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Could You Survive a Victorian Ocean Cruise on SS Great Britain? 

History Hit
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When she set out on her first voyage to New York in 1845, SS Great Britain was the largest passenger ship ever built, and she would go on to transport over 30,000 people during her 41-year-working life.
For most of that period, the ship carried emigrants between Liverpool and Melbourne on the notoriously testing Australia run - a non-stop sea journey that lasted anywhere between two to three months. Great Britain made this journey 32 times between 1852 and 1875, battling through all conditions with a combination of steam and sail power.
But who were the passengers that embarked on such a gruelling voyage? What were their reasons for leaving home? And what was it really like to be a passenger on Brunel’s revolutionary ocean liner?
Using original diaries from the passengers who sailed aboard SS Great Britain, History Hit presenters Luke Tomes (@histluketomes) and Louee Dessent (@loueedj) show you how a voyage across the world could look very different, depending on who you were and how much money you had…
Whilst Louee enjoys a first class experience aboard SS Great Britain, enjoying luxury accommodation and grandeur in the dining saloon, down below deck, Luke steps into the shoes of a passenger in the lowest class on the Victorian ocean liner, steerage.
How did the experience of a first class and steerage passenger compare? Watch this video to find out.
Voiceovers: Tom Brown, Lucy Davidson, Laura McMillen, Alister Tomes, Tristan Hughes, Kyle Cairns
Visit www.ssgreatbritain.org/ to explore the ship's story further - and be sure to check out SS Great Britain's on Instagram (@ssgreatbritain) and TikTok (@ssgreatbritain)
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00:00 Introduction
02:27 First Class Cabin
05:34 Third Class Accomodation
08:32 On Board Socialising
12:16 On Deck Entertainment
16:01 Victorian Medicine And Illness
20:25 First Class Catering
27:51 Steerage Rations
33:48 Drinking And Gambling In Steerage Class
38:00 Arrival In Australia

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15 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 1,2 тыс.   
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit Год назад
So, if you had the chance, would you go back in time to the Victorian period to experience a voyage on SS Great Britain? 🤔
@EgXP
@EgXP Год назад
As fascinating as you've made this video, I'm sorry to say I wouldn't 😅. Still, a brilliant watch, all the same!
@carag2567
@carag2567 Год назад
Not a sea voyage. I've spent my entire life living on an island and I've been on enough boats. But I would certainly travel back to the late Victorian period just to wear the clothes and to see how people were marveling at innovation and industry.
@jeremycox2983
@jeremycox2983 Год назад
Yes from England to New York
@johannebaker9730
@johannebaker9730 Год назад
Absolutely
@brandeni1785
@brandeni1785 Год назад
I would pass. I get seasick easily.
@YesYouAreAbsolutelyCorrect
@YesYouAreAbsolutelyCorrect Год назад
In 100 years that'll be "Could You Survive a Spirit Airlines flight?"
@sophbookers9580
@sophbookers9580 Год назад
😂😂😂
@kellyharper367
@kellyharper367 3 месяца назад
😂🎉
@JoaoPessoa86
@JoaoPessoa86 3 месяца назад
short answer: no
@spooksbukowski63
@spooksbukowski63 3 месяца назад
We have Ryan air were I live 😂
@johnnytower6169
@johnnytower6169 3 месяца назад
I remember all the big guys in the navy suffered, not a bad place for a short lad
@podunkcitizen2562
@podunkcitizen2562 Год назад
Ben Franklin made eight crossings over the Atlantic between America and Europe. They took anywhere from 40 to 90 days each. That meant he likely spent over one year of his life at sea. He wondered why it was always quicker to go to Europe than to return to America. He figured out the affects of the Gulf Stream and mapped them.
@podunkcitizen2562
@podunkcitizen2562 Год назад
@Pleb Three different sources I saw said it took at least six weeks. By the 1830s a ship made the crossing in a recod 21 days.
@podunkcitizen2562
@podunkcitizen2562 Год назад
@Pleb With changes in technology, the crossing might have been quicker than in 1750 to Franklin's last sailing in 1785.
@avalondreaming1433
@avalondreaming1433 Год назад
Fascinating. I didn't know that.
@frequentlycynical642
@frequentlycynical642 Год назад
It wasn't due to the Gulf Stream as much as the prevailing Westerlies.
@jayg1438
@jayg1438 Год назад
​@BigAdriatic Ben Franklin was not traveling to Europe in the Victorian period...
