Weird Stories from The Titanic You May Not Have Heard Of

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Published 2023-07-24
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Everyone knows the story of the sinking of the Titanic, but less people know about her many famous and interesting passengers. Come learn with me about some strange and remarkable tales from the night the unsinkable ship... sank.

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Sources

Fire Did Not Sink the Titanic by Matthew Anderson www.shipwreckworld.com/articles/fire-did-not-sink-…

A Coal Fire May Have Helped Sink the ‘Titanic’ by Danny Lewis for Smithsonian www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/coal-fire-may-ha…

Charles John Joughin– Encyclopedia Titanica www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/cha…

British Wreck Commissioner's Inquiry: Day 6– Testimony of Charles Joughin from Titanic Inquiry Project www.titanicinquiry.org/BOTInq/BOTInq06Joughin01.ph…

The story of Charles Joughin: Chief Baker, Titanic From The National Archives, UK www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/titanic/stories/charle…

“FOR THE CHILDREN: Two Baby Waifs Rescued From the Sunken Titanic” from The Daily Banner, Thursday 9th May 1912 www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/for-children.html

“No Light on the Mystery Hiding the Identity of Two Waifs of the Sea” by Nixola Greeley-Smith for Evening World, Monday 22nd April 1912 www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/no-light-on-the-myst…

Dorothy Winifred Gibson from Encyclopedia Titanica www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/dor…

Lucy Noël Martha, Countess of Rothes from Encyclopedia Titanica www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/titanic-survivor/cou…

Titanic, A Very Peculiar History By Jim Pipe

Black Man on the Titanic: The Story of Joseph Laroche By Serge Bile

What Happened To The Only Black Family On The TITANIC by Zondra Hughes for Ebony, June, 2000

