Titanic: The Facts Told By Real Survivors | British Pathé

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  • Опубліковано 25 гру 2024

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  • @msladyashley1
    @msladyashley1 12 років тому +23303

    My Great Grandmother, Nelle Snyder was a passenger and survivor of the Titanic disaster. She, and her maid were rescued in lifeboat # 7. She was returning from her honeymoon in Europe.

    • @milfhunter329
      @milfhunter329 5 років тому +646

      robert meyerriecks What did she tell about the titanic?

    • @Parkerlee1000
      @Parkerlee1000 4 роки тому +558

      I call bullshit

    • @PRINTEDBYMM
      @PRINTEDBYMM 4 роки тому +2048

      @@Parkerlee1000 its not hard to believe..

    • @eternalhalloween1
      @eternalhalloween1 4 роки тому +912

      Hey Robert. She must have had some interesting stories to tell. I recently read that even the survivors were greeted with an absolute downpour once they made it to safety in America. Imagine spending all that time dodging the flooding doomed ship, then spending all that time in a crowded lifeboat, and then when you're finally safe, being greeted by a downpour of rain.

    • @violetdesjarlais8420
      @violetdesjarlais8420 4 роки тому +99

      Im sorry but it was not glong there before it went to Europe it was in canada

  • @fieryheadedgirl
    @fieryheadedgirl 2 роки тому +12796

    For those unaware, this is Edith Russell. This is my favourite quote of hers - ""I'm accident-prone," she said. "I've been in shipwrecks, car crashes, fires, floods and tornadoes. I've had every disaster but bubonic plague and a husband.""

    • @marylinthicum678
      @marylinthicum678 2 роки тому +785

      I liked that quote. Thanks for sharing it. She must have been quite a character.

    • @carlosdossantos917
      @carlosdossantos917 2 роки тому +292

      I love her! She's the highlight of this video.

    • @loriematthews6418
      @loriematthews6418 2 роки тому +64

      💞😂😂💞

    • @thecomedypilot5894
      @thecomedypilot5894 2 роки тому +249

      I think having a wife would be the real disaster rather than a husband…
      Ok so apparently I offended a bunch of left-wing liberals with this joke. Please take my comment for what it is, *a JOKE.* I honestly don't think having a wife is a disaster, so please stop getting all offended by just a simple comment.

    • @loriematthews6418
      @loriematthews6418 2 роки тому +98

      @@thecomedypilot5894 i agree, 😂 believe this could work "both" ways.

  • @sammyinbrooklyn
    @sammyinbrooklyn 3 роки тому +19597

    My grand uncle survived. Third class passenger. Daniel Buckley Jr. he spoke before the senate explaining how awful the 3rd class passengers were treated. He joined the American Army and died by sniper shortly before WW1 ended. He’s my hero.

    • @aliray1165
      @aliray1165 3 роки тому +1002

      That is such a sad story. He sounds like an amazing guy.

    • @lodersracing
      @lodersracing 3 роки тому +380

      Thanks for sharing!

    • @kenadams5504
      @kenadams5504 3 роки тому +557

      First class hero.

    • @StylesP710
      @StylesP710 3 роки тому +130

      How tf did he die in ww1 and ride in the titanic?? Doesn’t add up

    • @jasonbrisco
      @jasonbrisco 3 роки тому +1660

      @@StylesP710 ... pick up a history book and leqrn before you write something so stupid.

  • @TapanThakur1964
    @TapanThakur1964 8 місяців тому +430

    Today is 14th April, 2024 - 11:04 PM, Sunday. It has been 112 years since Titanic sank at the bottom of the Atlantic. RIP to all those who lost their lives on that fateful night🙏

    • @Have_you_seen_papyrus
      @Have_you_seen_papyrus 6 місяців тому

      Rip

    • @taztaz7267
      @taztaz7267 6 місяців тому +2

      It'd impossible to bring that ship because it will just crumble

    • @jeffscomp
      @jeffscomp 5 місяців тому +4

      @@taztaz7267 not to mention it’s hard to do anything with that water pressure. It’s 12000 feet under water which is over 2 miles.

    • @taztaz7267
      @taztaz7267 5 місяців тому +2

      ​@@jeffscomp the only thing I can think off send robots with ropes or high definition cameras

    • @yash_walia
      @yash_walia 5 місяців тому

      Yeah​@@taztaz7267

  • @Trini2DeBone
    @Trini2DeBone 5 років тому +15263

    It's truly sad that persons in steerage or lower classes had to stay below deck until the upper classes were cleared. It means that some persons probably never made it to the deck of the titanic at all.

    • @doffineotienongoga1281
      @doffineotienongoga1281 5 років тому +638

      Yes my dear Maria some were stuck in there till the end

    • @greenkitty82
      @greenkitty82 5 років тому +925

      Yes very few people from steerage survived. What a tragedy and it must have been absolutely frightening to witness and experience. Huge iron ship like that, going down like that in a couple of hours. God rest their souls.

    • @xZ4ZZYx
      @xZ4ZZYx 5 років тому +246

      It’s horrible everyone’s equil

    • @greenkitty82
      @greenkitty82 5 років тому +453

      Unicycle Crazy !!! We know as human beings we are all equal on this earth but in certain cultural systems, particularly in the U.K. where Titanic left, there is a belief system of hierarchy based on money, work and education - the working class, upper class and middle class. In the UK it goes way back in the times of old kings and queens and even today we still have a class system in the UK. I'm middle class as I'm educated but not rich but then there are others like simple labourers who are deemed working class. We shouldn't be labelled that way but we are. Working class or living in a manor as a well educated upper class person shouldn't matter, we are all people with a heartbeat.

    • @xZ4ZZYx
      @xZ4ZZYx 5 років тому +31

      Greenkitty82 I agree

  • @iwantlee9510
    @iwantlee9510 4 роки тому +21650

    And now they are all dead. Every single person who sat foot on the Titanic is gone. Both the victims resting on the ocean floor of the north atlantic, and the survivors who made it home. It's sad to think about.

    • @ninarae8837
      @ninarae8837 4 роки тому +1116

      @Leo Welch i dont think "moves on" is appropriate. Life continues, but no one should be "moving on." Those words are just so cold to refer to people who wanted to live, just like you do right this moment. (or maybe you don't. but sometimes you do.)

    • @t1ny03
      @t1ny03 4 роки тому +575

      I think it's sad, yes.
      But if they never stepped foot on titanic, never even knew if its existence - like billions of other people on the planet - they would still be gone unfortunately.
      May they all rip.

    • @stevenmurray8984
      @stevenmurray8984 4 роки тому +517

      Pretty soon the Titanic will be gone herself

    • @sophiaroberto3563
      @sophiaroberto3563 4 роки тому +175

      @Leo Welch I think you mean the heart will go on

    • @iwantlee9510
      @iwantlee9510 4 роки тому +50

      @Debziez there's probably a couple left

  • @donna6368
    @donna6368 4 роки тому +12527

    This is such incredible footage. They are human walking history books. Imagine all that they lived through.

    • @Saranda4787
      @Saranda4787 4 роки тому +49

      Really? They don't look like books to me. They look more like...human. Find out what literally means before you decide to (mis)use it.

    • @donna6368
      @donna6368 4 роки тому +678

      @@Saranda4787 Lady, have a seat. It was meant as a compliment as to the amount of history that they experienced in their precious lives.

    • @amiraprichard1741
      @amiraprichard1741 4 роки тому +148

      Saranda Krasniqi omg chill out. people find anything to be mad about now. just shut your face.

    • @nuss529
      @nuss529 4 роки тому +221

      That's actually a beautiful way of putting it, "They are walking history books"

    • @donna6368
      @donna6368 4 роки тому +52

      @@nuss529 😊

  • @envymhere2446
    @envymhere2446 Рік тому +1690

    Respect the Ocean. It's undefeated, its ruthless, merciless, powerful and its vast.

    • @harvesterofstorms4932
      @harvesterofstorms4932 Рік тому +22

      Well put.

    • @mzj7246
      @mzj7246 Рік тому +17

      Exactly

    • @Criticodoscriticos
      @Criticodoscriticos Рік тому +35

      Very true. I am terrified of the ocean.

    • @Mone333Williams
      @Mone333Williams Рік тому +16

      I could be wrong. But A LOT of aristocrats and extremely wealthy ppl were on that ship and I think right around WW1 the world was changing fast and the modern age had begun..the gap between the super wealthy and very poor was too great and if Europe was gonna survive there couldn't be such a big gap between neighbors becuz of birth status. They needed each other to rebuild Britain during WW1... That ship killed ALOT of wealthy ppl at once..That ship was doomed from the day it sailed becuz NOTHING is unsinkable...gods true magic tends to happen when man kind puts machine built thing above gods natural wonders like the ocean. I personally don't believe a iceberg sunk that ship. U ever saw ice slice thru a metal plate even the thin-est of metal ? Me either smh

    • @Criticodoscriticos
      @Criticodoscriticos Рік тому +12

      @@Mone333Williams sir, do you know what an iceberg looks like ? We are talking about a mountain of ice inside of the sea "pretty much", it was a 122 METERS long iceberg my friend. Yes, it did sunk that ship, because it was very possible.
      Also, you need to consider the speed the ship was traveling, more than 23 miles per hour, which makes the impact even worse.

  • @susieq9801
    @susieq9801 7 років тому +6671

    I met Elizabeth and Violet Mellinger, mother and daughter survivors who lived in my town and are buried a couple of miles from where I live. The daughter was 12 and lifted into a lifeboat by Will Murdoch, 1st Officer. Their lifeboat picked up 2nd Officer Lightholler from the icy water and the mother gave him her coat. In return he gave her his silver officer's whistle.

    • @lillykluge-browne8616
      @lillykluge-browne8616 6 років тому +22

      Susie Q

    • @karamuenster
      @karamuenster 6 років тому +161

      Susie Q oh wow!! 😯 so interesting. Thanx for sharing Susie.

    • @vaishnavitiwari4461
      @vaishnavitiwari4461 6 років тому +232

      Oh my God !! To think that none of the crew survived. They indeed were heroes. Imagine what must be going in his head while giving that whistle that was to be the last thing of his life to reach people

    • @ashleyn8946
      @ashleyn8946 6 років тому +77

      Vaishnavi Tiwari I think the 2nd officer survived but he did that by swimming to a overturned boat.

    • @kirkgriffin8882
      @kirkgriffin8882 6 років тому +113

      Ashley N 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th officers all survived. One of the officers shot himself while the lifeboats were being loaded.

