Empress of Ireland Sinks in REAL TIME | 14 Minutes of Horror

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 31 тра 2023
  • Fourteen minutes is all it took for Canadian Pacific Railway's RMS Empress of Ireland to sink below the icy Saint Lawrence River in Canada. 1,012 people lost their lives in a horrific disaster which happened in such a terribly short amount of time that many simple never found out what had hit them. Like the Titanic and Lusitania, the Empress of Ireland was one of the major disasters of the early 20th century that changed shipping regulation and history itself. This is the first real time sinking animation of its kind to depict the Empress' final moments in vivid detail as based on survivor accounts and books on the subject.
    Animation and sound design by Jack Gibson
    Research by Mike Brady and Liam Sharpe
    3D models by Lucas Gustaffson and Liam Sharpe
    Oceanliner Designs explores the design, construction, engineering and operation of history’s greatest vessels- from Titanic to Queen Mary and from the Empress of Ireland to the Lusitania. Join maritime researcher and illustrator Michael Brady as he tells the stories behind some of history's most famous ocean liners and machines!
    #sinking #engineering #disaster #documentary #tragedy #history #empressofireland #titanic #oceanliner #titanic
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,5 тис.

  • @brayson6889
    @brayson6889 11 місяців тому +3464

    I have to commend the crew for such quick action. Only 6 of the lifeboats were able to get away, but that’s still impressive considering the very small timetable the crew were given.

    • @erickaraujo5327
      @erickaraujo5327 11 місяців тому +105

      I thought lifeboat 7 was crushed by the first funnel but it turns out that it was one of the 6 to get away safely from the ship

    • @ShadrakJohn
      @ShadrakJohn 11 місяців тому +136

      Enough lifeboats but not enough time.

    • @littleferrhis
      @littleferrhis 11 місяців тому +154

      A third of the people onboard survived, which is a miracle in and of itself.

    • @mariolee64
      @mariolee64 11 місяців тому +59

      Lifeboats 1, 3, 9, and 13 were launched in quick succession. Lifeboat 5 was released and cleared the ship as it was rolling over. Lifeboat 15 at the stern was lowered but capsized and ended up floating away upside down. Lifeboat 11 was launched but it was unable to clear the ship and ended up getting crushed as the ship was rolling over. Lifeboat 7 was not swung out until late in the sinking and was dragged under as the crew were trying to launch it. None of the port boats made it due to the Empress quickly developing a severe list to starboard after the collision, rendering the davits on that side useless.

    • @erickaraujo5327
      @erickaraujo5327 11 місяців тому +3

      @@mariolee64 So lifeboat 15 is the other lifeboat that got away from the ship

  • @SherlocksLeftNipple
    @SherlocksLeftNipple 11 місяців тому +2212

    I think one of the reasons the Titanic gained so much noteriety compared to much more brutal sinkings such as the Empress' is entirely down to how easy it is to romanticize her demise. With the Empress, you can't tell any stories of triumph or bravery or old loves deciding to die together. The band didn't play until the end. The women and children died, same as the men. There was no dramatic rescue ship steaming through a field of 'bergs to help the survivors. These people drowned like trapped rats in a metal coffin, in so little time that most barely had time to exit their cabins, nevermind make it onto the deck. You can't make movies or plays about a horror story like this without feeling the finality of Death creeping up your spine, and it feels like a desecration of a mass-grave to even try to make up fiction in the face of such a terrifying reality. This sinking makes me feel so very small and scared, and I'm simply watching a video about it on UA-cam. Had this been my loved ones' final moments, I might, too, want to prefer to speak of happier things, to preserve the memory of their lives rather than wonder how lost and scared they must've been at the end.
    I hope these poor souls found peace, or was given a happier life in their next go-around. With a death like this, they deserve as much.

    • @paulanthony5274
      @paulanthony5274 10 місяців тому +164

      And it didn't sink on its maiden voyage which was the most incredible thing that happened to TITANIC..

    • @joshstrange1244
      @joshstrange1244 10 місяців тому +40

      Beautifully said..

    • @brianapereira2694
      @brianapereira2694 10 місяців тому +149

      And it wasn't boasted to be "indestructible" like the Titanic was. Titanic was made out to be this impossibly huge, luxurious ship that couldn't be destroyed, so when it hit the iceberg, it showed the hubris of man. With Lusitania, they didn't tout it as indestructible, and I'm assuming they didn't with the Empress.
      Still, they need to share the Empress' story more, because the way the crew handled things and got all those boats out, yeah it's depressing, but it's a remarkable feat of humanity.

    • @leonpaelinck
      @leonpaelinck 10 місяців тому +65

      The Titanic 's situation was very unique. There were not enough lifeboats but it was one of the rare insrances where lifeboats were actually useful for evecucuation. At that time, boarding a lifeboat was considered death

    • @biel08sant
      @biel08sant 10 місяців тому +7

      Titanic the musicians didn't play to end

  • @lilianaohara
    @lilianaohara 11 місяців тому +3547

    I cannot imagine how terrifying it must have been, it sank in 14 minutes with no time to prepare. I hope all the souls rest in peace.

    • @giovannirastrelli9821
      @giovannirastrelli9821 11 місяців тому +52

      Admiral Nakhimov sank in only eight minutes after suffering a similar collision.

    • @teetee2799
      @teetee2799 11 місяців тому +16

      He only makes it even worse when your loved ones are on board.

    • @teetee2799
      @teetee2799 11 місяців тому +11

      It only makes it even worse knowing that your loved ones are still on board.

    • @lilianaohara
      @lilianaohara 11 місяців тому +21

      It's all sounds terrifying, to all souls lost at sea, I hope they all rest in peace

    • @barbarae-b507
      @barbarae-b507 11 місяців тому +76

      My mom told me about a man that had survived the sinking of the Titanic and then survived the sinking of the Empress of Ireland. I don’t think I would be willing to get on another ship after that.

  • @robertstaples3256
    @robertstaples3256 10 місяців тому +1933

    I looked this up and read that Captain Kendall was picked up by a nearby lifeboat after he was thrown overboard as the Empress tumbled into the sea, then rowed survivors back to the Storstad, which was floating in the near distance. After unloading the passengers, and before he headed back out to pick up more survivors, he stormed up to the bridge and yelled to Captain Anderson, "You have sunk my ship!" I can't imagine the fury on his face.

    • @Fred_the_1996
      @Fred_the_1996 10 місяців тому +317

      Yes, it was complete negligence not to stop

    • @greendalf123
      @greendalf123 10 місяців тому

      Hope he knocked his teeth out

    • @CtrlOptDel
      @CtrlOptDel 10 місяців тому +291

      Anderson was lucky Kendall didn’t try to kill him, and however loyal Anderson’s crew was, under the circumstances, they probably would’ve only made a half-hearted effort to restrain Kendall…

    • @zerobartholomew3738
      @zerobartholomew3738 10 місяців тому

      😊j

    • @dealler669
      @dealler669 10 місяців тому +104

      @@Fred_the_1996 No, it was complete negligence of Kendall to stop. You´re not supposed to stop in the fog because you lose all maneuverability of the ship and cannot react to circumstances like in this case. If he followed the book, nothing would happen.

  • @ko7577
    @ko7577 11 місяців тому +784

    The fact that they launched anything and save over 200 people is still pretty amazing when you account for a 14-minute sinking. It takes humans that much time just to analyze a situation and plan. To have launched boats and gotten anyone out of there is a miracle and speaks to the competency of at least some of the crew.