All Comments (21)
  • As far as the French orphans, the older of the two boys actually died in 2001. He lived the majority of his life in Montpelier, France and became a professor of philosophy. He was one of two survivors who got to watch the 1997 James Cameron film.
  • @l.g.956
    One fact about Dorothy Gibson’s Titanic film that has always stuck with me is the fact that she wore the same outfit that she wore DURING THE SINKING. Apparently she was extremely distraught while filming and was experiencing a lot of trauma.
  • @whiimskers
    My favorite story from the Titanic is of Arthur West. He got his wife and two daughters, one daughter being an infant on to a lifeboat. Then he doubled back saying he had to get something. His last act before perishing was getting a warm thermos of milk for his daughter. His wife kept the thermos on the mantle for the remainder of their lives.
  • @nanamiharuka3269
    The Titanic wreckage is an underwater grave and should be treated and respected as such and not treated as simply a tourist attraction. Caitlin Doughty of Ask a Mortician here on YouTube did a great video on underwater graves a couple *years ago.
  • @beckyginger3432
    Can I just! All the content creators respecting the strike, mentioning it and not crossing the picket, its just really nice to see
  • @user-qw3ob3tf9u
    Great video, but as a former field medic I feel obliged to correct the story about the drunk guy. Alcohol expands blood vessels, making you feel warmer for a bit, but drastically quickening the effects of hypothermia. If he survived, what kept him warm was likely a mix of body fat, muscle, and the body heat from 2 hours of continuous paddling. Drinking alcohol 100% hurts your chances of surviving in extreme cold
  • @oomflem
    One fascinating thing about the Titanic is the overlooked stories of the many, many Arab passengers on board. Apparently everyone at the time just assumed anyone remotely ethnic-looking was Italian, so the accounts of surviving second and third class passengers of the disaster described virtually everyone they encountered from the Third Class as generic “Italians,” when in fact there were only eleven Italian passengers in third class, vs somewhere between 140 and 165 from the Arab world, who got clocked as Italian steerage passengers in the survivor accounts. Accounts that describe specific lifeboats as “full of Italians” can be matched with the accounts of Arabic-language survivors in those same boats (at the time, the Ottoman Empire had not yet been broken up into the modern countries of the Middle East, so it is easiest to classify these passengers by language). The Dream and the Nightmare: The Story of the Syrians who Boarded the Titanic by Leila Salloum Elias, which draws on passenger lists from Arabic newspapers and oral accounts from Lebanese villages, created a revised account of the number of passengers from the Ottoman Empire left out of English records. If these revised totals are correct, Arab passengers- predominantly Arab Christians from villages in what is now Lebanon- may have been the single largest group by nationality in third class, and the third or fourth largest on board after Brits, Americans and the Irish. I am NOT saying there was a big intentional conspiracy here to whitewash the Titanic- but it sort of happened accidentally. Most of the survivors whose stories were passed down to us were obviously from the first and second class, so their impressions of who made up the third class have been transmitted down into pop culture. The Titanic was a far more global and international disaster than we often think. I highly recommend Elias' book to anyone with an interest in Titanic scholarship, for a very different international view of the disaster. The survivor accounts are absolutely fascinating.
  • @terev.
    Seems like early Hollywood had a habit of making films about catastrophic events and hiring survivors to play in them. Armenian Genocide survivor Aurora Mardigian was cast to play herself in the film based on her memories of the genocide, I can only imagine how traumatizing that was. For her, it was a chance to tell the world the truth, but her mental health suffered hugely
  • @ssoomee
    As a Haitian woman, I'm really grateful that you mentioned that Joseph Laroche was a Haitian man. I knew of his story for several years now, but many people like to only talk about him being black, not about his nationality. 🇭🇹 I love your channel and all the work you put into your videos, I'm always learning something new! ❤
  • @lemonanddrip1461
    My ancestor was on a titanic, he left London to go move to be with his parents. He was a second class passenger and was only on the titanic because the st.Louis was too late in booking. He was on life boat number 9! This is a letter he wrote of his experience “I jumped up, put on light clothing and went up on deck. The steam was blowing with a deafening noise. I did not see the iceberg myself. I talked to the officers and the Captain ordered us to get the ladies. I ran down, got more clothing and went to Miss Wright. She had got up and was out on the deck. There were no more women to go and I asked the officer if there was any objection to my going in that boat. He said ‘No, get in’ and I was the last one in. I think it was the third from the last to go on that side. It was No. 9 and we had to get away fast. Besides other boats going down there was danger from the sinking boat. I cannot describe the sinking in any other way than to say that it was like the noise from a football field, not loud like a shout of victory, but hushed as though there was canvas over it... There were two loud noises as she went down. It was like as if all the cargo went from one side of the ship to the other all at once. It may have been bursting of the boilers or the vessel breaking itself in two. I don’t know. It seemed to me that we all should go down. As she sank I saw her looming up more clearly just as on a lantern slide when they are bringing a picture into focus.”
  • @SConArt87
    When I was in the 6th grade, right when Titanic mania hit. My computer teacher brought in a special guest; her grandmother, who was a child on the Titanic. It was mind boggling hearing her first hand experiences of that night, mostly of being cold and scared.
  • @edisonlima4647
    I got all the more respect for the tragedy of the Titanic after learning about the sinking of the S.S. Arctic. The Arctic was a ship that suffered a huge collision, in 1853, and as it began to sink, the captain, the stewardesses and some of the tripulation fought in vain to have the female passengers and children into the life boats. Every time, the male passengers and some men in the tripulation would overun the women and children, throw them into the sea and destroy the boats fighting to get abord. A young sailor tried in vain to sign for help, and when the captain asked him to give up and try to save himself, answered: "Tell them that when the time came, at least one man remained at his post". He died there. Meanwhile, the stewardesses kept the water pumps that the crew had abandoned manually working for as far as they could to give the others a chance, their hands cut and bruised bleeding profusely. They all died there, too. During the last hours, the captain and the remaining passengers couldn't do anything to try and save anyone, because they spent their entire time fighting the MANY men who turned into sexually assaulting the women aboard during the sinking, many of which has been left by fathers and husbands who had taken the boats. The captain lost his entire family in those last monents. When the few survivors (no woman or children) were finally rescued, it was a HUGE scandal and those who had survived by overtaking the boats, as soon as they learned there had been surviving witnesses, booked away to Canada. There is a reason "women and children first" being (mostly) respected during the sinking of the Titanic is such a big deal.
  • @Me-iq4se
    I find learning about the people on the Titanic so interesting, even if it is horribly depressing. I think it's important to learn about tragedies like these.
  • The idea that alcohol consumption warms the body is a myth; consuming alcohol can cause the skin to flush with blood and create the illusion of warmth, but this draws blood out of deeper tissue within the body somewhat and so could actually make you colder. Charles' intoxication aided him moreso that it dulled his senses and protected him from shock, allowing him to maintain movement as he treaded water which staved off him freezing to death. This may also explain why he felt warmer in the water; he was no longer treading water once in the boat and so was not warmed by his physical activity.
  • @emott922
    For anyone wondering, the countess of Rothes was in the movie. She was introduced early on, but she’s also the one that came out of her room and said “excuse me, why have the engines stopped? I felt a shudder” and the steward responds “I shouldn’t worry madam, we’ve likely thrown a propeller blade. That’s the shudder you felt. May I bring you anything?”
  • I remember another crazy story about the only Japanese passenger on the Titanic. After a steward woke him up, Masabumi Hosono was blocked from the deck cause the person thought he was a 3rd class passenger. He ended up making it to the deck and into a lifeboat, ultimately surviving. Sad thing is, people made up stories about him (he was a stowaway on the lifeboat, he dressed as a woman to get on) causing him to be publicly condemned in the US. He ended up losing his job for a bit because of the stowaway accusation (the disguise accusation wasn’t reported in Japan), but he got his job back and worked there until he died in 1939 EDITED to fix the autocorrect “public ally” to “publicly”. Apologies for any confusion
  • @PieOfEpicness
    The parents doing what they could to save their children hit me the hardest. I'm not crying, you're crying. I don't even want to imagine how hard it was for the parents that knew they couldn't do anything.
  • @pathemeleski
    I expected you to include Masabumi Hosono, the only Japanese survivor of the Titanic. He had been prepared to die on board when a call went out from one lifeboat that there was room. He got in and survived, only to be vilified in his home country for nor dying honorably in the sinking. The rest of his life, he was called a coward and was pretty miserable.
  • @orangetherat
    Another random story of the Titanic includes 24 year old, Ann Elizabeth Isham who borded the ship with her great dane and when the ship started sinking she denied getting off because she didn't want to leave her dog