  • @potentpotionssubliminals1122
    @potentpotionssubliminals1122 4 роки тому +7605

    It's officially 108 years since Titanic sank

    • @fantasticpotato5698
      @fantasticpotato5698 4 роки тому +116

      No way this comment is real

    • @donnaiwicki6889
      @donnaiwicki6889 4 роки тому +67

      Sadly its true

    • @rockfreakk5712
      @rockfreakk5712 4 роки тому +11

      @M yeah 😟😂

    • @kr4zyy
      @kr4zyy 4 роки тому +127

      @@rockfreakk5712 300+ bodies were recovered. 1.1K + bodies were never found or recovered. This means at least 1.5K people died then.

    • @eunuchprovocateur4734
      @eunuchprovocateur4734 4 роки тому +30

      Ok, it was officially 107 years last year. It will officially be 109 years next year. What is the point of this comment?

  • @JaneMagdalena
    @JaneMagdalena 6 років тому +6572

    Amazing footage.
    Shivers went down my spine when she mentioned the "suction". I have actually never realized, there must have been massive water pressure dragging the boats towards the sinking Titanic, putting them at risk of sinking too....

    • @SunflowerSpotlight
      @SunflowerSpotlight 5 років тому +296

      MMLF 7619 I believe they were also concerned of being swamped. A boat that did go back was piloted by one of the crew members. He waited to go back, because he was afraid if they went back too soon they’d be tipped over by so many panicking people. They waited. I believe less than 20 people were saved from the water because of this.
      Fun fact, the pig in this video was musical, played music. Another man took a Bible he’d promised his brother he’d always carry until they met again.

    • @rogergoodell1874
      @rogergoodell1874 5 років тому +185

      Actually there was no suction. They all thought there was, not true at all. It’s been scientifically disproven.

    • @pepesupreme6451
      @pepesupreme6451 5 років тому +62

      @@rogergoodell1874
      Source?

    • @laurentaylor1200
      @laurentaylor1200 5 років тому +113

      Charles Harris what’s the source? how could that be true, it was tons upon tons, there had to have been SOMETHING??

    • @rogergoodell1874
      @rogergoodell1874 5 років тому +17

      Pepe Supreme Mythbusters

  • @94frankiec
    @94frankiec Рік тому +487

    I can’t imagine going through something this traumatic - running around the ships deck as it’s sinking, seeing the ship sink and hearing all those people suffering - and just having to move on with your life. So many of the survivors must of felt like a part of them was left on that ship and were never the same people again afterwards.

    • @autumninvirginia1229
      @autumninvirginia1229 Рік тому +13

      But they chose to go on and not sit and wallow. For sure the survivors were preserved for a purpose great or small. For many adversity builds resilience and strength and gratitude. I have no idea how terrible that night was but I do know many decent hard working people died because of poor decisions by the power players who wanted to set a record and over ruled a skilled Captain. Thank God for the skipper of the Carpathia .

    • @aidenpettigrew9246
      @aidenpettigrew9246 Рік тому +2

      Yeah you can. In fact, you just did. Your brain physically cannot imagine something impossible or incomprehensible.

    • @isabellas5447
      @isabellas5447 5 місяців тому

      ​@@aidenpettigrew9246uhh sir it is just a saying

    • @MutmahinahLuqman
      @MutmahinahLuqman 2 місяці тому +1

      The same thing I was thinking

  • @beardedsailor9465
    @beardedsailor9465 8 років тому +6558

    The problem was to make this voyage at a time of the year when there was a lot of ice in the North Atlantic.The crew received a lot of warning about icebergs but still kept a dangerous high speed because they wanted to arrive in New York earlier so that the press would talk about how fast the ship was.There were some naval engineering mistakes,not enough lifeboats,the boats were not filled with people to its full capacity,there was no consideration for the 3rd class passengers,so many mistakes.They could have better observation instruments for the men who were watching out for icebergs like some nautic telescope or binoculars.The sea was calm,there was no fog,they could have seen the iceberg from a distance enough to dodge it.

    • @beardedsailor9465
      @beardedsailor9465 8 років тому +276

      Paul Heenan
      they received warnings about icebergs from other ships way before the collision but still kept a dangerous high speed,the two last warnings were not sent to the bridge.One of the lookouts said that if he had binoculars he could have seen the iceberg before.During the investigation some passengers said that they heard Bruce Ismay talking with the Captain about increasing the speed.There was also criticism of the avoidance maneuver and so many other things

    • @paulheenan9098
      @paulheenan9098 8 років тому +90

      Fernando Miranda Yes, the last warning would have helped, for it could have pinpointed the exact iceberg they were going to hit. Even Officer Lightoller testified that had he known that ice was so close to Titanic, he would have slowed the ship down. In his own words, "That piece of paper would have saved that great ship." The blue colour of the berg was what helped hide it against the dark blue horizon until the last minute. As for Ismay wishing to increase speed, it was Titanic's first voyage, so he was discussing a possible speed run, weather permitting, on Monday morning for the ship to test its engines.

    • @beardedsailor9465
      @beardedsailor9465 8 років тому +151

      Paul Heenan
      It was a combination of incompetence and misjudgment by the crew,the bridge,wireless operator and managers of the company

    • @paulheenan9098
      @paulheenan9098 8 років тому +50

      I completely agree, in addition to just some bad luck for the ship (nearly causing an accident before it even left port) and by sheer coincidence sailing straight into a lone iceberg. I've always thought, had Smith not adjusted her course to ironically avoid ice, would she have survived her voyage?

    • @keishastewart5614
      @keishastewart5614 6 років тому +64

      There are a lot of other stories and conspiracies that are saying that the sinking wasn't an accident 😞

  • @selentorfan5123
    @selentorfan5123 10 років тому +13347

    In fact titanic supposed to be the most safe ship.But instead is the most tragic history

    • @Googaify
      @Googaify 6 років тому +320

      because it was safe for those times. just not unsinkable, not in such circumstances

    • @anom3778
      @anom3778 6 років тому +560

      You cant just ram an iceberg at full speed and expect everything to be fine lol.

    • @elizabethcarter880
      @elizabethcarter880 6 років тому +263

      It has alot to do with the fact there where not enough life boats.

    • @fbnflaviusbroadcastingnetw6786
      @fbnflaviusbroadcastingnetw6786 5 років тому +19

      anom head on you might

    • @tay.mchardy2045
      @tay.mchardy2045 5 років тому +149

      @@anom3778 Actually the ship was designed in such a way that if the ship collided head on with the iceberg only one of the front compartments would have flooded. The ship would not have sunk

  • @mahtinown-eel
    @mahtinown-eel 3 роки тому +4525

    This was over 100 years ago and I’ve heard the story of the Titanic my whole life and yet, watching this made me tear up. It’s never not sad thinking of 1,500 people dying in such horrific fashion

    • @VenusEvan_1885
      @VenusEvan_1885 3 роки тому +9

      And people back then were very ignorant and sexist, all the passengers that died were men, they saved only women, talk about men rights, sadly nowadays men still have no rights in comparison to woman

    • @spaghetits1338
      @spaghetits1338 3 роки тому +19

      @@VenusEvan_1885 your entire statement is ignorant and it’s 2022 my guy. Women, children and babies were ordered to be saved first by the captain/ a higher positioned officer. There were families ripped apart and didn’t want to be. Now, give me a credible basis that proves that today, ‘men have no rights’?? Idk where you are but people STILL have rights it’s mostly women’s that are violated.

    • @VenusEvan_1885
      @VenusEvan_1885 3 роки тому +3

      @@spaghetits1338 if you're a feminist I am not gonna argue with you, i hate Feminists

    • @spaghetits1338
      @spaghetits1338 3 роки тому +13

      @@VenusEvan_1885 yeah cause you’re completely and utterly misinformed about the actual definition and reasoning why feminism exists. Really funny as well how you refuse to have an argument with someone that simply asked for credible sources that you must have when you made that baseless claim yet you failed to provide any. Kinda proves that you likely can’t even argue properly at all since you barely tried.
      Anyway, your statements already show too much about you and your reply is exactly as expected. Tells me arguing with you is going to be tiresome so I won’t really be willingly wasting my time on you. Adios!!

    • @ld5420
      @ld5420 3 роки тому +7

      Oh Martin

  • @scattypetty
    @scattypetty Рік тому +137

    "We didn't know one another, so we couldn't get into conversation" is the most British thing ever. I'm sure they had at least one thing to bond over...

    • @troyundroy1
      @troyundroy1 7 місяців тому +5

      We don't tend to demarcate classes/ages/genders/roles nearly as much these days. Back then... you stayed in your lane as a social norm. Quite sad really - much like the 3rd class passengers being locked in the lower floors while the ship sank.

    • @theeggtimertictic1136
      @theeggtimertictic1136 6 місяців тому +4

      That was a real eye opener to me! Different times. I think if they were Irish you couldn't stop them talking ... but maybe they were in shock.

    • @crystallineblue4344
      @crystallineblue4344 5 місяців тому

      @@troyundroy1 Third class passengers were NOT "locked in the lower floors while the ship sank". Only uneducated simpletons believe everything you see in FICTIONAL movies.

    • @realitia
      @realitia 24 дні тому

      @@theeggtimertictic1136 I was thinking that, too. People must have been in absolute shock. Folks spoke to each other in other boats, according to stories and accounts.

  • @katiek3396
    @katiek3396 2 роки тому +6122

    It's so interesting to hear the different classes speak about things that happened either during the trip and the disaster. How first class were so worried about stuff and the third were just trying to survive. It's almost as if the urgency wasn't the same. First class certainly assumed they would be saved first and they weren't wrong. It's really sad to think how we as humans never learn or change.

    • @billhosko7723
      @billhosko7723 2 роки тому

      JFC... get over yer pious self... u woke types are endlessly looking for affirmation...

    • @lemurman7978
      @lemurman7978 2 роки тому +330

      This happened in a time where reputation was everything, and being the richest (first class) meant escaping many things, and they probably knew they would be saved meanwhile 3rd class had no idea if they would survive at all. In a way, this still exists for other matters.

    • @arex1072
      @arex1072 2 роки тому +39

      There was also a lot of known celebrities on the ship,ofc it dosent mean there more important than others but back then that’s the reason they saved them first as well

    • @liam2386
      @liam2386 Рік тому +148

      this was portrayed vert well in the 1997 movie.. the rich asking. their maids to heat their room for when they return. the poor running from the rising water

    • @len3169
      @len3169 Рік тому +60

      Like that one guy that tried to pay money to get on the lifeboat then took that child and said he was the kids only family. What a horrible person.