    • @user-xp8vf7tb9b
      @user-xp8vf7tb9b 10 місяців тому +9

      400

    • @erwina4738
      @erwina4738 10 місяців тому +6

      Most of the people who survived were crew members

    • @user-xp8vf7tb9b
      @user-xp8vf7tb9b 10 місяців тому +2

      @@erwina4738 lol

    • @Doyouhearthemtoo
      @Doyouhearthemtoo 10 місяців тому +19

      ​@@erwina4738makes since considering how fast it sunk and that passengers had been asleep

    • @j-roc6989
      @j-roc6989 10 місяців тому +4

      Bada bing bada boom as James Cameron would say 😂

  • @DollarDude
    @DollarDude 10 місяців тому +480

    6:01 Considering that this took place just 2 years after the Titanic, I'm surprised any of the passengers thought leaving the deck and going back to their cabins was a good idea. It's crazy how fast this all happened.

    • @Pozorrogo
      @Pozorrogo 10 місяців тому +109

      The Titanic took 2.5 hours to sink, so maybe they thought they had time to go back and prepare, not knowing that both boilers were taken out and the lights were about to go out. I think in times of chaos and panic, people go through 'stages of grief' almost. A lot of these people were probably still confused, in shock, and in denial that this could even happen let alone the entire ship sink in 14 minutes. I don't know what I would do in that situation, if I was even lucky enough to be on the deck to where I even had a chance of survival.

    • @schnitzelschnitzel8790
      @schnitzelschnitzel8790 10 місяців тому +22

      Well if you travel with others it would make sense for one person to go up and check and then go back to the cabin, only there was no more time then.

    • @Alfhilde89
      @Alfhilde89 10 місяців тому +6

      They did go through the stages of grief. Originally those were defined for people experiencing their own mortality ( terminal illness, etc...) before be co-opted to a wider scope of grief. So yes those people were experiencing real denial, anger, bargaining stages.

    • @wahedasamsuri9248
      @wahedasamsuri9248 10 місяців тому +10

      all in 14 minutes, it take me a ten minutes to realized I was in accident and this happen in broad daylight. I imagine in darkness and among panic crowds, it's very confusing to figure out what happened. Also there's wasn't fb or social media back then, pretty sure nobody actually knew the details about how Titanic sank or somebody aware to make PSA on how to survive a sinking ship....

    • @Leverag
      @Leverag 10 місяців тому +4

      I imagine it takes a special type of person to have traveled by boat *at all* right after the Titanic; then again, it's not like they knew how dangerous it was back then compared to now.

  • @debbiejarus1723
    @debbiejarus1723 11 місяців тому +1148

    It's one thing to hear she sank in 14 minutes, but totally another to actually see and feel how fast the sinking actually took place. I can't imagine how terrifying it was for so many to be sleeping peacefully one moment and having to fight for their lives the very next! May they rest in peace.
    Another job exceptionally well done!

    • @ko7577
      @ko7577 11 місяців тому +68

      And for the crew to launch 5 lifeboats in 14 minutes, this should be more discussed with shipwrecks. It took Titanic an hour to launch the first lifeboat despite knowing the ship was going to sink in an hour, 2 at most. The Empress Crew launched 5 in just 14 minutes while lurching to the side. That's incredible.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 11 місяців тому +12

      Yes, this video is superbly done - and really frightening to watch.

    • @torment4723
      @torment4723 11 місяців тому +2

      Dude they already rested like for a while now, i think they are ready for another go.

    • @TV-ly3dp
      @TV-ly3dp 11 місяців тому +14

      ​@@ko7577The crew of the Empress of Ireland knew she was going to sink the moment the SS Storsad (i think thats the name) created a giant gash in the mid section. The Titanic's crew saw the iceberg go past and maybe a very small amount might have seen the iceberg hit but again very few. It took a while to walk around the *BIGGEST SHIP IN THE WORLD AT THE TIME* and when they knew that Titanic was doomed they wasted no time in preparing and launching the lifeboats.
      I am one of those people who belive more lifeboats would've resulted in a bigger loss of life becuase they had 1hour & 50 minutes to launch 20 lifeboats. They launched 15 without incident. (Collapsible C/D was scrpaing along the hull the entire time it was being launched. Lifeboat 15 nearly crushed 13 and Collapsibles A & B had to be floated off) and couldn't launch the last two.
      Also considering the fact that nearly nobody wanted to leave the Titanic they were told, "It was just a lifeboat drill." Think for a moment that you were told to leave your house as a safety precaution whilst a blizzard was going on outside; you would be reluctant to leave the warmth of your house.
      I kind of waffled a bit but overall you can't Co pare the Titnaic to the Empress of Ireland.

    • @paulanthony5274
      @paulanthony5274 10 місяців тому +3

      @@ko7577 Yes five lifeboats is very fast. I wonder if the lusitania that sank in 20 minutes got as many away. A ship twice the size but not sure how many it got away.

  • @Farnsworth96
    @Farnsworth96 11 місяців тому +1483

    WW1 overshadowing the disaster is usually cited as the reason it was almost forgotten, but considering how many Titanic survivors stayed silent about such a protracted, gentler sinking, I wonder if the speed and violence of the Empress played more into the silence than typically assumed. Titanic had social etiquette preserved almost to the end, prioritizing the most vulnerable, while the Empress had it shattered almost instantly.
    -Titanic's children had a 50% chance of survival, the Empress' had a 3% chance.
    -75% of women survived Titanic, but that dropped to 13% on the Empress

    • @Reticulating-Splines
      @Reticulating-Splines 11 місяців тому +136

      I'm sure many of the survivors had to watch family members and strangers die right in front of them as well.

    • @Farnsworth96
      @Farnsworth96 11 місяців тому +161

      ​@@Reticulating-Splines absolutely! A lot of women and children in Titanic's lifeboats didn't know they were widowed or fatherless until rescue, whereas there was no hiding that with the Empress. I don't know if I'd be able to recall the latter experience without breaking down, it was probably easier for survivors to avoid the topic entirely.

    • @partiellementecreme
      @partiellementecreme 11 місяців тому +70

      It's unsurprising if not many people wanted to talk about this after having been through it. I certainly wouldn't. By 1918 everyone in Canada and Britain was emotionally wounded anyway, and the WASP custom is to be quiet about your trauma. It would be interesting to read a social history of how people dealt with grief in the era between the wars.

    • @misarthim6538
      @misarthim6538 11 місяців тому +68

      I don't think there was even enough time for the social order to break down. The ship was plunged into darkness only after 6 minutes, listing heavily, sunk in a cold water, in a fog. Either you were lucky enough to be in a place where you could survive or you weren't. Most women and children were deep in ship's steerage, unless they reacted extremely quickly, they were doomed.

    • @martletkay
      @martletkay 11 місяців тому +74

      @@misarthim6538 I imagine women were far less likely to survive this fast sinking because
      A. They were probably less likely to be the one who would have gotten up to 'go see what was going on', especially if they had children, and especially given they were likely in nightclothes
      B. They had children and either would have been slowed by them, or refused to leave them (I'm sure some men were affected in the same way, but there were probably a lot fewer men traveling with children than women, especially given the contingent of Salvation Army men)
      C: If they had to climb steep angles on stairs or the side of ships they were probably less prepared to do so, not strong enough, or hampered by old fashioned clothing
      D: Given the dire situation and panic, self preservation likely won out in some cases and women were probably less likely to win a struggle to push through crowded spaces
      E: Perhaps hampered by heavier clothing in the water, or less stamina in the water
      All just theories, would be interested to know if there is any historical evidence or research

  • @jays8083
    @jays8083 10 місяців тому +236

    The groans of the hull and the screams of the helpless sent some serious chills down my spine. It must have been so horrifying.

