
Titanic Before Disaster
Titanic Before Disaster
The story of Titanic is perhaps most well-known for its ending – the image of the tragic loss of the liner, taking with it nearly 1500 souls into the freezing depths of the North Atlantic, has been seared into our collective memory for over 100 years. Tragedy is what most people think of when they hear the name “Titanic.” But this is, of…
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this is a prime example of how you can do everything in your power to make sure everything is the way it should be and working properly, yet… things can still happen even to the most experienced people. all it takes is one small thing to happen for all that work to just be taken away in an instant…. the world is truely a cruel place
I have always been fascinated w/what happened to the Titanic. I've read books & watched endless documentaries.
at around 17:00….. is this script AI-generated?
Yes that true it was a very different ship,it used to be olympic. 😮
I bet those guys shovelling coal never for a second thought that they would be watched by half a million people from all over the world over a hundred years later.
THAT WAS A BRILIANTLY SCRIPTED INTERESTING NEW LOOK AT A LARGLY OVER LOOKED PART OF THE TITANIC STORY AND MIKE BRADY IS BY FAR ONE OF THE BEST PRESENTER STORY TELLERS OUT THERE EITHER AMATEUR OR PROFESIONAL WELL DONE
I really wish that ship never sank on that voyage
Much enjoyed, thank you. Love your descriptions.
BEST VIDEOS AND BEST TRUE INFORMATION BY FAR MR. BRADY!!!
Oh my, it's my, it's your, it's OUR friend Mike Brady‼️
So…the photo on the gangway…where is the golden line between black and white?
I’m going on a transatlantic cruise & it got me thinking these people who traveled on her & were looking forward to getting to nyc & just saw titanic like we do a new plane excited to use her and believed with the hype that she was practically unsinkable so the idea it would go down those poor people the fear and pain they must of gone through
I recently took a train to Southampton! Got to visit the Titanic Museum, see where the Titanic docked and the monument to the Titanic Engineers! Such a worthwhile trip!
Love your graphics and narration. Thanks, Mike.
Ugh, I almost wish she had failed her sea trials
The movie came out when I was in high school, a friend stood up at the end and yelled ‘it sank??’
I’ve heard so much about the wreck but not all this info of before it sank, perfection!
Too many ads
What a brilliant video, Mike! It’s so easy to forget that Titanic had a life, albeit far too brief, before April14th 1912. She’s captured my heart in a whole new way, thank you for that.
The shop's freezers were loaded with 75,000 lb of meat. That's more than thirty pounds of meat for each person on board – roughly six pounds a day!
Loved this! As someone more fascinated by the social/economic side of ocean liners, it can feel impossible to find out indepth details about Titanic pre-iceberg, despite this being a time filled with newspapers, gossip, journals, and diaries. Would love to see a video showcasing the events and gossip that occurred on the Titanic's voyage before the iceberg. But I know from my own experience in reading and researching that those details are often hard to find in the midst of the more exciting events that happened that night.
Mike, another outstanding video from you, sir! Your collaboration with Titanic Honor and Glory with your expertise and storytelling makes for a quick 40 minutes. I find myself restarting the video just to experience the story again! Bravo!
I absolutely ADORE these Titanic lessons!!!!Thank you!
what app are u using to create these graphica Mike?😊
Brilliant.
I grew up in Wallsend and I used to sit on the old railway wall above Swan Hunters and watch the ships get launched into the Tyne, the one I remember the most was HMS Illustrious
The final saying to this…Stop worrying about what others think of you….So what if they would’ve made it to New York late
Why was it so imperative to make it to New York “on time”!?! Ridiculous business
I passed Life. I was John Jacob Astor. I keep having a lot of past life regression from it as I remember, almost everything on the ship and of all the tours and everything else I’ve ever been on and watching these videos it’s very reminiscent of an old time and I was alive, of course didn’t come down just because there was association with this man on the Titanic as well as Ringwood where are used to live in New Jersey and when we used to frequent that place, I was told he had once traveled there more than once and it was basically a second home for him. I don’t know if anyone familiar with Ringwood Manor, but there’s a lot of association with that as well. The obsession of Titanic is dominated my life, even as a kid, and only now come to fruition of knowing this knowledge.
Farewell our love's rest in eternal peace.
Thank you hard working gentlemen for bringing Titanic to life and what happened to her isn't your fault.
What happened to the 1st Captain of the Titanic after the, Titanic sank?
39:38
Only disappointment with this is you didn't feature the stop at Cherbourg.
Thinking about the lifeboats' role as "ferries" between the stricken ship and the rescue ship (so that there was "no need" for a full lifeboat complement) I think the trouble with that is by the time the "ferries" made one trip and came back the stricken ship might've been in a far more precarious situation if not already beneath the water. So with a full lifeboat complement and a properly trained crew it would've all been more effective and faster everyone would've been evacuated at the same time. The normally stormy North Atlantic is no place for such "ferries" especially if the crew had to row (the boats weren't motorized) the crew would've for sure been exhausted from rowing in choppy waters. That night the sea was most unusually calm and it seems largely forgotten that this is really the exception on the North Atlantic. (And the very fact that it was so calm makes it very easy for people now to think of lifeboats as "ferries")
Also the word was spread at the time that the North Atlantic run was so busy "there were always other ships nearby if anything happens." The Titanic was really no exception as the Californian was only 10mi away or most probably less than that (donkey boilerman Ernest Gill and carpenter James McGregor saw the Titanic's distress rockets very plainly as did the officers), but then (a) she was the one and only ship really close and (b) Cpt Lord just wouldn't bother helping. And then apart from the Californian all the other ships contacted by Phillips and Bride were much further away. After all, the Carpathia was no fewer than 58mi away so she needed 3.5hrs to make it to the scene and she didn't get there until 1h40min after the Titanic slid beneath the water.
In closing what's the use of a nearby ship if the captain doesn't go help?
Geez! I never thought of that. I lived in Weymouth, I've never thought of that fact titanic would have sailed past all that time ago. That's a crazy thought
🌊🌊🛳Perhaps the most beautiful ocean liner designs titanic video ever🛳🌊🌊
Excellent video, thank you.
As usual, well done!
Excellent production…. very informative.
Great story and the graphics are superb 👍
Very informative. Never realized so much went into just getting the ship ready.