  • @CanadianPrepper
    @CanadianPrepper 3 роки тому +5373

    The woman is a great storyteller with a good memory

    • @BeanThatDude
      @BeanThatDude 3 роки тому

      Do you think they planned this to kill the rich people⁉️ do you believe in aliens I think they built the pyramids

    • @YogaBlissDance
      @YogaBlissDance Рік тому +96

      19 Trunks...amazing how much she cared for her things!

    • @mistressmozart
      @mistressmozart Рік тому +53

      Edith Russell! She was a journalist

    • @WVChad
      @WVChad Рік тому +149

      Woman? I thought it was a man at first

    • @bada4989
      @bada4989 Рік тому +112

      ​@@exploreitsgood4u "The "pig" was a music box in the shape of a pig. The papier-mâché toy, covered in pigskin and playing a tune known as "The Maxixe" when its tail was twisted, was used by Edith Russell to calm frightened children in the lifeboat in which she escaped."

  • @bobandvegana4trump140
    @bobandvegana4trump140 7 років тому +10601

    They should of played this after the movie titanic

    • @petermasterson8276
      @petermasterson8276 4 роки тому +164

      @Martin have

    • @jessevollmar2689
      @jessevollmar2689 4 роки тому +105

      Absolutely no reason they shouldn't that be very good historical information about society of the titanic

    • @violetdesjarlais8420
      @violetdesjarlais8420 4 роки тому +12

      Are before

    • @terra7113
      @terra7113 4 роки тому +6

      bob and vegana 4 trump play it before the movie

    • @colettetaylor8645
      @colettetaylor8645 4 роки тому +107

      There was an original British Titanic movie before the 90's one which is more accurate and didn't have the love story. It also had a few facts at the end. It's an excellent movie.

  • @jimmymcjimmyvich9052
    @jimmymcjimmyvich9052 11 місяців тому +197

    My Mother Catherine Dempsey Nee Keane was a niece of victim Andrew Keane Athenry Co Galway. She told us of the sadness her father experienced.She died last week 30 12 23. Rest in peace mammy.

    • @samarjitmechie
      @samarjitmechie 10 місяців тому +2

      Really? How old was she? Could you please tell me more.. Could we please connect over facebook or insta..?

    • @abdoukouriba2520
      @abdoukouriba2520 9 місяців тому

      Facebbook pls?

    • @brianschmidt9919
      @brianschmidt9919 8 місяців тому +2

      rip

    • @jessicawalker3614
      @jessicawalker3614 8 місяців тому

      Well if that's all true, it sounds like you have an amazing story to share.. if you ever choose to. All in your own timing of course. I just hope it comes across me, if you do choose to. It's an incredible namesake. 💜🙏🏻🕊️

    • @jimmymcjimmyvich9052
      @jimmymcjimmyvich9052 8 місяців тому +1

      @@jessicawalker3614 Well it is all sadly true. His name is engraved on my grandparents grave in Athenry Co. Galway. It reads ''Lost On Titanic''. Later this year I am getting a rock from the Homeplace to make into a headstone for my mother. I think It will be a good idea. I live on the opposite side of Ireland and her grave is near me.

  • @joannebutcher860
    @joannebutcher860 3 роки тому +3334

    This footage of survivors talking about what happened is amazing. What a real character the lady who spoke was !

    • @mariannejohannessen9751
      @mariannejohannessen9751 2 роки тому +17

      Oh how i Love her 🙂🙁🙏💓💓💓💓🥀

    • @Kelly14UK
      @Kelly14UK 2 роки тому +12

      I think her name is Millvina Dean

    • @mkphotofilm
      @mkphotofilm 2 роки тому +11

      The one with the taxidermy pig? Taxidermy is kind of creepy. Norman Bates was a taxidermist.

    • @MrMJmusicLover
      @MrMJmusicLover 2 роки тому +6

      Can you imagine the sound of crashing furniture and dishs.😳

    • @foxyknowledgeseeker1
      @foxyknowledgeseeker1 2 роки тому +11

      Her name is Edith Russell. The pig was a music box gifted by her mother as a lucky charm after a road accident in 1911. There is a longer interview of her talking about her experience in another video.

  • @kristina286
    @kristina286 12 років тому +573

    exactly now, 2.20 am, 100 years ago, the titanic sank. all people who died in this tragedy, rest in peace. you will not be forgotten.

    • @Corxival
      @Corxival 4 роки тому +32

      Wow, a comment from 8 years ago

    • @aveskao8497
      @aveskao8497 4 роки тому +9

      @@Corxival right?

    • @Corxival
      @Corxival 4 роки тому +9

      @@aveskao8497 It's crazy to me

    • @Amanda-ie4vw
      @Amanda-ie4vw 4 роки тому +4

      @@Corxival Woah

    • @jada850
      @jada850 3 роки тому +5

      omg, 8 years ago :(

  • @JulianShagworthy
    @JulianShagworthy 3 роки тому +2409

    Something that always gave me chills was a survivor reporting the enormous, muffled sound of the ship imploding about 30 seconds after it disappeared beneath the surface - it was the noise of the iron buckling under the pressure and crushing every air pocket in the vessel shut.

    • @CRD-hi6vk
      @CRD-hi6vk 3 роки тому +261

      I cannot imagine being there and experiencing that and hearing those sounds of the ship cracking and imploding. Then seeing the others in the water with no hope of getting on a lifeboat.

    • @blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian
      @blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian 3 роки тому +168

      Along with the bodies of any unfortunate men,women,children,and pets trapped aboard that didnt die from drowning or freezing. Even the thought of that happening to their bodies while the ship imploded is horrible.

    • @bulkyzero
      @bulkyzero 3 роки тому +19

      Woah where can I find that account?? It imploded??

    • @blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian
      @blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian 3 роки тому +103

      @@bulkyzero basically the ship sank further than any human can dive. Hence why the wreckage wasnt discovered til way later. I think even further than a submarine can dive without imploding

    • @bulkyzero
      @bulkyzero 3 роки тому +44

      @@blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian come to think of it, I remember reading a little about how it imploded as it sank. Yeah I can’t imagine what that would have sounded like. Maybe like a giant Whale’s roar. Spooky

  • @kriskalpa
    @kriskalpa Рік тому +41

    it's amazing to hear her describe the moment of impact, that there was a slight bump and then another. Didn't feel like anything then she went to bed. Amazing story. so good these stories weren't lost.

  • @vanessalegend
    @vanessalegend 12 років тому +971

    The people sharing their experiences in the video are not actors, they were recorded a long time ago. The first lady to speak is Edith Russel. The last Titanic survivor was Millvina Dean who died in February 2009 at a Nursing home aged 97 years. (She was only a 6 week old baby when she was on titanic).

  • @spreadthelove77
    @spreadthelove77 4 роки тому +4139

    When you call a ship “Unsinkable”, Nature’s gonna remember that.....

    • @jct3439
      @jct3439 3 роки тому +274

      Right! ESPECIALLY if you have the AUDACITY to say “nOt EvEn gOd HiMsELf CoULd tHiNk ThIs tHiP”. This is tragic as hell but this is why you don’t test Nature/God... Keep them thoughts to ya self

    • @prototyp3972
      @prototyp3972 3 роки тому +1

      @@jct3439 ...who said that?

    • @jct3439
      @jct3439 3 роки тому +34

      @@prototyp3972 Look up the newspapers written about the titanic at the time. I can’t think of the specific company off the top of my head but some papers were definitely saying that, if not then something along those lines

    • @anonnieman
      @anonnieman 3 роки тому +19

      It was bloody well near unsinkable, but near was not enough this time

    • @whhrms
      @whhrms 3 роки тому +16

      @@anonnieman The WSL was responsible for the "unsinkable" label. It appeared in one of their earliest brochures (1910) on the Olympic class liners. which were still under construction, and was taken up as "fact." It was published uncritically in Shipbuilder magazine with the word "practically" added to "unsinkable," and was kept going by an intense word-of-mouth campaign being driven by none other than the WSL people themselves, including Captain Smith and Thomas Andrews of Harland & Wolff. This was all at the height of the Industrial Revolution when many people truly believed that man had finally conquered Nature, or at least stake out a safe place for himself.
      The Olympic class liners were very safe ships by any standards, probably even safer than many of the ships that are sailing today; but as one person posted here, they weren't meant to go ramming over an iceberg at 22.5 knots - not even an icebreaker would try to do that. The iceberg found the Titanic's Achilles Heel. "Practically unsinkable" also comes with an obvious qualifier: "practically"? It means "realistically," "sensibly," "reasonably," "nearly," "all but," etc. Even then, you can see, the WSL was sort of hedging its bets, since it knew full well there was no such thing as an unsinkable ship.

  • @smydie
    @smydie 3 роки тому +1162

    My Great grandmother was booked on that trip but had to cancel last minute .
    She ended up on another voyage to New York ,we still have a crystal chandelier she bought in NY.
    True story

    • @jenn8388
      @jenn8388 3 роки тому +86

      My husband’s great grandparents were supposed to be on there as well, but great grandpa fell ill and they sold their tickets to someone else.

    • @atonybiz4608
      @atonybiz4608 3 роки тому +69

      Imagine if it wasn't canceled, you may have not been here today or may have. 🤔

    • @MrMJmusicLover
      @MrMJmusicLover 2 роки тому +49

      @@jenn8388 I feel like I died on that ship. To this day, I have a fear of cruise ships and the ocean and it has nothing to do with the movie. I just don't want to go near any cruise ship or large body of water. 🙁

    • @jenniferraymond9766
      @jenniferraymond9766 2 роки тому +33

      @@AnAdorableWombat Do math much? It's totally possible that someone living today had a great grandparent aboard that ship. My great grandmother was born in 1893, which would have made her a young woman in 1912. Her daughter, my grandma, was born in 1925. My mom was born in 1945. She didn't have me until 1975, at age 29. I am currently 47.

    • @theyclosechannelsthatspeak428
      @theyclosechannelsthatspeak428 2 роки тому +11

      I'm 46 and my grandfather was born in 1911. So my great grandmother could have been on the ship.

  • @LeaveAhNah
    @LeaveAhNah Рік тому +412

    Something important I’ve learned; the discovery of the Titanic was monumental in confirming the stories of many woman and children and no longer making them feel crazy or hysterical in the eyes of these “naval professionals”.
    almost every survivor said they saw the ship break in half and stand upright, and of course, all the confident men denied that was possible. That is until the bow and stern were discovered thousands of feet apart.

    • @ObongaTTV
      @ObongaTTV Рік тому

      What are you on about? What "naval professionals" were making people feel crazy? Noone denied the possibility of the ship breaking as it was witnessed and recounted by Frank Osman, a Seaman in lifeboat 2. Sounds like you are inserting fallacies to align with a socio-political narrative that 100% has no place in the conversation at hand. Indoctrination I suppose. All the best w whatever you got goin on 😅.

    • @trobinski1842
      @trobinski1842 Рік тому +22

      Most sexist comment ever written. Men also cried out WOMEN AND CHILDREN FIRST, and told stories of seeing the boat tear in half before their eyes.