    • @EGarrett01
      @EGarrett01 10 місяців тому +5

      @@deu274 One of the Titanic survivors said years later that they couldn't stand being near a stadium because the screaming of that many people reminded him of that night.

  • @austinreed5805
    @austinreed5805 11 місяців тому +952

    It took only 14 minutes for a ship that size to sink. That’s absolutely terrifying.

    • @cb41503
      @cb41503 11 місяців тому +42

      Tbf it was a huge hole that was punched into the side of it by another ship

    • @paulanthony5274
      @paulanthony5274 10 місяців тому +26

      It's because the captain didn't close the watertight doors.

    • @jc_47
      @jc_47 10 місяців тому +34

      The RMS Lusitania's sinking (which was the Olympic and Titanic's rival) is even more impressive, it sank in 18 minutes after getting torpedoed, for a ship that is nearly the size of the Titanic, it sank in under 20 minutes which is unbelievably quick

    • @user-nw3xc2tk6y
      @user-nw3xc2tk6y 10 місяців тому +5

      Yup, big hole and steel is v heavy.

    • @j-roc6989
      @j-roc6989 10 місяців тому +7

      Bada bing bada boom as James Cameron would say 😂

  • @theplayeralsoknownasmousecop
    @theplayeralsoknownasmousecop 10 місяців тому +676

    They saved that many people in 14 minutes in the dark. That's impressive

    • @brittn2410
      @brittn2410 10 місяців тому +39

      Stands in stark contrast to another shipwreck that had over 10X the amount of time from collision to submerged and saved a SMALLER percentage of their passengers (looking at you Titanic)

    • @mr.battle20
      @mr.battle20 10 місяців тому +27

      @@brittn2410 Yeah, there was a major outrage over the lack of adequate lifeboats on the Titanic at the time, which prompted them to change regulations with the establishment of the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) in 1914, which still governs maritime safety to this day.

    • @brittn2410
      @brittn2410 10 місяців тому +33

      @@mr.battle20 it wasn’t just the lack of lifeboats with titanic. It was also that the whole evacuation was disorganized and chaotic. The lifeboats were leaving without being at capacity and not all the life boats were even deployed. Had titanic possessed a life boat seat for every passenger aboard, it wouldn’t have saved even one life because of how inefficiently the evacuation was conducted so that even the resources that they did have were not exhausted.

    • @kingjoong5625
      @kingjoong5625 10 місяців тому +18

      @@brittn2410exactly. Also, since the Titanic was constantly marketed as being “unsinkable”, many people on board were not taking evacuation seriously. others thought the ship still had time until it went down completely, so waiting on the deck was preferable to waiting on the lifeboats for help to arrive

    • @eastbow6053
      @eastbow6053 10 місяців тому +6

      @@brittn2410 the rich people demanded that their lifeboats not be filled i bet they had nightmares for the rest of their lives ...whoever of them had souls that is

  • @PalmettoGD
    @PalmettoGD 9 місяців тому +71

    My great great grandfather was a survivor of this tragedy. If he hadn’t survived, much of my family wouldn’t be here today.

    • @theogeffrelot983
      @theogeffrelot983 9 місяців тому +2

      Good for you he was fortunate.
      What was his name ?

    • @mergat2970
      @mergat2970 7 місяців тому

      ​@@theogeffrelot983didn't happen

  • @user-yy9ib6pk2d
    @user-yy9ib6pk2d 10 місяців тому +217

    My great-grandfather's first family went down in this sinking. I read about it in his diary but being able to see it through this animation is surreal. Thank you for this.

    • @madmozelle7396
      @madmozelle7396 10 місяців тому +19

      Couldn’t imagine how much pain your great-grandfather endured😢

    • @LITTLE1994
      @LITTLE1994 9 місяців тому +2

      Sorry to hear that

    • @mazBANK
      @mazBANK 9 місяців тому +2

      May him and his family rest in peace. Fly high 🙏

    • @MrThedonhead
      @MrThedonhead 9 місяців тому

      Scary that people read your diary after you die??

  • @katehartley1879
    @katehartley1879 11 місяців тому +352

    There was a Spanish ocean liner called Príncipe de Astúrias, the most luxurious Spanish ship at the time, that sank near Brazil. It was a foggy day around 4:00 in the morning, and the captain only realized way too late they were too close to the coast, and the sea was also rough on that day. She crashed against the reefs and opened a hole from stem to stern. The water reached directly the boilers, that exploded, and caused a failure in the electrical system, making it impossible for them to call for help. She sank in only 5 minutes. There was no time for even thinking on launching the lifeboats. From the nearly 600 people aboard, they rescued 143, I guess, but rumour has it that more than 1000 people died, as some speculate the ship was taking immigrants in secret, fleeding from the was (she sank in 1916). Sometimes I think I'd like to see an animation of her sinking, sometimes I don't, it was hard enough watching this one of the Empress, and I can only imagine the despair and fear the people who actually faced these situations could have felt in those moments. May the souls of all those who died on the sea rest in peace.

    • @user-lv7ph7hs7l
      @user-lv7ph7hs7l 11 місяців тому +30

      That does sound horrible. Crashing into a rocky shore is one of the worse fates. Like the SS Atlantic. To die so close from safety is somehow extra sad, to me anyway. And even if you get a boat off, it's likely to be smashed on the rocks and kill everyone, like the boats of the SS Atlantic.

    • @ninab.4540
      @ninab.4540 10 місяців тому +5

      Screw resting in peace. These souls deserve a reroll

    • @John-wu3pb
      @John-wu3pb 10 місяців тому

      Y u lying

    • @user-nw3xc2tk6y
      @user-nw3xc2tk6y 10 місяців тому +1

      You'd think there'd be more survivors it being on the shore, but no one can fight the sea when she's ferocious hey. 5 minutes of fear before dying is probably better than 14 minutes though.

    • @sunnyfon9065
      @sunnyfon9065 10 місяців тому

      @@John-wu3pbLying? You know this is a real story right?

  • @brittn2410
    @brittn2410 10 місяців тому +253

    What I’m learning from shipwreck videos is: always pay to be higher up. Always. Paying for first class on an airplane doesn’t make you safer in a crash, but paying for an upper deck on a ship GREATLY increases your chances in a sinking.

    • @paigeh.9208
      @paigeh.9208 10 місяців тому +31

      actually cruise ships now typically keep their lifeboats on lower levels - every cruise I’ve been on we have to walk DOWN several flights of stairs to get to the boats

    • @brittn2410
      @brittn2410 10 місяців тому +31

      @@paigeh.9208 that’s concerning. Wouldn’t they be concerned about the lifeboats sinking with the ship before you can load them if they’re so much closer to the waterline?

    • @k.o.h3599
      @k.o.h3599 10 місяців тому +26

      @@brittn2410 moder cruise ships now use their lifeboats as tenders/ferries for excursions and island visits.
      It's also important to remember how much taller modern cruise ships are when compared to ocean liners. From the top to the water line you're looking at about 15 stories, so it's safer and faster to have the boats at the bottom of the superstructure.

    • @TiestoCalvinHarris
      @TiestoCalvinHarris 10 місяців тому

      ​@@k.o.h3599and plus they got spot icebergs and ships from a distance right ?

