @prettythings3
      @prettythings3 3 місяці тому +1

      You must see "A Night to Remember." You would find it fascinating.

    • @pocopico7409
      @pocopico7409 3 місяці тому +3

      @@prettythings3: Thank you… I just watched it. I watched a colorized version on UA-cam for free. Yes, it was a very good movie, especially considering it was made in 1958. I found both of them to be very similar, but I think I prefer the 1998 version. The ‘58 version didn’t have the love story or beautiful music, of course. 😊

    • @prettythings3
      @prettythings3 3 місяці тому +4

      @@pocopico7409 Oh great. Very glad you enjoyed it. It was historically accurate mostly, and survivors were consulted during production. The set design was also very precise. The inquiries into the actions of the Carpathian and Californian ships were very interesting. Such a tragedy. Water can rob one's body about 20x faster compared to air, and the cold Labrador current was simply deadly for the poor souls in the water.

  • @alanbeaumont4848
    @alanbeaumont4848 7 місяців тому +59

    Mt grandmother had a school friend who survived the event (she'd have been about 16). She had also said there was no initial concern or rush to the boats because everyone believed the ship unsinkable.

    • @brightblue2415
      @brightblue2415 7 місяців тому +4

      There had also been people who died as a result of getting on lifeboats on previous ships (capsizing, smashing into the side of the ship), so people who knew about any of those, would be even more reluctant to get on board a lifeboat.

    • @miralynne8913
      @miralynne8913 7 місяців тому

      I can recommend ocean liners design for more information. It is such a well researched and informative channel 😊

    • @destructionman1
      @destructionman1 6 місяців тому +3

      @@brightblue2415 It was 80 feet down the side of the Titanic to the water. Pitch black, freezing cold, eerily silent. Waving goodbye-forever to your husband/dad/etc. Leaving behind all your personal belongings other than what you could fit in your pockets. I for one would have been scared sh*tless to get into one of those lifeboats, and wouldn't unless there was no other choice, which people weren't sure of until the final minutes. Understandable they were reluctant.

  • @Hackett1066
    @Hackett1066 7 місяців тому +218

    Men like him make me proud of my wonderful country and it’s past 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿👌

    • @markpalmer8083
      @markpalmer8083 7 місяців тому +14

      And look at it now and the latest generations! Compare and contrast!

    • @Hackett1066
      @Hackett1066 7 місяців тому +13

      @@markpalmer8083 exactly some can’t decide if they are Arthur or Martha strange world we live in now 😂

    • @shafiqyongxian97
      @shafiqyongxian97 6 місяців тому

      By colonising and killing other nations?

    • @LukeGale-w8m
      @LukeGale-w8m 6 місяців тому

      @@Hackett1066 Yes, that is EXACTLY what he meant XD

    • @Gino_567
      @Gino_567 6 місяців тому +2

      @@markpalmer8083 I prefer to focus on the positives and move forward rather than dwell on the negatives.

  • @Trey_Johnson11
    @Trey_Johnson11 4 місяці тому +11

    That last thing he said was so haunting. Thinking about how he was just a young man when this occurred. And alllllllllll these years later he still lays in bed at night reliving that nightmare. Such a chilling and profound account given from this man. And he’s now long gone. RIP sir and thank you for telling your story.

  • @tonysuley4306
    @tonysuley4306 2 місяці тому +20

    Well spoken gentleman who didn't crumble under pressure and saved other people first you have my respect sir and I salute you

  • @sandraa2971
    @sandraa2971 7 місяців тому +62

    I find it amazing that he ran into Mrs Clark a second time I hope they stayed in touch. Good bless them all.

  • @rickgrimes120
    @rickgrimes120 6 місяців тому +10

    He had such a calming and endearing way about him - especially how he spoke. Beautiful human. Respect.

  • @andysimpson7559
    @andysimpson7559 7 місяців тому +32

    A truly remarkable account of the last moments of the Titanic.

  • @FavourOhonsi
    @FavourOhonsi 7 днів тому +3

    When you say a Legend…this is literally a Legend ❤

  • @--Voltz--
    @--Voltz-- 3 місяці тому +4

    *Hearing him talk was so peaceful and calm. I could listen to him all day and all night* !

  • @michellewinkler3985
    @michellewinkler3985 6 місяців тому +88

    Old guy had massive PTSD that's why he continued to have nightmares. They didn't have that term back in 1979. What an incredible story. Meeting up again with Mrs. Clark must have meant that God or an angel was watching over them!!!!!

    • @ziziscorsese9475
      @ziziscorsese9475 6 місяців тому +4

      @AemondBlackKillerI would prefer gunfire from a distance than being trapped in a huge sinking chunk of steel in the dark of night in the middle of a freezing cold horrifying ocean.

    • @bryanflipse8483
      @bryanflipse8483 6 місяців тому +6

      They did have PTSD back then. It was known as shell shock.