    • @faithlivings395
      @faithlivings395 Рік тому +26

      @@trobinski1842they’re on about men that weren’t on the boat didn’t believe the people telling that story

    • @AmberLewis-hu5vh
      @AmberLewis-hu5vh 9 місяців тому +1

      600ft away from the other part of the titanic i believe

    • @zeddeka
      @zeddeka 8 місяців тому

      You neglect to say why the "naval professionals" formed those opinions - because the eye witness accounts were totally contradictory. Most of the eye witnesses said the Titanic did *not* break in two, and those that did could not agree where it broke.

  • @S_J_banana
    @S_J_banana Рік тому +3327

    And now 111 years later 5 new men have died there. RIP. As a person who has followed the Titanic disaster since 2012, this is all such a shame. Don’t mess with history ladies and gentlemen

  • @reziaakter1886
    @reziaakter1886 5 років тому +1586

    A short information about the old lady:
    Edith Louise Rosenbaum Russell was an American fashion buyer, stylist and correspondent for Women's Wear Daily, best remembered for surviving the 1912 sinking of the RMS Titanic with a music box in the shape of a pig. Wikipedia
    Born: June 12, 1879, Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
    Died: April 4, 1975, London, United Kingdom

    • @tulip1695
      @tulip1695 4 роки тому +70

      96? Whoa.

    • @ashleysix2523
      @ashleysix2523 4 роки тому +89

      Was it really a music box though? It almost looks like an old taxidermy job...I was wondering if the pig was alive when thrown...Like a mini pig maybe...

    • @naturalbornchiller158
      @naturalbornchiller158 4 роки тому +6

      Incredible.

    • @Taelyr
      @Taelyr 4 роки тому +50

      Awww she died 5 years after this interview was made😢💔 rip Edith

    • @taurangasurf
      @taurangasurf 4 роки тому +247

      So she was born just a few years after the American civil war, survived the titanic, two world wars and saw a man land on the moon....amazing.

  • @MorenaHildegard
    @MorenaHildegard 3 роки тому +212

    this lady and the two men make you imagine what people in 1912 was like, the way they talk, the way they look like, they are the perfect picture of the past

    • @karlbuchanan1363
      @karlbuchanan1363 3 роки тому +15

      Dignity, grace and fortitude? Yes. A time when most chose to be representative of their generation

    • @rainbowpandasays8851
      @rainbowpandasays8851 3 роки тому +3

      🤦‍♀️They are the past.

    • @karlbuchanan1363
      @karlbuchanan1363 3 роки тому +3

      @@rainbowpandasays8851 they were there. People and their times are not the same thing and times change, but people change much slower.

    • @calvinbrice.t2140
      @calvinbrice.t2140 3 роки тому +11

      I mean they are. They’re from that era. You hear how they speak no one really speaks like. This may be from the past but this is amazing. This is how people spoke. Cherish this video

    • @alitanicholas9579
      @alitanicholas9579 2 роки тому

      Living time machines. ❤

  • @debbiecreter2005
    @debbiecreter2005 7 місяців тому +11

    We visited a traveling exhibit of the Titanic several years ago in Flint, Michigan. It was very respectfully presented. We received a name of one of the passengers on each of our tickets and as we went through the exhibit, we saw information about many of them. Personal artifacts retrieved from the ruins and ocean floor were displayed, and a large display of what the water temperature felt like at that time, which was painfully cold. By the end of the exhibit, we found out if our passenger lived or died. It was a very somber, but realistic exhibit which empathetically and with dignity personified the people and this tragic event. The feelings from seeing this stayed with me for a long time. My utmost respect to everyone who endured that event. May they all rest in eternal peace.

    • @misterd7843
      @misterd7843 4 місяці тому +1

      I went through one of those and it was fascinating. "My" passenger was a preacher named John Harper who had been invited to preach at a church in Chicago. I still have the "boarding pass" they gave me. I'm pretty sure he didn't make it, but that info isn't on the card because, as you said, you didn't find out until the end of the exhibit.

    • @debbiecreter2005
      @debbiecreter2005 4 місяці тому

      @@misterd7843Thanks for sharing your experience of the Titanic exhibit! It was such an emotion filled experience and exceptionally presented.

  • @giggles7179
    @giggles7179 Рік тому +1918

    The most terrifying detail I ever read was that the survivors in the lifeboats could actually hear an implosion beneath them as that massive ship made her final descent. Especially in the pitch-black of the moonless night with hundreds of screams, having so much happening underneath them that they couldn't see would have been enough to snap _my_ sanity.

    • @daniel-davis
      @daniel-davis Рік тому +62

      Sadly Ironic that is to the titan sub

    • @jmiller9972
      @jmiller9972 Рік тому +39

      U just gave me chills

    • @giggles7179
      @giggles7179 Рік тому +120

      @@jmiller9972 That's exactly how _I_ felt when I read it. I can't fathom how terrifying all of it must have been. Then, to sit silently in one of those boats four hundred miles from land as the screams and pleas for help started to go silent one by one? I hope this doesn't come across offensive, but I honestly don't know what would have been worse: being in the lifeboats with all those sounds echoing through your head for the rest of your lifetime or being in the water and having your panic and your consciousness slip away within minutes?

    • @MrScotty5877304
      @MrScotty5877304 Рік тому +39

      My great grandfather was on the Titanic they were announcing that only women and children were allowed onto the life rafts when a guy running by slipped on a chunk of ice, he said he was laughing that much he nearly dropped his purse 😉😂

    • @jmiller9972
      @jmiller9972 Рік тому +7

      @@giggles7179 absolutely terrible...I couldn't imagine

  • @syb_764
    @syb_764 2 роки тому +2071

    I’ve heard stories about people saying they were about to board the titanic but ended up going on another ship. That just gives me chills. Imagine seeing what ended up happening and realizing if u decided to go on that ship u might not have made it out alive.

    • @JK-ff1ft
      @JK-ff1ft 2 роки тому +35

      Or if they went it may have meant someone else could have died as they took their place on the lifeboat

    • @shakinram
      @shakinram 2 роки тому +119

      Similar to those who were supposed to be on flights that crashed on 9/11 but had plans change

    • @hellifromtheblock
      @hellifromtheblock 2 роки тому +63

      My grandfather was planning to board the ship Wilhelm Gustloff in WW2 the day it was sunk by torpedos. He spontaneously decided to go by train.

    • @shawnabarnett7008
      @shawnabarnett7008 Рік тому +87

      My whole life my grandma told me about how someone in our family actually had a ticket & never ended up boarding. The ticket still exists within my family & I hope one day to see it.

    • @liam2386
      @liam2386 Рік тому +7

      @@shakinram seth macfarlane was meant to be on one of those flights

  • @PebblezfrmDetroit80
    @PebblezfrmDetroit80 4 роки тому +81

    I love hearing old people tell stories! I could listen to her all night!!!! RIP beautiful!!!!

    • @redqueen7533
      @redqueen7533 3 роки тому +2

      Same

    • @abbiepotter9453
      @abbiepotter9453 3 роки тому +2

      The way she explained everything was sad but true and just hearing her experience was wow also she seems so sweet.

    • @PebblezfrmDetroit80
      @PebblezfrmDetroit80 3 роки тому

      @@abbiepotter9453 ikr!!!!

  • @TheStevenWhiting
    @TheStevenWhiting Рік тому +69

    Its more interesting to also hear how people interacted with people back then. We all here people say "the good old days", "You could leave your doors unlocked. People talked to each other" well here we see they didn't 7:59 "No well we didn't know one another so we couldn't get into conversation".

    • @NoCallerID70457
      @NoCallerID70457 8 місяців тому

      Shut up. You have an uglybdog as a profile picture. Worst animal ever.

    • @nerysevenden9408
      @nerysevenden9408 8 місяців тому +2

      The people on those boats were complete strangers to one another so they wouldn’t have talked. But as far as communities of people living their lives in the same neighbourhood you get to know the people in the towns you lived in and you did leave doors unlocked and you did speak with people out and about because even if you weren’t close with them they were still familiar to you.

    • @glorygloryholeallelujah
      @glorygloryholeallelujah 8 місяців тому +4

      Yeah, you can’t really make that comparison in this particular circumstance - they were in the midst of a horrendous mass tragedy.
      I’m going to go out on a limb here-and say that everyone “not talking on the lifeboats,” had less to do with “not knowing each other” and more to do with the fact that they were floating aimlessly in the middle of the ocean, in pitch darkness, wet, freezing, terrified, traumatized, listening to people screaming/dying all around them- and nearly every person, on every boat, having just lost *at least* 1 person close to them…
      Do you expect people to sit there and chitchat about their favorite teas to pass the time?

    • @crystallineblue4344
      @crystallineblue4344 5 місяців тому

      "We all" do NOT "here people". We HEAR.
      Your lack of elementary schooling is appalling.

  • @CoriAlexis93
    @CoriAlexis93 Рік тому +2209

    Insane how the ship was split up based on class. And the order people were saved was based on class. It’s very interesting to hear interviews from survivors of different classes. How their experiences were vastly different.

    • @noone8118
      @noone8118 Рік тому +167

      "We were not allowed to go to any part of the ship except the deck "...Sounds somethinh like any commercial airline would do...how ironic that class divide is accepted as normal

    • @KatieBellino
      @KatieBellino Рік тому +127

      I imagine based on ticket price, which of course generally means your richest people will be in 1st class. This practice is still used if you think about airlines. Go to a music concert, there are expensive tickets and cheap tickets; you're expected to stay in your area.

    • @klavier285
      @klavier285 Рік тому +96

      Third class women would have had priority over first class men for getting a seat in the lifeboats. Being first class didn't help that much for the men. Though they still had a better chance than 3rd class men for sure.

    • @rufusreir1732
      @rufusreir1732 Рік тому

      Have you never travelled on a plane then ? Duh. Stupid comment

    • @ScoopDogg
      @ScoopDogg Рік тому +32

      still is today

  • @rhaenyralikesyoutube6289
    @rhaenyralikesyoutube6289 2 роки тому +937

    I love these interviews, they truly are historical gems. It's awesome that this was in color.

    • @marysorocko5256
      @marysorocko5256 2 роки тому +3

      absolutely amazing videos!

    • @moski9861
      @moski9861 2 роки тому +2

      When year was this interview recorded?

    • @dekerz165
      @dekerz165 Рік тому +18

      @@moski9861 1956, 67 years ago.

    • @moski9861
      @moski9861 Рік тому

      @@dekerz165 Oh wow, thanks!

    • @dekerz165
      @dekerz165 Рік тому

      @@moski9861 your welcome matey

  • @shawnmccrary5526
    @shawnmccrary5526 5 років тому +1296

    The woman is Ms.Edith Russell. I’ve seen her in other interviews and gives me the feeling of a straight forward yet honest and tough as nails woman. Something about the story grabs us all. Such a loss of life that should never have happened.