    • @bluemikuhow2092
      @bluemikuhow2092 10 місяців тому +3

      ​@@brittn2410 It helps with an issue 3rd class passangers on the Titanic faced: being too far from the lifeboats.
      It's better to have them closer to the center of the ship than the top simply because passangers can all reach them faster that way

  • @floppydolphins4123
    @floppydolphins4123 11 місяців тому +241

    8:02 is terrifying. Many of the passengers below decks must have seen that as their last view, the lights flickering out and making escape all but impossible...

    • @DisastrousIntentionally
      @DisastrousIntentionally 10 місяців тому +74

      Imagine being asleep and waking up to a loud bang but in your barely awake state, you decide it was nothing and return to sleep. The last thing you would have experienced is being submerged in bitterly cold water in your pitch black cabin. Confused, terrified, helpless and doomed.

    • @AnneIglesias
      @AnneIglesias 10 місяців тому +26

      @@radscorpion8 it’s called awe. You can be completely enraptured and fascinated by something while still being upset about it.

    • @Hi-po2br
      @Hi-po2br 10 місяців тому +15

      @@radscorpion8
      Considering your other comments on this video, you're just talking for yourself.

    • @swapnilmankame
      @swapnilmankame 10 місяців тому

      @@radscorpion8 Let's be honest, you are mentally Ill

    • @TiestoCalvinHarris
      @TiestoCalvinHarris 10 місяців тому

      ​@@radscorpion8it's a video not real life but based on real life

  • @TheGentlemanGamerLive
    @TheGentlemanGamerLive 3 місяці тому +14

    What horrible irony....The Titanic had hours to evacuate, but not enough boats....the Empress had plenty of boats, but not nearly enough time...

  • @sargepent9815
    @sargepent9815 11 місяців тому +118

    I think the more horrifying story I read about this sinking is where a trapped family handed their two children out the porthole to people standing on the hull. The parents couldn't fit through the porthole and inevitably died as the ship sank

    • @mikoto7693
      @mikoto7693 5 місяців тому +4

      Oh that’s terrible. I hope the thought of their children surviving eased the horror of their final minutes.

  • @fiarandompenaltygeneratorm5044
    @fiarandompenaltygeneratorm5044 10 місяців тому +143

    I've never heard of this tragedy before. This is a magnificent animation of this tragic event. You deserve every one of the millions of views this will get.

    • @paullewis2413
      @paullewis2413 6 місяців тому +2

      I’ve known about this since I was a teenager but that’s because I am a ship (mainly ocean liner) fanatic. No one I’ve ever spoken to about the Empress of Ireland (other than ship enthusiasts) has known anything about this tragedy but everyone has known about “Titanic” of course which has received all the publicity.

  • @kinzkinz85
    @kinzkinz85 11 місяців тому +124

    The ones that immediately died upon the first impact were indeed the lucky ones.

    • @divinelangene6813
      @divinelangene6813 10 місяців тому +1

      True

    • @SpiralSkylines
      @SpiralSkylines 10 місяців тому +11

      Being sleep one second then dying so randomly and suddenly has to suck just as much as I imagine it does. I guess overall they didn’t suffer, but I feel like I would want to wake up and then die.

    • @Domhnall_A_Ghalltachd
      @Domhnall_A_Ghalltachd 10 місяців тому +5

      Apart from the ones who survived

    • @user-rw6tm8hx4g
      @user-rw6tm8hx4g 10 місяців тому +1

      Someone was getting sloppy toppy. Then blam dead

    • @erinjohnson1124
      @erinjohnson1124 10 місяців тому

      @@user-rw6tm8hx4g🙄🙄🙄🙄

  • @mazBANK
    @mazBANK 9 місяців тому +17

    Bloody hell! 14 minutes?! Even faster than Lusitania, I really feel for those people that died that night, in fact all of them 😢

  • @laszlozsurka8991
    @laszlozsurka8991 10 місяців тому +728

    The fact that 465 people (around 31%) managed to survive is impressive given the very short timeframe. Shoutout to the crew for being very effective.

    • @radscorpion8
      @radscorpion8 10 місяців тому +35

      shoutout? Yo bros, shoutout for being real homies as yo ship sank!

    • @sarahrobertson4629
      @sarahrobertson4629 10 місяців тому +49

      It was actually around 31% who survived (465/(465+1012)). Still pretty good, considering.

    • @jaydenkim5732
      @jaydenkim5732 10 місяців тому +10

      Shout to a bunch of dead people yo ! 🤘💯💯💯

    • @jorelldye4346
      @jorelldye4346 10 місяців тому +3

      @@sarahrobertson4629 the empress had 1057 passengers. Where did the 1012+465 come from???

    • @sarahrobertson4629
      @sarahrobertson4629 10 місяців тому +11

      @@jorelldye4346 Number who died (1012) plus number who lived (465). Passengers + crew, I assume.

  • @mm1k3y
    @mm1k3y 10 місяців тому +38

    I can't begin to imagine the horror of being stuck inside one of the hallways trying to make it to deck before it suddenly goes pitch black. It's filling me with dread.

    • @aimeekubik8803
      @aimeekubik8803 10 місяців тому

      Don't watch. I personally feel that God never intended man to take to the seas. The seas belong to the creatures that reside within them.
      Observe how the mighty Orcas are attacking the shop rudders now, and destroying the yachts of the rich.
      The sea belongs not to us. We were given the Land, and did, somehow, manage to mess that up.
      With our plastics and human waste we foul the sea.

  • @codacstarn5173
    @codacstarn5173 11 місяців тому +423

    Thank you for your commitment to keeping history relevant. Even if there are sad parts to the history

    • @LunaLovegood293
      @LunaLovegood293 4 місяці тому +1

      Relevant?! History is always relevant!

  • @katherinegilks3880
    @katherinegilks3880 11 місяців тому +415

    For some context, the St. Lawrence is essentially an oceanic river (there are two different words in French for seaways like it and rivers) more akin to the English Channel than most inland rivers. You can’t just swim to shore easily, and with the fog and darkness, plus the fact that the passengers would have been unfamiliar with the area, you couldn’t know where the shore was. It is also very rocky and not conducive to swimming or getting out of the water. Women especially were weighted down by heavy clothes (not to mention would have been more likely to be asleep, less likely to know how to swim, and more likely to be caring for children). Children would not be able to swim it at all. People on the shore were asleep and couldn’t see either to help once they woke up. Absolutely terrifying and heartbreaking.
    All things considered, that 465 people survived is miraculous.
    It was a very unfortunate accident. Yes, one can try to assign blame, but that isn’t about to bring anyone back from the dead, nor is it likely to prevent a similar accident in the future. Obviously, coming up with better protocols is important, but one doesn’t need blame for that.

    • @alexk1486
      @alexk1486 11 місяців тому +20

      in fact Calais to Dover is narrower than the Rimouski section where the Empress of Ireland sank

    • @c0mpu73rguy
      @c0mpu73rguy 11 місяців тому +10

      "Fleuve" isn't it?

    • @connorbranscombe6819
      @connorbranscombe6819 11 місяців тому +26

      @@jonathanparle8429 Tbh even then, in that water temp, with how far they would have had to swim, I literally dont think even a professional swimmer could manage it.

    • @Neal_Schier
      @Neal_Schier 11 місяців тому +16

      ​​@@connorbranscombe6819 Excellent point. The water was very cold and no one was prepared for it. The cold temp would have taken one's breath away at first contact. It would be difficult for even strong swimmers to have made it very far--a few hundred meters maybe?