@loriscook5231
@loriscook5231 Год назад
I’m a kiwi, my relatives from the 1850’s to 1913 all travelled from Scotland or England to NZ. They would have all travelled steerage, so great to see what life at sea was like. Two teenage brothers worked for their passage in 1900. They looked after horses for the army going to fight in the Boar war in Sth Africa. After the horses were delivered they had to dismantle the stables and scrub the hold ready to hold goods on the return trip. None ever went back, it was truely a new start for them all, they all did well in their new lives.
@phillipecook3227
@phillipecook3227 Год назад
Fascinating. We can only imagine what it was like for these people - and 000s of others - who probably had never traveled far from their birthplace to undertake a 4 month sea voyage and then arrive in a strange new land never to return home. Have you identified individual relatives who arrived into Melbourne? Is here anything preserved in Melbourne from that period like Ellis Island in New York?
@Mej111
@Mej111 Год назад
My relatives went to nz around that time too! They didn’t leave until my parents and I moved to the US
@MikeWood
@MikeWood Год назад
Did any of your relatives come over in the Euterpe? It is now a museum ship in San Diego called the Star of India. My Great Great Grandfather was the captain for about 10 years in the 1870s. Putting in to places like Dunedin. Made many trips in the other direction than the SS Great Britain, going around the tip of South America.
@setharp
@setharp Год назад
At least you have the history of your family. My family came to the US- we think- in the 1740's. We have no clue how.
@jaymac7203
@jaymac7203 Год назад
Its such an interesting video 🧐 lol
@vectravi2008
@vectravi2008 Год назад
It's amazing to see how this ship has been restored. I remember when it was in the Falkland Islands. It was very nearly past saving. Well done to all those who saved this ship for future generations
@evalevy2909
@evalevy2909 Год назад
How did they get it back to England? On another ship?
@vectravi2008
@vectravi2008 Год назад
@@evalevy2909 yes....brought back on a large ocean going barge towed by tugboats
@francesaggarwal22
@francesaggarwal22 Год назад
What a wonderful renovation. I saw it when it first came to the UK , and it was a rusty hulk.Such a beautiful ship.
@theotherohlourdespadua1131
@theotherohlourdespadua1131 9 месяцев назад
Wait, this is the original? She fared better than her bigger younger sister the SS Great Eastern...
@aaronhughes2951
@aaronhughes2951 Год назад
I’m 6’5 and did a tour of the boat years ago, there is no way I would have survived3 months , even in first class 😂
@nikolibolokov4521
@nikolibolokov4521 Год назад
I'm also 6ft 5 .Aaron don't do what I did.. dont put a pull up bar on your hallway doorway. 🤦🏻‍♂️
@jimajams7080
@jimajams7080 Год назад
It's a ship!
@dallas820
@dallas820 Год назад
@@jimajams7080 clever observation...
@raraszek
@raraszek Год назад
You realise European men were shorter in that century than today's average. You're very tall by anyone's standards.
@jayleigh4642
@jayleigh4642 Год назад
I was under the impression due to poor diet people didn’t get to be 6ft + in those days? Of course I couldn’t be completely wrong in which case it would have been dreadful being so tall in such a confined space 😵‍💫
@Kubulek17
@Kubulek17 Год назад
imagine the difference between this and the Olympic class liners of the 1910s, must've been a breathtaking change
@Black-Rat
@Black-Rat Год назад
Before the outbreaks of WW1, maybe I'd be tempted to consider, possibly yet but unlikely, during WW1, depends on which one of the two remaining sister ships, but beyond that, forget it... I'm not in a hurry to blow up and die in a mine field...
@CleoPhoenixRT
@CleoPhoenixRT Год назад
Yes! I was thinking the same thing. They were eating beef stew, and staying in rooms on par with first class with their own sink! I didn't quite understand it before but it makes more sense now.
@Kubulek17
@Kubulek17 Год назад
@@CleoPhoenixRT swimming pools, restaurants and cafes, a piano on board, running water and toilets. I always read how most didn't have running water in their homes yet had a hot tap in their cabins on the titanic
@Adolphification
@Adolphification Год назад
even the third class of olympic class was way more luxurious than the first class of SS great britain, LOL
@callummclachlan4771
@callummclachlan4771 Год назад
And then you compare them to nowadays. Even though Ocean Liners are basically extinct now. Long distance ferries are probably the closest (Denmark to Iceland for example). Even the cheapest tickets would have blown the minds of 1st class people back then.
@mikefly562
@mikefly562 Год назад
We really have it easy today...London to Sydney in a 787-9 with food, movies, internet, and comfort in less than 1 day of travel. it's so awesome that this ship is so beautifully preserved!