    • @gardengnome1827
      @gardengnome1827 4 роки тому +26

      @array s that means she also survived the flu pandemic of 1918.

    • @gmar7836
      @gmar7836 4 роки тому +5

      @@gardengnome1827 correct

    • @tonyfeeney6978
      @tonyfeeney6978 3 роки тому +10

      @@gardengnome1827 Edi was unsinkable and a pandemic wouldn't have bothered her.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron 3 роки тому +3

      Great eireann lady

    • @richp.1234
      @richp.1234 3 роки тому +5

      She had a super interesting life.

  • @LaeDanielle
    @LaeDanielle Рік тому +29

    “When he threw that pig…I knew it was my mother calling me”
    Lord forgive me for my laughter. I’m screaming.

    • @clairejohnson6522
      @clairejohnson6522 Рік тому +6

      "What do you think i am,an acrobat, a monkey,or something?"made me do the same.

    • @LaeDanielle
      @LaeDanielle Рік тому +2

      @@clairejohnson6522 😭😭😭

  • @jasa6554
    @jasa6554 11 років тому +2631

    Titanic was so sad! R.I.P FOR THE PEOPLE WHO DIED ;(

    • @allipeteclarke08
      @allipeteclarke08 4 роки тому +11

      The movie was crap tho

    • @Taelyr
      @Taelyr 4 роки тому +28

      𓅿modern walmart𐂂 comment was made 6 years ago bud, lol

    • @williamwhitecloud9020
      @williamwhitecloud9020 4 роки тому +5

      And the pet dogs in Cages

    • @Pppiston
      @Pppiston 4 роки тому +1

      Mmmhmm

    • @sweetvirgoo
      @sweetvirgoo 4 роки тому +7

      𓅿modern walmart𐂂 Crap?! You're mom thought that when you where born.

  • @justijess5233
    @justijess5233 3 роки тому +186

    1,503. What a shocking number. All those people dead because too many mistakes were made. To those who died that night, rest in peace.

    • @Firemarioflower
      @Firemarioflower 3 роки тому +1

      @lerebox NO

    • @Firemarioflower
      @Firemarioflower 3 роки тому

      @lerebox Yeah true but 1503 died on Titanic not 1496

    • @Leo.de99
      @Leo.de99 3 роки тому

      @lerebox my grandpa as a kid was actually supposed to be on the gustloff, he fled from east prussia because of the russians and was a hour or so too late to get on the gustloff. Which means if he got on the gustloff I would not be alive today

    • @soonermagic24
      @soonermagic24 3 роки тому

      @@Leo.de99 biggest bullshit story I’ve ever heard

    • @therealDYL93
      @therealDYL93 2 роки тому

      Now think about 9/11 and double that number.

  • @GreenBananaz
    @GreenBananaz 2 роки тому +69

    “When they threw that pig, well I knew It was my mother calling” … What an odd remark. Caught me off guard. I’ve never heard such a sentence In my life

    • @Eric-eh7vg
      @Eric-eh7vg 10 місяців тому +2

      How is it not a meme?

    • @beth16440
      @beth16440 10 місяців тому +32

      The toy, paper mache pig was a good luck mascot given by her mother, after Edith was involved in a car crash the previous year. Edith had promised her mother that she would always keep it with her. If she hadn't gone after the toy pig, she would have died. For her, it was her mother calling for her to get in that boat.
      By twisting the pigs tail, Edith would play the pigs musical box to drown out the sounds of the dying and for the long, cold seven hours they awaited for rescue, Edith would continuously play the pigs musical box to stop the children from crying and keep them entertained.

    • @bethroberts2575
      @bethroberts2575 10 місяців тому +2

      I had to rewind when I heard that. I was like “a pig? Why was there a pig on the titanic? And why does that mean her mother was calling her?” So damn confused 😂 I understand now, glad she jumped after her pig. Should defo be a meme.

    • @fobbitoperator3620
      @fobbitoperator3620 10 місяців тому

      She was an entitled aristocrat, who cared nothing for the "help-class people," only that fvck'n pig...

    • @jibjub7047
      @jibjub7047 9 місяців тому +2

      ​@@bethroberts2575 I literally went onto Google and searched "Was there a pig on the Titanic?" Lmao.

  • @Rainytwilight
    @Rainytwilight Рік тому +62

    When I watched the movie I didn't feel sad for Rose and Jack at all, I felt horrible for the elders who were left behind, laying on their bed waiting to drown and the mother who told the story about Tir Na nog.

    • @Fullcowlingsmash
      @Fullcowlingsmash 6 місяців тому +8

      Rose and jack was the fictional part of the movie
      The real thing was yes the older people and the workers who were trapped the babies kids and many others

    • @crystallineblue4344
      @crystallineblue4344 5 місяців тому +1

      OMG - you actually "think" the Rose and Jack CHARACTERS in the 1997 FICTIONAL movie are real people???? SMH... You're not too bright are you?

    • @EDRIANPENGUINO
      @EDRIANPENGUINO 5 місяців тому +3

      @@crystallineblue4344 No need to be rude there...

    • @kristenbrinn3940
      @kristenbrinn3940 День тому

      @@crystallineblue4344It’s not impossible to feel bad for fictional characters.

  • @peterroberts5835
    @peterroberts5835 2 роки тому +1706

    My relative, Nelly walcroft, was a Titanic survivor. The letter she wrote (available online) post rescue is truly harrowing.
    We Recently visited an exhibition in Worcester where we managed to narrow down using her letter what lifeboat she was in.
    A very humbling experience.

    • @thesilversurfer7136
      @thesilversurfer7136 2 роки тому +87

      I just read about your relative Nelly! What a story! Thank god she survived. She was in 2nd class and they didn't think much of the 2nd and 3 RF class people. Such arrogance! Surprised Astor didn't make it since he was so upper crust. Sad the men had to wait but manners and courtesy were the rule then.

    • @annaleathompson2702
      @annaleathompson2702 2 роки тому +18

      Where is the letter located? Would love to read it. Incredible legacy

    • @trainstrains1
      @trainstrains1 2 роки тому +128

      @@thesilversurfer7136 In fact a number of what would be termed "super wealthy" men gave up their positions in boats so that others could live. They were a different breed to today's new rich.

    • @Kushagra.j
      @Kushagra.j 2 роки тому +29

      @@trainstrains1 that was then. If Feminists want equality they shall have it. If anything similar to Titanic happens i hope all the men take the seats irrespective of other factors as they are physically stronger and thus would be able to overpower others.
      Can you imagine the outroar if women were forced to stay back or be shot just to let the men go through to safety while they were made to wait and suffer a dreadful, miserable death!

    • @Milena-ek6gm
      @Milena-ek6gm 2 роки тому +170

      @@Kushagra.j homie calm down and take your hatred for women somewhere else....preferably somewhere where you don't come in contact with any other person ever pls 🙏🙏

  • @WestAbbey
    @WestAbbey 2 роки тому +473

    Fotage like this should never be forgotten or put away, it should be shown for future generations!!

    • @dontshitsh9404
      @dontshitsh9404 2 роки тому +2

      Why ?

    • @dontshitsh9404
      @dontshitsh9404 2 роки тому +2

      What did Titanic constribute to society ?

    • @RaquelPereira-fj4kt
      @RaquelPereira-fj4kt 2 роки тому

      why would they be put away? the older something is the more valuable.

    • @RaquelPereira-fj4kt
      @RaquelPereira-fj4kt 2 роки тому

      ​@@dontshitsh9404in many ways. some are in the comments.

    • @mindedchaos
      @mindedchaos Рік тому

      the future generation unfortunately dont care about history good or bad ... they just destroy the history and act like it never existed

  • @Bojangles5-2
    @Bojangles5-2 9 років тому +207

    Thank God someone had the foresight to make this recording! Love the voice inflection and dropoff when the old woman speaks.

  • @jee2206
    @jee2206 Рік тому +18

    Ocean Gate Expedition disaster brought me here. Rest in peace for those on board and for the Titanic passengers. May they all find peace.

    • @prittyugly86
      @prittyugly86 Рік тому

      Idk why people are calling it a disaster ... I'd call it a f*ck up.

    • @KusherK_
      @KusherK_ Рік тому

      @@prittyugly86Did you find the guy who asked?

    • @prittyugly86
      @prittyugly86 Рік тому

      @@KusherK_ I'm asking

    • @dbyspae122
      @dbyspae122 5 місяців тому

      @@KusherK_me I did

  • @ferdinandcapellan1465
    @ferdinandcapellan1465 2 роки тому +577

    Your watching a real titanic survivor who is already an adult back then (1912) and then telling the real actual story first hand. This footage is insane !

    • @hamza_ali_
      @hamza_ali_ Рік тому +4

      Woah yeah!! 😶

    • @Vic-wi9cr
      @Vic-wi9cr Рік тому +5

      uploaded 11 yrs ago and video taken many yrs ago

    • @mohddalibinzali1165
      @mohddalibinzali1165 Рік тому +18

      I think this interview was recorded in 1970's

    • @kevinwaterfield7400
      @kevinwaterfield7400 Рік тому +2

      I knew this Lady and she had a very interesting life after surviving the sinking

    • @kberg6019
      @kberg6019 Рік тому +2

      @@kevinwaterfield7400where can we read more about her?

  • @6figureceleryjfs378
    @6figureceleryjfs378 Рік тому +88

    I could listen to older generations tell stories all day.

  • @rellewilson7814
    @rellewilson7814 6 років тому +1565

    She mustve been a hoot in her day, man shes awesome

    • @Adam-cj2jg
      @Adam-cj2jg 5 років тому +85

      She looks like a man

    • @OliviaBrookeee
      @OliviaBrookeee 5 років тому +185

      Adam what the hell

    • @toejam516
      @toejam516 5 років тому +178

      It's normal for women to lose estrogen in old age, same with men and testosterone.

    • @livingashtree1942
      @livingashtree1942 5 років тому +94

      @@Adam-cj2jg no lie, I thought shd was a man till she mentioned the kid calling her ma'am

    • @debroyprasenjit
      @debroyprasenjit 5 років тому +4

      @@livingashtree1942 Likewise!

  • @Nick-cy2tn
    @Nick-cy2tn Рік тому +36

    Absolutely incredible that there were any survivors at all let alone video interviews with some of them.

  • @scarletespinalgomez3320
    @scarletespinalgomez3320 4 роки тому +3272

    I wish I could go back to 1912 and tell people there was an iceberg so they can turn it another way.🥺😭

    • @annanimity7085
      @annanimity7085 4 роки тому +937

      They would have laughed at you and called you a lunatic unfortunately 😣

    • @karinarayjr699
      @karinarayjr699 4 роки тому +214

      Then titanic probably wouldn’t be as famous

    • @terrybardy2848
      @terrybardy2848 4 роки тому +471

      @@karinarayjr699 Perhaps, but over 1500 people would still be alive.