    • @connorbranscombe6819
      @connorbranscombe6819 11 місяців тому +17

      @@Neal_Schier A professional and experienced cold water swimmer might be able to do more, but yeah I doubt they make it even 1 kilometre from tbe wreckage, feel like your best hope would be clinging to some piece of debris and praying for a boat.

  • @sylverfox6973
    @sylverfox6973 9 місяців тому +10

    It's horrifying how quickly it went from quiet to total chaos.

  • @micahwoodard
    @micahwoodard 11 місяців тому +108

    I can't think of many other or more horrifying experiences than trying to escape a rapidly capsizing & sinking ship, and then the lights go out. The confusion, disorientation, terror, and panic are dreadful to imagine; helpless to escape death😰

  • @rickydo6572
    @rickydo6572 10 місяців тому +11

    Absolutely nightmarish stuff.
    Imagine the fear and confusion of hearing all around you screaming as you're all being swallowed by the abyss, in the dark, in the cold, knowing you'll be dead soon and so will your loved ones.
    Knowing you're just one among many, and none will be saved, in a way, you're completely alone.
    And if you're one of the last to go, you'll live enough to realize all the screams fading, the night becoming quieter, until only the sounds of the wind and the water can be heard...
    That night must have been absolute and utter hell.
    Also, amazing job by the people who put this video together, I should be sleeping rn, hope this doesn't give me a nightmare.

  • @yurisuika
    @yurisuika 11 місяців тому +44

    It is honestly amazing that a third of the people survived this sinking given the small amount of time from impact to the point where getting out of the ship was impossible. If at 10 minutes it started to turn over, and at just 4-5 minutes it lost illumination... Well, I think that speaks for itself!

  • @marekkopton2546
    @marekkopton2546 11 місяців тому +67

    This was breathtaking. Although there have been RT sinkings made for RMS Empress of Ireland in the past years, only this one made it really close as it could have looked like. I watched it in a true terror. It was so quick, I can't imagine how horrifying disaster it must have been. Great that such a video was made, it was really needed and this tragedy really deserves more attention. Not only Titanic have sunk. I'll tell it once again - this is what I love YT for.

  • @girlytomboyx
    @girlytomboyx 11 місяців тому +107

    It's insane how much of the ships have sank by starboard side. Titanic hit the iceberg on starboard side, Lusitania was torpedoed on starboard side, Britannic hit the explosion mine on starboard side, and this Empress of Ireland was rammed on starboard side as well.
    Very sad to all of the ship tragedies and all the lives lost. May they rest in peace. Such a great animation video, good job team.

    • @everythinghistory6770
      @everythinghistory6770 11 місяців тому +14

      Olympic was rammed on her starboard side too, luckily she didn't sink

    • @girlytomboyx
      @girlytomboyx 11 місяців тому +1

      @@everythinghistory6770 I thought that was her port side?

    • @everythinghistory6770
      @everythinghistory6770 11 місяців тому +4

      @@girlytomboyx photos show the damage on her starboard. its easy to get mistaken though, don't worry haha

    • @josephayers7395
      @josephayers7395 11 місяців тому +3

      ​@GirlyTomboyX No it was starboard side in the stern section

    • @mowowie
      @mowowie 11 місяців тому +8

      It is because almost 90% of the world is right handed...

  • @CJODell12
    @CJODell12 8 місяців тому +9

    Empress was hit in the worst possible place, right in the boiler rooms and engine room.

  • @nursefaithrn4321
    @nursefaithrn4321 11 місяців тому +291

    It's incredible! My Great Auntie went down on the Empress. It was so important for me to experience this and know what she went through. I am so grateful that I watched this and the video on the anniversary! It means a great deal to me! Thank you so much Mr.Brady! I love all of your videos!❤❤❤

    • @khernandez46
      @khernandez46 11 місяців тому +25

      Im sorry for your family's loss. Bless your heart!

    • @LITTLE1994
      @LITTLE1994 11 місяців тому +12

      Sorry for your loss

    • @polishrocker93
      @polishrocker93 11 місяців тому +5

      @@khernandez46 I think a good number of years have passed since it happened. I doubt they are all miserable about it now 😂

    • @nursefaithrn4321
      @nursefaithrn4321 11 місяців тому +22

      @@LITTLE1994 Awww!😇You're so sweet! How lovely of you to take time out of your day to leave such a nice comment. Your kindness touched my heart! Our family thinks of my Great Aunt every day. Her remains are still inside of the Empress. My family fervently hope and pray that she passed as peacefully and as quickly as possible. But sadly, it seems as though no one who were trapped deep inside of the ship, sleeping or awake, were able to leave this world in peace. 😔In which case, we can only hope that it was very fast, and that the passangers who were not awoken by the Storstad piercing and gutting the precious Empress, weren't terribly alert when the ship was in her death throes. Obviously that is wishful thinking because the alternative is so unimaginable, so terrifying, and so hopelessely claustrophobic, and so desperate, that I would have taken a big deep breath to drown faster because of the complete unconscionable abject terror. If it were me, the fear and anguish would be insufferable. Personally, I wouldn't be able to stand it. But that's me!

    • @jackcarr9365
      @jackcarr9365 10 місяців тому +3

      Dang I am a survivor myself and I remembered her being trapped behind this gate and was wondering if I should have saved her, I felt like in that situation that I shouldn't have and left her. RIP cuz

  • @Feline_Frenzy53
    @Feline_Frenzy53 11 місяців тому +68

    Such a beautiful ship. So many lives lost. May they rest in peace. Thank you, Mike, for the tribute.

  • @colinsean2931
    @colinsean2931 11 місяців тому +33

    This was absolutely haunting. It really gave a sense of the chaos and horror the passengers and crew must have felt.

  • @gabbyf4281
    @gabbyf4281 10 місяців тому +32

    Absolutely horrifying, I could not imagine the sheer terror everyone was feeling. May those poor souls Rest In Peace. Shoutout to the crew for doing all they could in such a short time

  • @oliversherman2414
    @oliversherman2414 11 місяців тому +61

    This reminds me a little of that Titanic real time sinking animation. It's terrifying to think that this ship sank so quickly and so suddenly. Rest in peace to all the victims of this disaster

    • @luckyspurs
      @luckyspurs 9 місяців тому +1

      For some reason the moments of the ships floating alone and quiet in the dark at the start are among the most creepy/moving.

    • @oliversherman2414
      @oliversherman2414 9 місяців тому

      @@luckyspurs agreed

  • @onceuponatimeonearth
    @onceuponatimeonearth 9 місяців тому +10

    This was more horrifying to watch than any horror movie I've seen. It was actually, literally, gut wrenching.

  • @EmperorDank
    @EmperorDank 9 місяців тому +6

    Seeing this in real time really puts into perspective how insanely fast this sinking was

  • @tuxedotservo
    @tuxedotservo 11 місяців тому +154

    Another disaster within the US you might find interesting is the capsizing of the Eastland in Chicago on July 24, 1915 - killing ~900 people right there at the dock.
    The cause of the capsizing? A large number of passengers apparently rushed to the river side of the Eastland to watch ships go by.
    (edit) The ship was ruled unstable in a hearing. So you had an unstable ship, and a sudden shift of a majority of passengers over to the river side. The two things together caused her to roll.
    The Eastland was bought by the Navy and converted into a military training ship and renamed USS Wilmette. She served without further incident until her scrapping after World War II.