@cplcabs
@cplcabs Год назад
I think I would prefer to sail on this ship than risk going on a Boeing 787...or Boeing anything really
@AverageAlien
@AverageAlien Год назад
@@cplcabs utterly deluded
@cplcabs
@cplcabs Год назад
@@AverageAlien oh really? So did you know that the FAA has told Boeing to halt deliveries of the 787 due to issues with the fuselage? Apparently not. How many 787s does this affect that have already been delivered?
@AverageAlien
@AverageAlien Год назад
@@cplcabs Not a single 787 has ever crashed or caused a single fatality, it is one of the safest aircraft in history
@AverageAlien
@AverageAlien Год назад
@@robertcottam8824 Mate you ok
@fionablaikie6422
@fionablaikie6422 Год назад
This was wonderful! My great grandfather travelled to Australia from Scotland on the SS Great Britain aged 19. Have visited the ship in Bristol several times through its restoration. This means so much. Have shared it with the family. Can't thank you enough!
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit Год назад
Really glad you enjoyed!
@toranziancentralnetwork
@toranziancentralnetwork Год назад
@@HistoryHit The real question is: Did his Great-Grandfather enjoy it?
@RegulareoldNorseBoy
@RegulareoldNorseBoy Год назад
@@toranziancentralnetwork His....? Fiona Blaikie is a girls name
@toranziancentralnetwork
@toranziancentralnetwork Год назад
@@RegulareoldNorseBoy o h, oops
@johnjoseph3667
@johnjoseph3667 Год назад
The number of adverts is overbearing. Stopped watching and disliked.
@dinahjackson8146
@dinahjackson8146 Год назад
I really ENJOYED this ! 😊 As a young girl, I traveled 4 times by ship to England from USA... THANK GOD, it was in the fifties and GREAT FUN !!! 😀 My mom and I went on the 2 QUEENS... ELIZABETH and MARY... BEAUTIFUL LADIES they were ! 😘😘😘😘😘
@tileux
@tileux Год назад
I emigrated to australia with my parents as a kid in 1970. Onboard the smallest ship of the line, the Ellinis. Pretty wild: they used to wet the table cloths in the dining room so the plates didnt slide off. One month trip to Fremantle, western australia. I loved it. Still love ships.
@andydunn5673
@andydunn5673 Год назад
My bast mate and his Family Peter Taylor did so at the same time Nice addition to this piece
@conclavecabal.h0rriphic
@conclavecabal.h0rriphic Год назад
That’s a cool story, I love little peeks into people’s lives like that. Thank you.
@tileux
@tileux Год назад
@@conclavecabal.h0rriphic we stopped off in capetown on the way to Australia. The passengers - all british - fled the ship for solid land and non-ship food and ended up at a fish and chip shop. What they didnt know is that, being apartheid south africe, it was a "blacks only" fish and chip shop. All the african people were at a soccer game so the owner of the shop sold as much fish and chips to the hungry passengers as he could. In the middle of all that the soccer game finished and all the african people turned up at "their" "blacks only"fish and chip shop. A riot nearly happened, with the bewildered brits in the middle of it. My dad always used to tell that story with glee but Ive never been able to find the moral in it. I think my dad enjoyed that story because it was a pretty good reflection of the confusion of the human race.
@nygelmiller5293
@nygelmiller5293 Месяц назад
To Tileux? WET THE TABLECLOTHS? What a story! I'm sure it worked, though!
@EmmaCruises
@EmmaCruises Год назад
I loved this, it's so funny to hear about the guests complaining about the drinks prices being too high and that they couldn't bring their own drinks, that's a very common complaint now too on cruises. Nothing changes really! Well, happy to say the accommodation and food has...
@CleoPhoenixRT
@CleoPhoenixRT Год назад
I can see why third class on the Titanic still felt so luxurious! Also, I couldnt imagine getting tipsy on a ship that size, it's hard enough not to stumble on leveled ground. Lol I enjoyed every minute of this, I wish it could be a series on various eras of ships.
@pandamilkshake
@pandamilkshake 11 месяцев назад
Talking about size, what about the size of those beds? They are so extremely thin.
@chgr4674
@chgr4674 8 месяцев назад
Titanic was the first ship where 3rd class had sinks in the cabins
@CleoPhoenixRT
@CleoPhoenixRT 8 месяцев назад
@@chgr4674 lavish!
@TS-1267
@TS-1267 6 месяцев назад
... OH AYE?