    • @scarletespinalgomez3320
      @scarletespinalgomez3320 4 роки тому +191

      Karina Ray Jr But at least people wouldn’t have died which is what matters 😭

    • @scarletespinalgomez3320
      @scarletespinalgomez3320 4 роки тому +34

      Melia Adelita Cybelle I Know that IS what’s sad 😔

  • @frankfigueroa4586
    @frankfigueroa4586 5 років тому +386

    I love this woman she really describes what happened so well.

    • @TejaaaaaaReddy
      @TejaaaaaaReddy 3 роки тому +5

      Weaving stories

    • @musicpipe
      @musicpipe 3 роки тому +3

      Olympic (unseaworthy) was scuttled having a Titanic nameplate attached, for an insurance claim ($21 Million). White Star-line was owned by J.P. Morgan, facing bankruptcy, plus a coal miners strike in 1912 restricted ocean Liner travel. The Californian who's only cargo was wooly jumpers {basically empty} left the previous day & waited to pick up the Titanic passengers. Typical incompetence caused the Captain of the Californian not to recognize the Titanic & thus ignored its distress signals. After a court trial the Captain of the Californian, was never allowed to Captain another ship. The Iceberg is a Big Lie Pure & Simple.

    • @falsum6913
      @falsum6913 3 роки тому +5

      @@musicpipe Utter Tripe never head such nonsense in my life

    • @Tigerroux
      @Tigerroux 2 роки тому

      I wonder what the pig was all about. As horrific this event was, I wonder why she carried the pig with her.

    • @wildestcowboy2668
      @wildestcowboy2668 2 роки тому +1

      @@musicpipe Is that true?

  • @julieprice9310
    @julieprice9310 9 років тому +1111

    They believed that a rescue ship was on its way .
    No one knew the outcome of tragic event that was about to happen .

    • @Sigma.6
      @Sigma.6 9 років тому +24

      Sorry but you don't know what you're talking about.
      Smith and the officers knew exactly what was going to happen!

    • @CosmicPegasus
      @CosmicPegasus 9 років тому +6

      ***** It was the SS Californian, not the Lusitania.

    • @sundushussain7185
      @sundushussain7185 6 років тому

      Julie Price listen

    • @xgracee.e3811
      @xgracee.e3811 5 років тому +23

      Rescue ships were on its way. However they were several hundred miles away, and reached the Titanic’s location went it was already on the sea floor.
      I can’t remember which ship was the first to make it though, but I know that it came 1 hour and 40 minutes after it’s sinking.

    • @Coco-mc9zs
      @Coco-mc9zs 4 роки тому +4

      If they would have been paying attention at the station they would have been ...sad

  • @niktaylor7790
    @niktaylor7790 Рік тому +2

    Listening to her talk about how calmly she moved scares me. God bless her.

  • @Kissfan96dr
    @Kissfan96dr 3 роки тому +311

    imagine surviving that nightmare and then having someone make you look at that picture in the back.

    • @Mutasis_Mutandis
      @Mutasis_Mutandis 3 роки тому +13

      I was thinking the same thing.

    • @bohogothhoe
      @bohogothhoe 3 роки тому +5

      Literally my first thought as well. Why parade their tragedy???

    • @nancyjackson3909
      @nancyjackson3909 3 роки тому +1

      Like jesus coming back and seeing crosses

    • @leadvendor
      @leadvendor 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah, that was pretty insensitive.

  • @terrylewis_
    @terrylewis_ 3 роки тому +732

    This is random, but I've seen the traveling Titanic exhibit twice. They'll give you a passenger slip at the beginning, and at the end you see whether or not you were among the survivors. Both times I was among the deceased which doesn't really surprise me, but it is so heartbreaking to visually see the list of names of all those who perished. I have always been fascinated with the Titanic from a young age. My Meemaw was alive when Titanic happened and I wish I asked her about any memories she had of that time. Such a tragedy.

    • @Emily-xu6fi
      @Emily-xu6fi 2 роки тому +8

      I’ve done the same thing. Super eerie

    • @sarahhayslip1793
      @sarahhayslip1793 2 роки тому +10

      I saw the exhibit in Las Vegas, it was amazing. P.S. I was a survivor.

    • @austinadams9464
      @austinadams9464 2 роки тому +28

      My great grandmother was born in 1906 and was from Sweden. Her name was Fauma. When I was 8 years old, a year before she died, I asked her if she remembered anything from 1912 and what happened with the Titanic. She told me that it was "very sad" and that her father and mother were very sad when they heard the news, and she was a little girl playing with her toys. I still think its crazy that she lived nearly 100 years. She saw the 21st century. She used to tell me a lot of stories about Sweden during World War 1. Crazy honestly when I think back to it. I'm nearly 25 now and I still remember some of her stories.

    • @billhosko7723
      @billhosko7723 2 роки тому

      Yer p[hoto is trash...

    • @animallover18193
      @animallover18193 2 роки тому +2

      Yeah me too I died once and survived once it is so sad

  • @Paulintouch
    @Paulintouch 12 років тому +664

    may they rest in peace

    • @kendallrosedanley596
      @kendallrosedanley596 4 роки тому +1

      RafaelAnimz wow a 3 week old comment?

    • @armanator7291
      @armanator7291 4 роки тому +1

      @@rafaelanimz992 wow a 4 week old comment

    • @David-vi2dm
      @David-vi2dm 4 роки тому +1

      @@armanator7291 Wow a 3 week old comment ?

    • @mahamahmad21
      @mahamahmad21 4 роки тому +2

      Amen 🙏❤️

    • @alex-nk5wg
      @alex-nk5wg 3 роки тому +1

      @@David-vi2dm wow a 3 months old comment

  • @Hemi-Homer13
    @Hemi-Homer13 Рік тому +11

    My great grandfather had warned everybody that the ship was going to sink he kept yelling and yelling “The ship is going to sink!!” till they whooped his ass and kicked him out the movie theater.

  • @antoniograncino3506
    @antoniograncino3506 4 роки тому +343

    From a 1970 documentary. The Lady of the Pig is Edith Russell. She was 32 at the time of the sinking. The pig is actually a wind-up music box. She led an interesting life, including as a front-line correspondent during WW 1. Wickedpedia has a very good article on her.

    • @texaspete33
      @texaspete33 3 роки тому +9

      She must been in her in her 90's during this interview.

    • @zirk5392
      @zirk5392 3 роки тому +2

      Thank for the info. This is what I was looking for.

    • @Spurz1975
      @Spurz1975 2 роки тому +7

      @@texaspete33 Yes, she was 91 , she died in april 1975 just 2 months before her 96th birthday.

    • @GDgrl
      @GDgrl 2 роки тому +1

      Thank you! I was trying to figure out what year this was made!

    • @syahriyanatlanticasejati575
      @syahriyanatlanticasejati575 2 роки тому +1

      It happened over 50years before that interview, yet they remembered it as if it's happened yesterday.

  • @missladybug6712
    @missladybug6712 3 роки тому +268

    I love the fact that Mrs. Russell made a point of stating that she was without underwear! What an incredible lady with an equally incredible story. Bless her sweet soul!

    • @cheezheadz3928
      @cheezheadz3928 3 роки тому +7

      Why do you love that?

    • @delilahcaroline3489
      @delilahcaroline3489 3 роки тому +46

      @@cheezheadz3928 because back then women didn’t tell anyone about their “unmentionables”!!

    • @mojopin70
      @mojopin70 3 роки тому +11

      Hideous woman, clearly rich , 19 trunks? 3 rooms ? Complaining whilst the poor were drowning.

    • @ros4395
      @ros4395 3 роки тому +18

      She couldn't help being rich.

    • @Audit-xq4vu
      @Audit-xq4vu 3 роки тому +7

      @@ros4395 I mean really… back then if your father was rich, your mother was the keeper of the house and books & it was just custom for all your children, especially girls, to fall in line with knowing how to be a good house wife… she probably even married into a rich family, because the rich marries off to other rich.. it’s how a legacy keeps on rolling..

  • @annapersson5085
    @annapersson5085 2 роки тому +85

    My grandmother was going go the states to work.. The family she was going to work for sent her a ticket to the Titanic. She lived in Sweden and took a boat over to Southhampton but came to late. The ship had already left! She had to take a another ship, not at all like the fantastic Titanic. When she was half way over the Atlantic she heard about the catastrophe.

    • @abdihassan7208
      @abdihassan7208 Рік тому

      did she like southampton

    • @VickiSmith-eg9oo
      @VickiSmith-eg9oo Рік тому +3

      Wow. Being late probably savdd her life.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung Місяць тому

      You should tell the Titanic Historical Society

  • @tonybaker55
    @tonybaker55 Рік тому +81

    One of my great Aunt and Uncle's had tickets for the Titanic. They left Jersey to go to Southampton and fortunately my great uncle had his wallet stolen with the tickets inside. They had to buy more tickets for a different ship. Who knows what may have happened if they had travelled on the Titanic. My great aunt lived to well over 100 in BC Canada.

    • @JsoldierEats
      @JsoldierEats 9 місяців тому +3

      It was most probably a sign

    • @Brian-kl1zu
      @Brian-kl1zu 3 місяці тому

      Maybe the thief made the trip w/ a friend. Or sold them--Possibly two people boarded in your aunt and uncle's place. Sorry to state the obvious; but life is certainly unpredictable.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung Місяць тому

      You should tell the Titanic Historical Society

  • @gooberclown
    @gooberclown Рік тому +143

    I learned the Morse Code when I was 12 years old. Much later, I saw a movie about the Titanic, where the radio operator aboard the Carpathia copied the S.O S. distress signal from the Titanic. I could understand every bit of it, including the position report of the vessel. It gave the movie an eerie, realistic feeling.

    • @brendafegley3317
      @brendafegley3317 Рік тому +9

      That was the first time the SOS distress was used

    • @Yetaxa
      @Yetaxa Рік тому +3

      @@brendafegley3317 It actually wasn't, although it was relatively new at this time. It certainly cemented it as THE distress call

  • @GrooveYouVerse
    @GrooveYouVerse 2 роки тому +389

    I find Titanic so fascinating, not just because it's size, imagery, but also because of the tragedy. These stories survived when there wasn't enough boats for everyone. We are fortunate and honored to hear such stories from survivors.

    • @DrivenA111
      @DrivenA111 Рік тому +3

      Well obviously because of the tragedy.

    • @moon-uh5kd
      @moon-uh5kd Рік тому +2

      @@DrivenA111what’s the point of your comment 🤣🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @jessH090
      @jessH090 Рік тому +7

      It’s such a shame that they didn’t fill the boats to their full capacity.