    • @Yu-hx5jo
      @Yu-hx5jo 11 місяців тому +5

      cause of the capsizing seems a bit a goofy, maybe a lot of things about the actual cause might have been hidden

    • @Polarisuma
      @Polarisuma 11 місяців тому +5

      aswell, the lifeboats and safety measures ironically played a huge part in the capsizing

    • @tuxedotservo
      @tuxedotservo 11 місяців тому +2

      @@Yu-hx5jo for whatever reason I was a bit too brief on the original post - have since edited. The ship was ruled unstable in the follow-up investigation. So it was a combination of unstable ship and a rush of passengers to the river side.

    • @barbarae-b507
      @barbarae-b507 11 місяців тому +1

      Yeah I‘be seen videos on the Eastland.

    • @doreengreen3287
      @doreengreen3287 11 місяців тому +1

      Highly recommend ask a morticians view on the subject.

  • @sarahwright7804
    @sarahwright7804 10 місяців тому +13

    Sometimes I think about how fun it would be to go on a cruise to an island or Alaska or something but then I watch videos like this and think to myself “you sure you want to do that?”. That’s beyond terrifying.

    • @sonyarowe1327
      @sonyarowe1327 10 місяців тому +4

      Just bring your own inflatable lifeboat.

  • @Strider91
    @Strider91 10 місяців тому +12

    Its actually a testament to the discipline and skill of her crew that they manged to get anyone off the boat at all. The conditions were clearly, shall we say. . . Less than ideal. That said, very well done on the recreation. I feel like I'm really there, its horrifying.

  • @Tyrunner0097
    @Tyrunner0097 11 місяців тому +123

    The fog's timing couldn't have been worse. When it came, the Empress was in the middle of a maneuver where she had to take a long turn to starboard, before turning back to port to straighten out. The Storstad saw the Empress turning across its bow just as the fog came in, making the crew think the Empress was going to make a conventional port-to-port passing, and so it turned to its own starboard to make this happen, not knowing the Empress was turning back to port at the same moment, putting them on a collision course.
    If the fog had come just a few minutes earlier, the Storstad wouldn't have seen the long starboard turn of the Empress, and had it come a few minutes later, the full maneuver would've been completed, and the Storstad would've kept its regular course.

    • @mastercoolguy2809
      @mastercoolguy2809 10 місяців тому +21

      Just imagine being the crew on the storstad, you thought that you would be able to pass right by but then your ship rams the empress and you can’t do anything but watch as it fades in the fog and listen to the screams of the victims

    • @user-nw3xc2tk6y
      @user-nw3xc2tk6y 10 місяців тому +3

      I was wondering the why of this bit, cheers, was thinking it's obs not an international law of the sea for everyone to stop in fog, so they thought she was turning to pass then. Long time before radar too huh.

    • @ngndnd
      @ngndnd 10 місяців тому +2

      this reminds me of the two airplanes crashing at the airport because one of the pilots had a huge ego and thought he could still fly even though it was extremely foggy

    • @bonniedalesullivan9705
      @bonniedalesullivan9705 4 місяці тому

      ​@@ngndnd,,, you are talking about Pan Am and KLM at Tenerife in 1977. That was horrific as well!

  • @Tamity
    @Tamity 11 місяців тому +41

    I watched the Documentary that you made on this, and it shook me. Many of these deaths are terribly painful and difficult to think about. That was an awful night for those passengers and crew on that ship.

  • @Royle_RRR
    @Royle_RRR 10 місяців тому +16

    If I were one of those survivors, I would have been greatly terrified just hearing how it rapidly transitioned from deafening screams of help to absolute silence as the passengers just helplessly sink in the cold and deep.

  • @wesleysworkshop4081
    @wesleysworkshop4081 11 місяців тому +182

    Mike, you did an outstanding job on this animation. The sounds, the graphics, the lighting, everything about this is just so perfect. You really outdid yourself here, Mike! Hope to see more real time animations, like a Britannic one, I don’t think there are that many of those around. Anyway, just wanted to congratulate you and the team for all the hard work you put into this, and believe me, it certainly paid off!
    - Wesley

    • @TheEmeraldMenOfficial
      @TheEmeraldMenOfficial 11 місяців тому +3

      Honor and Glory’s is amazing though

    • @barbarahannon6033
      @barbarahannon6033 11 місяців тому +1

      without any sound it made the atmoapher a little spookey which added to the tension.

    • @West_Coast_Gang
      @West_Coast_Gang 11 місяців тому

      It certainly did

    • @brianapereira2694
      @brianapereira2694 10 місяців тому

      @@barbarahannon6033 The muffled screaming added to it.

    • @legitbeans9078
      @legitbeans9078 10 місяців тому +1

      Agreed. This is one of the best tragedies ever 👍

  • @Sibes3
    @Sibes3 10 місяців тому +10

    Very frightening. This was the ship that brought my G-Grandmother and Grandfather to Canada, from the U.K., in the October of 1906, four months after her maiden voyage. Thank you for posting.

  • @VelvetYeti
    @VelvetYeti 11 місяців тому +61

    Ok, the sound of the passengers was not something I was expecting, and added another layer to the video. Very well done

    • @TheExtremelyFluffyYeti
      @TheExtremelyFluffyYeti 10 місяців тому +1

      @VelvetYeti: I agree! It is very good. And the screaming from the passengers, also makes it all more horrifying than it already is.

    • @VelvetYeti
      @VelvetYeti 10 місяців тому +1

      @@TheExtremelyFluffyYeti It's rare to meet another like minded Yeti. Good day to you good sir/mam.

    • @TheExtremelyFluffyYeti
      @TheExtremelyFluffyYeti 10 місяців тому

      @@VelvetYeti I agree. 😊
      Nice to meet you, VelvetYeti! I love your name. And thank you, I hope you will have a good day too, good sir/mam. 🤗

  • @cobbler9113
    @cobbler9113 10 місяців тому +40

    That scene at 13:35 is absolutely haunting and no doubt occurred throughout the ship. I sincerely hope the end was quick for those people.

    • @mywifesboyfriend5558
      @mywifesboyfriend5558 10 місяців тому +7

      It wasn't. Drowning is slow and very painful.

    • @cobbler9113
      @cobbler9113 10 місяців тому +3

      @@mywifesboyfriend5558 Alas, I fear you’re right. Maybe some were fortunate enough to suffer a blow to the head that rendered them unconscious but they would have been few.

  • @LordXsi
    @LordXsi 11 місяців тому +11

    Very reminiscent of what happened to SS Admiral Nakhimov…only that sinking took even less time. Such an unimaginable horrible situation.
    Thank you for your great work, Mr. Brady.

  • @Nicholas_Buck
    @Nicholas_Buck 10 місяців тому +5

    In 1973, my next door neighbour in Aylmer, Quebec told my family and me that he swam for his life and survived. He said he remembered the coal dust between his toes when he got on the deck of the coal ship the EoI had struck.

  • @ct1762
    @ct1762 10 місяців тому +9

    i dont think people quite understand just how horrific this event was, and thats very understandable given the 100+ year timespan. But i still think its important to remember all those people that died on this ship. they deserve to be remembered for the real people they where. RIP and thank goodness for radar , AIS and radios.