    • @michellewinkler3985
      @michellewinkler3985 6 місяців тому

      @@bryanflipse8483 I forgot about that, your right! But that was normally reserved for military, not for someone else

  • @SleepCove
    @SleepCove 6 місяців тому +15

    I’ve only heard one survivor talking about the screaming and shouting as that was very traumatic and most won’t revisit it. Everyone in the water were begging to be saved, screaming for their mothers etc. Every minute these screams got less and less until silence in the blackness of the night. Imagine that memory staying with you

  • @Salacious-Crumb
    @Salacious-Crumb 7 місяців тому +89

    Whats even sadder is gentleman like this have also slipped away never to be seen again

    • @JimmyWin501
      @JimmyWin501 7 місяців тому +15

      Totally agree, you won’t see people like that again…

    • @TaxingIsThieving
      @TaxingIsThieving 6 місяців тому +12

      That’s a tragedy in itself.

    • @joycegibbs5267
      @joycegibbs5267 6 місяців тому +4

      so true. Looks what's replaced it 🥺😢😱😱

    • @NoNeed2No
      @NoNeed2No 3 місяці тому

      ​@@joycegibbs5267East Asian and African gimmegrants

  • @coloradoken3159
    @coloradoken3159 3 місяці тому +7

    He was 90 years old during this interview. I hope I look this good when I'm 70.

  • @onefastgoat1168
    @onefastgoat1168 4 місяці тому +8

    Titanic, both world wars. This gentleman has lived through some crazy stuff. Respect from a 🇺🇸

  • @sandymwest1606
    @sandymwest1606 6 місяців тому +14

    Wow, this gentleman tells a wonderful story of the sinking from his personal experience. Bless him.

  • @bartdart3315
    @bartdart3315 6 місяців тому +97

    Stiff upper lip, duty bound, never ever worried about his own demise, while witnessing horrors no one should. This man and his ilk are what made Britain what it was throughout the ages. I am proud to be British. As a side note: my gr8 grandad, a sergeant in the British army, also survived WWI...gaud only know how! I hope they both found peace.

    • @JoeL-zb1yd
      @JoeL-zb1yd 6 місяців тому +10

      I take my hat off to you and your countrymen.

    • @prettythings3
      @prettythings3 3 місяці тому

      A Yank from Wyoming: Somehow we feel you are still our anchor. Our admiration for you, your eloquent history and the grand United Kingdom is endless.

  • @glamdolly30
    @glamdolly30 7 місяців тому +103

    I'm delighted to say this lovely man died of natural causes at the ripe old age of 93, on 19th May 1982, just three years after giving this interview.
    And before he left this small planet, he fathered three children who are no doubt immensely proud of him.
    There was pure luck involved in who lived and died that terrible night - and survivors were of course in the minority. His encounters with Mrs Clark were very moving - he saved her life, then she saved his with acts of human kindness. God bless their beautiful souls, the victims of the Titanic tragedy must never be forgotten.

    • @cjhoward409
      @cjhoward409 7 місяців тому +4

      And more survivors from first and second class mainly

    • @J.Marrs76
      @J.Marrs76 7 місяців тому +2

      Are you from his family? Wonderful testimony he's left for history. Very honest account.

    • @gavinbrando8255
      @gavinbrando8255 7 місяців тому

      Unless you were a woman of course

    • @RonniePickeringMate
      @RonniePickeringMate 7 місяців тому +1

      You’re delighted that he passed away? That’s dark

    • @glamdolly30
      @glamdolly30 7 місяців тому +11

      @@RonniePickeringMate Grow up!

  • @digitalsoldier3894
    @digitalsoldier3894 5 місяців тому +14

    To put into context for the few who haven't worked out that the Titanic Disaster in the 1997 Film actually happened. This man was at the very same place on the stern that Jack and Rose were as She sank

  • @2036livy
    @2036livy Місяць тому +3

    Thank you for posting this amazing piece of history. If only this was what YT was all about. It's so much better than the rubbish being posted elsewhere ❤

  • @mrsjgray09
    @mrsjgray09 6 місяців тому +7

    I just adore him speaking to all of us. How absolutely lovely to have this precious interview footage 🙏

  • @saragrisanti9814
    @saragrisanti9814 7 місяців тому +22

    Wow.. what an impressive gentleman. I wish young men had the style, grace and courage he demonstrated that night.

    • @martyvirtue4051
      @martyvirtue4051 7 місяців тому +3

      Real men have stopped existing. Unfortunately.

    • @NoNeed2No
      @NoNeed2No 3 місяці тому +1

      ​@@martyvirtue4051Many men would just identify as a woman and be the first on the lifeboats these days

  • @quietguy1948
    @quietguy1948 7 місяців тому +47

    God Bless Mr Prentice . . . And all the souls on the Titanic.

  • @robertsessoms
    @robertsessoms Місяць тому +7

    I took a circle line cruise around Manhatten years ago..we past by this old dock and the tour guide said" that is where the Titanic was supposed to dock"

  • @jasoncurry1685
    @jasoncurry1685 2 місяці тому +2

    What a fantastic true gent, not boastful or full of self pity, just a polite man who did his best, that's all any of us can do.