    • @elenamcgibbon5379
      @elenamcgibbon5379 Рік тому

      Eedďďe8

    • @DrivenA111
      @DrivenA111 Рік тому

      @@moon-uh5kd Can you read? Can you think? Millions and millions less people probably would even know what the Titanic was if it weren’t for the tragedy. So that part is obvious. I pointed that out. And you respond with that silly stupidity? *Apply those emojis to yourself*

  • @DarthMeteos
    @DarthMeteos 6 років тому +743

    This is well before the wreck was discovered... How cool to see contemporary interviews.

    • @kathleennorton6108
      @kathleennorton6108 5 років тому +29

      Her room being so well sealed, if for some fluke they stayed so, as well as her trunks, I wonder if the trunks are down there preserved still?

    • @emperor___palpatine
      @emperor___palpatine 4 роки тому +1

      Kathleen Norton probably

    • @Khloe_dancer_model
      @Khloe_dancer_model 4 роки тому +1

      Kathleen Norton yes..must be..

    • @DarthMeteos
      @DarthMeteos 4 роки тому +35

      ​@@kathleennorton6108 At the Titanic's depth, the pressure is over 6 tons per square inch.
      Submarines for that depth have inches of titanium plate to keep it out, and any weakness results in the instantaneous death of the crew.
      There is no trunk in the world that could seal from that pressure. Any amount of air would be forced out. It would rupture immediately.

    • @AdrianoCROST
      @AdrianoCROST 4 роки тому +3

      @@DarthMeteos As i know pressure is much lower at that depth (around 2 tonnes).

  • @sand-7938
    @sand-7938 Рік тому +105

    James Cameron’s movie is one of the most beautiful movies ever made in the history. Outside of the small numbers of boat at their disposal, the third class should have been made aware of not being saved in case of a catastrophe. Maybe they would have not travelled with the Titanic. It must have been difficult to watch the ship drowning from afar and they were just not talking to each other because they didn’t know each other. As per the movie, the third class was interacting with each other, dancing together. They would have talked to each other on their safety boat.

    • @earlonaret
      @earlonaret Рік тому

      The 3. class was not a majority in the safety boat…
      No one there to speak to.

    • @carmencarmen9489
      @carmencarmen9489 Рік тому +1

      @@earlonaretthat’s not what he’s saying

    • @G1NZOU
      @G1NZOU Рік тому +1

      That's the thing though, regulations and industry practice at the time was that lifeboats were not intended to carry every single occupant of the ship, but rather ferry people onto another ship that had arrived to rescue.
      The thought was that overloaded lifeboats, especially on the open ocean, will capsize anyway or the occupants will succumb to exposure anyway if no rescue arrives, and that barring an extreme case most ships in distress only list or take one water partially and are in a condition to limp to port or be towed with a skeleton crew once the passengers have been offloaded to another ship.
      So it wasn't that the third class were chosen not to be saved, it was that a fast sinking before rescue arrived was deemed so unlikely that it wasn't considered.
      The Titanic disaster did change those regulations and also how ships communicate and organise rescue, rules about SOS messages were tightened and rescue flare meaning was made less ambiguous.

    • @earlonaret
      @earlonaret Рік тому

      @@carmencarmen9489 uh, my bad. I didnt read it correctly, sorry!

    • @joeskys2362
      @joeskys2362 Рік тому

      ​@@G1NZOU That information is not true the Titanic owners simply violated the Safety standards of that era. The purpose of life boats are to simply saves lives. The Titanic had only 20 lifeboats. That's enough for only more than half of its passengers. According to Maurice Clarke the Titanic's safety officer. The Titanic needed to have had 10 more lifeboats. The owners knew this but still refused. They wanted to depart on time and, they didn't want the lifeboats to spoil the view on deck. The Titanic Owners simply lied and, threatened there safety officer into silence. This new info has just recently resurfaced. Therefore the death of so many lives were due to illegal actives of the arrogant rich.🤔😥

  • @WeDemBoyz949
    @WeDemBoyz949 Рік тому +310

    I’m here after that submarine went missing with those 5 on board. RIP to everyone who lost their lives while Titanic sank and the survivors who are all not with us now. Prayers up to the people who lost their lives on the submarine. :/

  • @cyndisbranti1594
    @cyndisbranti1594 Рік тому +190

    TITANIC story haunts me. I’m absolutely fascinated about it. The loss of men, women and children. I can’t imagine how scary it must have been for every crew and passenger. RIP TO ALL

    • @jshepard152
      @jshepard152 Рік тому +6

      Mostly men. 19% of men survived compared to 73% of women who made it back.

    • @brennam954
      @brennam954 Рік тому +1

      @@jshepard152 That is a made up statistic

    • @alhera674
      @alhera674 Рік тому

      57% of statistics are made up on the spot.

    • @jshepard152
      @jshepard152 Рік тому +1

      @@brennam954 Since you don't know what you're talking about, I'll provide the actual stats. There were 782 male passengers on Titanic. 650 of them died. That's 83.1%. There were 402 women on Titanic. 102 died. That's 25.4%. Source: "Gender, Social Norms, and Survival in Maritime Disasters". Mikael Elinder and Oscar Erixson, Dept. of Economics, Uppsala University, Sweden.

    • @dorotheanehls3963
      @dorotheanehls3963 Рік тому +1

      Und unvorstellbar, diesem eisigen Wasser ausgeliefert zu sein...

  • @BrandoninOrlando
    @BrandoninOrlando 10 років тому +407

    One of the best videos ive watched on You tube , I love the history.

    • @Trini2DeBone
      @Trini2DeBone 5 років тому +6

      Agreed. UA-cam should have a section for Favourties separate from LIked Videos

    • @christophharriso653
      @christophharriso653 5 років тому +1

      You will love the whole story look up owen benjamin- the titanic

    • @tammyileene4060
      @tammyileene4060 5 років тому

      Me, too. I like history. Yep.

    • @elizabethbrown2960
      @elizabethbrown2960 5 років тому

      Great narration from a real human. 🕊️🥀

    • @sweetvirgoo
      @sweetvirgoo 4 роки тому +2

      Doesn't everyone love titanics history?

  • @anniemonroe9285
    @anniemonroe9285 Рік тому +15

    It's heart wrenching to watch everyone waving as the ship leaves.

    • @rbsk999
      @rbsk999 6 місяців тому

      That's footage of the Olympic, though.

  • @frostbite6689
    @frostbite6689 3 роки тому +982

    “Not even god can sink this ship.”
    God - “Bet.”

    • @Kinobambino
      @Kinobambino 3 роки тому +44

      God: watch this

    • @kayleeharper9865
      @kayleeharper9865 3 роки тому +28

      God: hold ma hoops

    • @Danbo22987
      @Danbo22987 3 роки тому +68

      God: *takes an ice cube from his drink and throws it in the water*

    • @shainilashamu2178
      @shainilashamu2178 3 роки тому +33

      So it is proven that God exists.

    • @dheaismaxx
      @dheaismaxx 3 роки тому +15

      God: what did he saaaaayyyy???

  • @Jasmin-fd3ny
    @Jasmin-fd3ny 4 роки тому +36

    Thank you for uploading this to UA-cam. I’ve never seen this before and it made me appreciate it more than ever.

  • @Bellabob
    @Bellabob Рік тому +203

    I’ve always been fascinated by the Titanic, I visited the museum in Belfast and just find it such a compelling event. A few years ago, I found out that my Great Great Uncle had been offered a role as a butler on the ship, but he turned it down because he suffered from seasickness.

    • @tineb2442
      @tineb2442 Рік тому +10

      My (Belgian) great-grandfather was offered a role as pianist and he didn’t go because of homesickness!

    • @faith4disney
      @faith4disney Рік тому

      "a role"

  • @TheTaintedTragedy
    @TheTaintedTragedy Рік тому +11

    It's so crazy to me hearing both of their stories from different classes of society period one at the time was only worried about luggage and the other 1 was worried about his life. At the end of the day they both were just glad they survived. Even the lady sounds like as she's telling the story she realizes how miniscule her luggage was compared to the situation that was happening around her that would forever change her life.
    It is also crazy to me realizing now how accurately James Cameron got his movie hearing them talk about the band playing music. Even then playing with the ice on deck after the iceberg was hit.

  • @HeyYaKnow
    @HeyYaKnow 2 роки тому +343

    This must've been insanely traumatic to have experienced.

    • @peachyemi870
      @peachyemi870 Рік тому +18

      It was. Most people had PTSD from it :(

    • @okitasan
      @okitasan Рік тому +18

      hearing that the sound in the area after the ship went down was something like the roar of a baseball stadium, except it was all people screaming in agony, must've been horrific -- and then the slow fade as every voice eventually went silent

    • @starfireprincess
      @starfireprincess Рік тому +4

      Atleast everyone envolved are dead now. No more suffering.

    • @Akhi_Umar
      @Akhi_Umar Рік тому +1

      @@starfireprincess There is an afterlife, do not be so sure that they aren’t suffering. Hell and paradise is real.

    • @uninterestingprofile
      @uninterestingprofile Рік тому +4

      @@Akhi_Umar The Easter Bunny is also real. 🐰🐰🐇🐇🐰🐰

  • @moominmay
    @moominmay 7 років тому +2323

    People are carrying on like the old lady is British - she's American!

    • @SenyorCapitàCollons
      @SenyorCapitàCollons 6 років тому +159

      Moomin Mai She has a very british accent. I know that they still have that accent in some very remote villages in America.

    • @skepticalbadger
      @skepticalbadger 6 років тому +442

      No, she has a very neutral, 'posh', American accent. You will still hear this among well-to-do Americans on the East Coast.

    • @filipzawistowski4615
      @filipzawistowski4615 6 років тому +323

      I'm English, and I knew straight away she was American. The way they pronounce their r's is always the biggest giveaway.

    • @JN003
      @JN003 6 років тому +147

      i would wager some Irish ancestry , parents with an irish accent , prolly grew up somewhere in the states.

    • @filipzawistowski4615
      @filipzawistowski4615 6 років тому +35

      Edith Russel, pretty sure she's full American. Google her.

  • @kaylalabrant2929
    @kaylalabrant2929 3 роки тому +312

    I just watched the titanic again (after 100x by now). And I still cry like a baby. My heart will forever be broken. Seeing the kids get tucked in bed killed me. The baby frozen in it’s mother’s arms in the ocean..... this world confuses me :(

  • @recherche4528
    @recherche4528 Рік тому +6

    Thank you for posting. This is fascinating.