  • @n16161
    @n16161 10 місяців тому +23

    Very emotionally-moving animation. Well done. I had never heard of this tragic event. Can’t imagine what that would have been like to live through

  • @EpicJoshua314
    @EpicJoshua314 11 місяців тому +39

    Great video, Mike! Best Empress of Ireland sinking animation I have ever seen.
    Unfortunately, I just don’t believe the Empress was stationary during the collision. The river currents doesn’t seem strong enough to dislodge the Storstad from the Empress so soon after it plunged 25 feet into the Empress’ hull and then drift so far away.
    Some documentaries I have seen suggest that the Empress was slowing down at the time of the collision - had momentum - which is consistent with the testimony of the Stordstad’s crew that the Empress was moving when the collision occurred.
    This would explain why the Storstad quickly dislodged herself from the Empress and why she drifted so far away after the collision as if the river currents were responsible for the dislodge and the drift, she probably would have only drifted to just aft of her stern or at a distance where her lights could still be seen in the fog.

    • @auroraborealis8155
      @auroraborealis8155 11 місяців тому +1

      It's an interesting thing to think about, it would explain a lot.

    • @user-lv7ph7hs7l
      @user-lv7ph7hs7l 11 місяців тому +1

      It's not controversial that her engines had been restarted and she was making some amount of headway. The issue is if she was stopped when the Storstad appeared out of the fog. If she was moving already there may have been a chance to maneuver but stopped there wasn't. Besides her telegraph has been recovered and shows Full Ahead as do the telegraphs in the engine room. She was making some speed and the engines where near full power, which doesn't take long, provided you have a full head of steam. They handle a bit different than diesels, simce the power comes from the boilers. You open the valve and full power hits the engine and it rapidly climbs to full rpm. While a diesel starts out with more torque from a standstill a steam engine rapidly gains torque as rpm increases, so once it gets going (easy on a ship, less so on a locomotive) it has full power in some amount of seconds. Call it 10 seconds or so. A diesel has to both make the energy and convert it. A steam engine converts readily available heat energy into kinetic energy.

  • @DeaconBlu
    @DeaconBlu 11 місяців тому +56

    I stumbled on your channel by shear luck, not long ago.
    I’ve been a fan ever since.
    As a closet ship/sailing fan, I find your vids absolutely fantastic. I’ve not seen a single one that wasn’t top notch.
    You sir, do a fantastic job…in a very simple, easy manner.
    Thank you for what you do.
    Thank you for how you do it.
    Subscribed? Lol. Absolutely!
    Keep it up!
    Please.

  • @johnking5174
    @johnking5174 9 місяців тому +12

    I know this sounds harsh, but the people on the Titanic didn't know how lucky they were that their ship managed to stay afloat for over 2.5 hours after collision.

  • @kip2981
    @kip2981 10 місяців тому +16

    This is absolutely the biggest fear i have.. being so helpless in water. Absolute terror you must go through😔 rest in peace those lost.

  • @mr.dystopian5554
    @mr.dystopian5554 11 місяців тому +3

    You wake up in the middle of a chaotic scene of people running and screaming in the hallways, jump out of bed and make your way out onto the deck where you have only 5 minutes to make a choice between fighting for lifeboat space, jumping in the icy cold water, and staying onboard for however long the ship remains afloat. Frightening moment, only heightened by the Empress' industrial moan as she staggers to stay upright.
    Good work on this rendering and may those who perished find peace.

  • @foxfire9144
    @foxfire9144 11 місяців тому +9

    This is genuinely horrifying and a lot more people should see it

  • @liamrab6
    @liamrab6 11 місяців тому +4

    that shot when it goes still at 2:40 and you know what’s about to happen is so eerie

  • @thoughtful_criticiser
    @thoughtful_criticiser 11 місяців тому +5

    I started to watch this video and decided to make a cup of tea. I had finished and delivered a cup to my wife as the ship went under the water. That is so fast that you needed to know where your cabin is, where you needed to be and how to get there in the dark. Most didn't!
    I watched the full video on Sunday and this was another chance to see the animation. Considering that this hasn't been produced by a large professional digital vfx team, the renderings are very good. Mike et al have done really well and probably done it in a fraction of the time.

  • @B_R2005
    @B_R2005 11 місяців тому +17

    The fact that not a lot of people know about this is sad. Had this happened maybe a year or so prior, it would've been more well known instead of being overshadowed by WW1

  • @akshaytakkar6747
    @akshaytakkar6747 7 місяців тому +2

    You know, you go through life sometimes scrolling through Instagram and feeling bad that you don't have that lifestyle you see people flaunting on social media but think about that guy who was trapped in his room in the 3rd class in the empress. Hearing the ice cold water gushing in, people screaming and the last bit of light fading away. That guy doesn't want expensive cars and fancy accessories. That guy just wants to make it out alive.

  • @Fleur-de-lis4
    @Fleur-de-lis4 11 місяців тому +8

    Was there for the premier; still astonished at the quality of this animation this in on parr with Titanic: Honor and Glory. Outstanding work, Mike!

  • @barbarae-b507
    @barbarae-b507 11 місяців тому +84

    My mom was the Salvation Army of Canada’s official historian and an amateur historian of Canadian Salvation Army history before that. She knew everything about this and regularly gave lectures on it. She was very concerned about divers who wanted to explore the bring up artifacts from the wreck and regularly had to advocate for leaving the site alone since it is the gravesite for a lot of people. The Canadian Salvation Army lost a lot of people in this wreck , including a lot of the Canadian SA leaders. It was travelling to England and was the only way for Canadian SA people to reach the International Congress at the time. I think she even insisted that the divers return the ship’s wheel to the ship. Not sure what they did. I really disagree with taking artifacts from shipwrecks. Unless the family of the person who is involved specifically requests it. Otherwise, it is desecrating a graveyard.

    • @auroraborealis8155
      @auroraborealis8155 11 місяців тому +8

      This is a big concern with many disastrous wrecks of this kind, I absolutely agree that it is disrespectful to raise "artifacts" from them.

    • @Randomjackass135
      @Randomjackass135 10 місяців тому

      Reading this after the titanic submarine thing

    • @barbarae-b507
      @barbarae-b507 9 місяців тому

      All Stockton Rush did was add more people to the graveyard that already exists down there at the location of the Titanic graveyard.

  • @mikoto7693
    @mikoto7693 5 місяців тому +3

    I’ve got to commend the crew for their quick work and discipline. It’s amazing so many survived given how little time they had.

  • @DieUnstillbareGier
    @DieUnstillbareGier 10 місяців тому

    I can't believe that I missed this animation until now. A proper full-time sinking animation of Empress of Ireland is what I've been waiting for so many years. Empress of Ireland is my 2nd favorite ocean liner so, once again an amazing job, Bradley!!!

  • @Phil-ey6yh
    @Phil-ey6yh 11 місяців тому +7

    I've just stumbled on your channel on the last day or so and i gotta tell ya... I'm REALLY enjoying the heck out of these. Very cool content and very informative. Keep em coming!

  • @MrQM2
    @MrQM2 11 місяців тому +34

    What a tragedy, those poor souls, what a horrible way to go. Stunning animation, thank you for the tribute!

    • @radscorpion8
      @radscorpion8 10 місяців тому +1

      yes, stunning and entertaining to watch, am I right? :D

  • @TheGreekPianist
    @TheGreekPianist 10 місяців тому +33

    3:25 At first I thought that was a rescue ship (I’m not too familiar with this incident) and was horrified when it plowed RIGHT THROUGH the Empress! That was shocking

  • @gijswillemsen4756
    @gijswillemsen4756 11 місяців тому +10

    Mike, you continue to impress! The way the lights of Storstad slowly pierce the fog is just haunting. Beautifully annimated. Must have been a nightmare.

    • @luckyspurs
      @luckyspurs 9 місяців тому +1

      Yeah, when it held the camera on that spot, I was looking ominously trying to see when a shadow or light was going to emerge.

  • @Rose0004
    @Rose0004 10 місяців тому +6

    The echoed howling of the ship sounds so haunting, like the ship herself is crying in pain before drowning. I can't even imagine the stress of being a passenger startled out of my sleep, realizing the ship is sinking, and rushing for my life to get onto a lifeboat only to be thrown into the water anyway. 💔

  • @hesseltjeb
    @hesseltjeb 11 місяців тому +7

    Amazingly high quality as always! Really loving the way the channel is going

  • @sarge6870
    @sarge6870 11 місяців тому +7

    Well done Mike to you and the team that put this together! I've been on 14 cruises and couldn't begin to imagine if this happened to me! Even though we have more stringent safety measures today, I think back to the most recent sinking of a cruise ship, the "Costa Concordia". Thanks for doing this Mike....Cheers from across the pond!

  • @Tcb0835
    @Tcb0835 10 місяців тому +1

    This is one of the most compelling things I've ever seen on UA-cam. It's an absolutely stunning piece of work. Thank you Mike.

  • @paulie-Gualtieri.
    @paulie-Gualtieri. 11 місяців тому +48

    Once again I'm deeply impressed by the levels of detail and immersing atmosphere, of such a tragic event.

    • @hansblitz7770
      @hansblitz7770 8 місяців тому

      I was more impressed with that grilled cheese cooked on the radiator.

  • @sarahfalquez6330
    @sarahfalquez6330 11 місяців тому +7

    Wow, this video and the last one about the Empress of Ireland are really excellent. I had read about the disaster before but wasn't able to visualize the terror of it until now. The videos really encapsulate the horrifying events of that night. This one in particular as there's no voice-over narration, so the eerie silence and then the sound of the screaming just gives you goosebumps. Nonetheless, we can only begin to imagine how truly terrifying it must have been. Thank you for this brilliant and moving content ❤

  • @anonymous_person-ls1ez
    @anonymous_person-ls1ez 11 місяців тому +8

    Wow this is incredible, the detail and skill shows in all your works.

  • @davidthompson5766
    @davidthompson5766 11 місяців тому +8

    I found out about Mike Brady and Oceanliner Designs from Sam Pence at Historic Travels.

  • @ScoutSniper3124
    @ScoutSniper3124 10 місяців тому +1

    Two mentalities appear in such moments, the more prevalent being that of resistance to accepting the situation for what it is, failing to recognize nor even contemplate the possibility of impending danger. The far more important but rarer quality is that of responding correctly with both experience and instinct, acting immediately in a coordinated fashion to effect a directed response. It's these types of people that truly are the unsung heroes in such times.

  • @chickenman22710
    @chickenman22710 11 місяців тому +4

    Very solemn and unnerving. Well done, this is an excellent teacher of the dangers of sea travel

  • @PJ-gm1hb
    @PJ-gm1hb 10 місяців тому +4

    The screams in the background during the sinking gave me chills, what these people went through was absolutely horrific 😢

  • @johnchengary3502
    @johnchengary3502 8 місяців тому +2

    Do a video on the Audubon and the Defiance. They collided with each other in 1854 on October 21st

  • @SoldierFox1393
    @SoldierFox1393 8 місяців тому +5

    This is pretty much Canada's Titanic

    • @emerybonner7973
      @emerybonner7973 8 місяців тому +2

      People have called it that. This was and still is the deadliest maritime disaster in peacetime Canada.

    • @SoldierFox1393
      @SoldierFox1393 8 місяців тому +1

      @@emerybonner7973 very true, sad that a beautiful ship had to go down like that with all their people

  • @ShadrakJohn
    @ShadrakJohn 11 місяців тому +5

    The 4 children that survived were:
    Josephine O’Hara, 10
    Florence Barbour, 8
    Gracie Hanagan, 7
    Arvo Markkula, 14

  • @BA3H0
    @BA3H0 9 місяців тому +3

    The fact that many people were already in terror trying to get out of the ship tilted a lot
    But then the lights out?! Horrifying and a survivor said it was basically “pitch black” in the middle of the River..
    Especially at 7:58-8:06

  • @nthgth
    @nthgth 11 місяців тому +2

    My God, they never stood a chance.
    Famtastic production.

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101 11 місяців тому +2

    Great job. This is one of the FEW videos I have seen that tells a story without narration.

  • @johannjohann6523
    @johannjohann6523 10 місяців тому +5

    I've been on cruise, and 14 minutes seems alot of time, but it's amazing how many levels there are on a ship below decks, and how many people a ship can hold that need to get to the deck before getting off. Crazy the other ship didn't wait out the fog on a busy waterway like the St. Lawrence.

  • @ErynRenee
    @ErynRenee 11 місяців тому +8

    I don't know what would be more terrifying: watching a massive ocean liner snap in half or turn over on its side while sinking in front of you.

    • @sarge6870
      @sarge6870 11 місяців тому +4

      All while floating in freezing water!

  • @louannelawson4916
    @louannelawson4916 11 місяців тому +1

    Thank you so much Mr Brady for the history & very sad ending of the Empress of Ireland, most passengers didn't have a chance to make it to the top of the ship or the time between sinking as the Titanic did. Such disaster with lowering the life boats. May everyone who lost their lives in the sinking RIP.

  • @floraaficianado5050
    @floraaficianado5050 13 годин тому

    Gentlemen, this portrayal was beyond extraordinary! Give yourselves much deserved high-fives for leaving this viewer feeling as though I was fully in that moment! Well done!

  • @AdmiralJT
    @AdmiralJT 11 місяців тому +8

    Most people sit on the toilet on tiktok longer than it took this ship to sink... cant even imagine the panic and chaos they felt that night...ey felt that night... and the luck, rather bad luck, of all the space on the river to be, they stopped directly in the course of the Storstad

    • @pabloescobarschanclas
      @pabloescobarschanclas 10 місяців тому

      man if you’re on the toilet for like 15 minutes, that must be some helluva diarrhea

    • @THESHINIGAMIPOSSE
      @THESHINIGAMIPOSSE 2 місяці тому

      @@pabloescobarschanclasor have adhd

  • @406ABarBs
    @406ABarBs 10 місяців тому +9

    When I was a child I read about the Empress of Ireland and was blown away that it sank in 14 minutes.

  • @tylerfrederick246
    @tylerfrederick246 11 місяців тому +1

    My God! The previous Real Time sinking of Empress of Ireland was no where near as horrible as this. Mike, excellent work!

  • @bangles7437
    @bangles7437 10 місяців тому +2

    Incredible animation! :) Been watching lots of these. The sound is really haunting too.

  • @anthro124
    @anthro124 11 місяців тому +3

    A marvelous animation honestly it felt like i was reading a old 90's era comic only i didnt have to turn the page every couple of pictures to advance the story just read the text and observe the event... I'd love to see more animations of this kind

  • @RanzilSoursugar
    @RanzilSoursugar 11 місяців тому +6

    Thank you so much for making such touching video. I can't imagine just how awful that must've been that night. Perhaps you could do a video over another ocean liner named "admiral nakhimov" (originally called "Berlin") that sank just outside the port of Novorossisk after colliding with a carrier. It took her just 7-8 minutes to sink. And all of that happened at year 1986. I would live to see your video on that tragedy aswell.

  • @zlevelx
    @zlevelx 11 місяців тому +1

    Amazing video the graphics,animation, sound, and text are done at perfection!

  • @kumqwtf
    @kumqwtf 11 місяців тому

    These videos are incredible. Thanks so much for doing them!