  • @dannygreene7405
    @dannygreene7405 7 років тому +893

    Some guy had $2500 cash and a gold watch on him when they found his body ..thats $35,000 now almost

  • @jessehassell1864
    @jessehassell1864 2 роки тому +96

    Sad thing is the lifted boy that she talks about he most likely died. Because he was part of the crew an he was 14. Back then 13 or older wasn't considered a child

    • @aaronjones7260
      @aaronjones7260 Рік тому +8

      His name was Arthur Barrett, he was a 1st class lift attendant and his father I believe was a baker on the ship, and sadly yes, they both perished

  • @thomasshaughnessy9023
    @thomasshaughnessy9023 3 роки тому +35

    My great grand uncle was sadly a victim of the tragic sinking and he wasn't even supposed to be on the Titanic! Truly a sad turn out

    • @julijejejdj4074
      @julijejejdj4074 3 роки тому +2

      Can you explain more? Why has he not supposed to be there

    • @thomasshaughnessy9023
      @thomasshaughnessy9023 3 роки тому +8

      @@julijejejdj4074 Well he was a horse farmer and he was planning to sell a horse at the docks and use his payment to buy a ticket for a different ship, but his payment was late and so he missed his ship, instead he bought a ticket for the Titanic and the rest is what we know as the sinking

    • @julijejejdj4074
      @julijejejdj4074 3 роки тому +3

      @@thomasshaughnessy9023 Thats very interesting, thanks for sharing

    • @whhrms
      @whhrms 3 роки тому +2

      What was his name?

    • @thomasshaughnessy9023
      @thomasshaughnessy9023 3 роки тому

      @@whhrms Patrick (Pake)

  • @whitenoisejosh-sleepfocusc2917
    @whitenoisejosh-sleepfocusc2917 8 місяців тому +15

    Humans: This ship is unsinkable
    Nature: Hold my beer

    • @sviesosvaikas1126
      @sviesosvaikas1126 7 місяців тому

      this hold my beer joke isnt funny anymore

    • @whitenoisejosh-sleepfocusc2917
      @whitenoisejosh-sleepfocusc2917 7 місяців тому

      @@sviesosvaikas1126 than don’t laugh 🤷🏼‍♂️
      Move on with your life.

    • @sviesosvaikas1126
      @sviesosvaikas1126 7 місяців тому

      @@whitenoisejosh-sleepfocusc2917 It was never really funny to begin with. Its a joke for autists whose brain move slow to think of anything better.
      I dont mean to insult you or those who use it, its just my opinion. Now when I have said it ill move in peace. Thanks

    • @66voldemort
      @66voldemort 6 місяців тому

      This tragedy wasn’t the fault of nature or an iceberg, it is completely the fault those who let it go to sail without enough life boats for all on board.

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung Місяць тому

      @@66voldemort It was both the shortage of lifeboats and the fact that despite that they still sped through the ice danger area. The law on lifeboats may have been lenient but that doesn't mean shipowners couldn't provide boats for all.

  • @alijagonase4717
    @alijagonase4717 3 роки тому +391

    “God himself couldn’t sink this ship”
    God : ...and I took that personally

  • @ededdison8965
    @ededdison8965 3 роки тому +48

    I did not know that these interviews existed. This is fascinating to be able to hear stories firsthand. The titanic is quite a momentous and tragic part of our history.

  • @BeesWaxMinder
    @BeesWaxMinder 3 роки тому +38

    “When he threw that pig I knew it was
    my Mother calling!” It was almost worth going thru the tragedy just to get to utter that line!
    G0D BLESS ‘EMxx

  • @nickmarinelli5291
    @nickmarinelli5291 Рік тому +7

    I love seeing Ms. Russell! She was an absolute awesome human being!

  • @JokeriPokeri17
    @JokeriPokeri17 6 років тому +150

    I love the posh elegant english that the narrator speaks in this exciting piece of history of the RMS Titanic, absolutely love this fascinating video.

    • @RufusT9
      @RufusT9 3 роки тому +2

      The narrator and interviewer is Sandra Harris, an Australian journalist whose father was the Lord mayor of Perth. She worked for British TV for a while in the 70's.

    • @endokrin7897
      @endokrin7897 3 роки тому

      She's extremely attractive. She's not bad looking, either.

  • @had940
    @had940 3 роки тому +72

    I can sit and listen to them tell me stories all day

    • @Kissfan96dr
      @Kissfan96dr 3 роки тому +4

      reminds me of that scene in 1997's Titanic where old Rose was telling her story and everyone aboard hunting the heart of the ocean were gathered around, enthralled.

  • @guywithacamera416
    @guywithacamera416 6 років тому +797

    7:57 That has to be the most British thing I've ever heard

    • @samk8018
      @samk8018 5 років тому +87

      LMAO that's hilarious , but could have been the shock and horror too

    • @florjanbrudar692
      @florjanbrudar692 5 років тому +10

      @@samk8018 If that's so, it's not funny

    • @munzirrafik7753
      @munzirrafik7753 4 роки тому +34

      haha typical . dont ask them a direction when go to london.. No answer for you.. !

    • @domiu7235
      @domiu7235 4 роки тому +1

      🤣🤣👌

    • @nataliecovers__
      @nataliecovers__ 4 роки тому +5

      I'm like huh... Why not? Of course you can have a conversation! Haha

  • @dawnjohnstone2087
    @dawnjohnstone2087 Рік тому +20

    I looked after one of the survivors, she was 18/20 months old when the rest of her family went down. She was a wonderful lady right to the end. X

    • @TheSavagederek
      @TheSavagederek 7 місяців тому +1

      Bullshit

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 6 місяців тому

      You should tell the Titanic Historical Society....

  • @josephconsoli4128
    @josephconsoli4128 Рік тому +71

    I wish I would've been old enough to recall the story, but my grandfather immigrated to America in May of 1912 and was originally scheduled for the Titanic. I always felt a strong connection to the ship and its story. It contains volumes of reflections on human nature. The one thing that surprises me is that when people say, "years ago people cared about others more and had better values", you find that although it may be true to a degree, people always had basically the same idiosyncrasies, especially when it comes to a serious crisis.

    • @Floppedd
      @Floppedd Рік тому +1

      Boi what conecction did u feel wogh the ship? U werent born back then and no family member of yours was in that ship stop making lies

    • @bookywooky2259
      @bookywooky2259 Рік тому

      ​@That1HotMF exactly! 😂 I find comments like this narcissistic in nature because it's more about themselves than anything else. Millions of people have found the titanic sinking interesting, myself included but I would never say I felt drawn to it because of some old relative who was SUPPOSED to be on it. We're all drawn to it because of the disaster and Cameron's film making it even more interesting for newer generations.

    • @josephconsoli4128
      @josephconsoli4128 Рік тому

      @@bookywooky2259 Just saying it adds to the overall mystique of the ship for me.

  • @mysteryjesus
    @mysteryjesus 12 років тому +70

    The Titanic was already a legend long before Cameron made the movie. I remember pre 1985 it was often on tv talking about how no one knew where it was, and people were searching for it. When they finally found it, they had a TV special showing some of the items that they brought up like a purse filled with old money and other things. It's always been a legend since the day it went down.

    • @whhrms
      @whhrms 3 роки тому +9

      Titanic interest really took off in 1955, when Walter Lord published his book A Night To Remember, which became a best seller. A condensed version of it also appeared in Reader's Digest magazine. The film ANTR was released in 1958. Interest has been non-stop ever since.

  • @nightj9396
    @nightj9396 2 роки тому +20

    My great grandma was on the boat 😢
    May she Rest In Peace, love you Shelly ♥️

    • @fmyoung
      @fmyoung 6 місяців тому

      You should let the Titanic Historical Society know

  • @meg2231
    @meg2231 Рік тому +5

    survivors from all walks of life proving that no matter how we live, we all face death the same way

  • @arealmench
    @arealmench 4 роки тому +389

    I believe both of them when they say that the band wasn't playing as the ship was sinking. I always thought it was just a legend and they confirmed it. However, it makes for a good story.

    • @jemmamcginlay9762
      @jemmamcginlay9762 4 роки тому +53

      It was a massive ship they just wasn’t on that part of the ship at the time

    • @lucifernazaedi
      @lucifernazaedi 4 роки тому +56

      I think the music was playing but that the band was on a different part of the ship so they themselves do not have eye witness accounts for it

    • @newgod8828
      @newgod8828 4 роки тому +7

      stfu kid, the band played

    • @whhrms
      @whhrms 4 роки тому +28

      It isn't a "good story." Just because some people didn't hear the band on a ship as large as the Titanic, doesn't mean that a lot of others, who were much closer, weren't able to hear them despite all the commotion. Edith's lifeboat #11 was a good distance back and on the other side of the ship. The band definitely played.

    • @sandwichbreath0
      @sandwichbreath0 3 роки тому +1

      @@newgod8828 Were you there, 'kid'? We'll never know for sure now, you're no wiser than anyone who suspects it didn't happen.

  • @allthingsbegin
    @allthingsbegin 3 роки тому +15

    "but when people say that music played as the ship went down; that is a ghastly horrible lie!" Damn right. I love how she said that.

    • @whhrms
      @whhrms 3 роки тому +8

      Certainly they weren't playing as the water closed "over their heads," but they kept playing as long as they could. That much is documented, whether Miss Russell heard them or not.

  • @pnwadventurer9674
    @pnwadventurer9674 3 роки тому +23

    These people really lived life!! I could hear them talk forever, what a difference from now

  • @bunyolofreshfarms7475
    @bunyolofreshfarms7475 Рік тому +293

    Something that is terrifyingly apparent is the old lady even after surviving such a tragic event seemed to be more concerned about the 19 suitcases she left on the sunken ship than anyone else. The love of material things is truly a curse. Morbid fact: Everyone who stepped foot or saw the titanic either being built or leaving the docks is dead today,they're all gone. Someone will read this comment one day and i will be long gone too. C'est la vie 😊

    • @dloesch
      @dloesch Рік тому +85

      Hm, I thought maybe she was remarking on the 19 trunks to emphasize that she hadn't realized how serious the situation was and so mistakenly took the time to worry about the security of her belongings. Like, she acted as though she thought she was coming back.

    • @Muddy283
      @Muddy283 Рік тому +52

      I think she's talking about the irony, with hindsight, of her concern at that fateful moment for those seemingly precious 19 trunks.

    • @MrDogfish83
      @MrDogfish83 Рік тому +23

      @@Muddy283 Yep. How could one possibly get from this video the idea that she still is more concerned about the suitcases and not talking about the irony in hindsight as you surmise.

    • @Muddy283
      @Muddy283 Рік тому +2

      @@MrDogfish83 Quite 😯.

    • @TransoceanicOutreach
      @TransoceanicOutreach Рік тому +2

      'Someone will read this comment one day and i will be long gone too' not if you're uploaded to an artificial storage system and then a synthetic brain.