@DanasDiary.
@DanasDiary. Год назад
I just love the way people used to write. With so much symbolism, metaphors and care given to every word ☺️
@Anglo_Saxon1
@Anglo_Saxon1 4 месяца назад
Yes your absolutely right.We have a beautiful language.Unfortunately it no longer gets used either correctly,or to its full potential.
@shikkithefirst5393
@shikkithefirst5393 3 месяца назад
You'd be surprised how much care is given to texting/informal written chatting. The subtle nuances required to convey tone and implied meaning that's usually a given in spoken language is unparalleled. So while text speech sounds way less fancy compared to victorian letters it is no less nuanced and filled with symbolisms. Just think emojis and smileys. They don't convey their literal meaning, but symbolise implied tones and references. Fun fact: it's a whole field of study and if tou wanna learn more i highly recommend "because internet" by gretchen mccoulloch. If you just wanna feel superior to others because of they way you write, then by all means stay being a prescriptivist.
@TheTamaleWhisperer
@TheTamaleWhisperer 3 месяца назад
Because they had to spend months stuck on a ship with little real entertainment.
@DanasDiary.
@DanasDiary. 3 месяца назад
​@@shikkithefirst5393 I agree, I think it would be very interesting to learn more about more recent written language, especially seeing that I use it every single day. Thank you for adding a recommendation. But by no means am I wanting to insinuate that I feel superior to others, especially since I use written language in form of texting every day myself. Just by complimenting one thing doesn't mean I am putting another thing down. I simply thought the language sounded beautiful and didn't comment on todays written language in my original comment at all. But I do get why you thought I was implying that todays language is less beautiful, that just isn't the case, it is simply different and because I myself never really hear old written English I wanted to comment on how beautiful it sounded, that's all - there was no hidden meaning or agenda. This was an appreciative comment so it is a bit of a shame that it is taken the wrong way.
@DanasDiary.
@DanasDiary. 3 месяца назад
@@TheTamaleWhisperer Haha that is probably true.
@gabsofine
@gabsofine Год назад
I loved this video and all the details and real accounts. It's amazing to think of someone who has hardly ever left their own town suddenly sailing across the world
@carag2567
@carag2567 Год назад
The real accounts from the diaries of actual passengers really sold it. This was an exceptionally well done video. And then having those accounts read by voice actors?! Oh my stars! 🤩
@barbarak2836
@barbarak2836 Год назад
I have more respect than ever for my ancestors who made the journey from Germany, Poland, and Belgium to the United States. These were all working people, so I am sure they had to travel in steerage.
@alyssajenaway3781
@alyssajenaway3781 Год назад
My ancestors made this same sort of trip to Australia and kept a log of the journey. They lost 3 of their 4 children on the trip from illness and his wife almost died too. It's a very sad read and amazing to see how the experience would have looked for them in this video. He commented a lot about the views from the deck as well as the weather. An interesting point he discussed was how each family in steerage was allowed to bring their box up to the deck only once on the trip to obtain fresh clothes and take anything out, and clothes washing was only done once each up on the deck as well. Other interesting points to note was that he commented that they all had jobs, and also discusses equipping their cabin with hooks to hang utensils and cups on the wall.
@doctorpanigrahi9975
@doctorpanigrahi9975 Год назад
Thank the gods , you made it.
@nuanced202
@nuanced202 8 месяцев назад
Been on this ship.. the thing that blew me away the most is the way they recreated the smells of each section. One manquinne was sea sick in the cabin. Head in a bucket. The smell of vomit was very strong and accurate. I hated it, but the fascination of realism made me keep going back for more. The kitchens smelt of freshly baked bread. I even got to climb into one of the very small cabin beds. Bristol, I shall be coming back 😅
@Iskandar64
@Iskandar64 Год назад
This was brilliant, I visited the SS Great Britain maybe 15 years ago and did the audio tour. I still think it was the best historical immersive experiences I have ever had. And this presentation was excellent too.
@Pikachuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu
@Pikachuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu 4 месяца назад
This is how RU-vid should be used for! Taking us around the world and showing how things were, while the viewers discover the unknowns. Brilliant documentary 👏
@MeherScholar
@MeherScholar Год назад
You all did such a wonderful job, and the hosts have such a friendly spirit, I loved listening to them. This was truly enjoyable to watch.
@jaymac7203
@jaymac7203 Год назад
Yes it was. 😊 Extremely interesting 🤔 It never occurred to me the shenanigans they'd get up to over a couple of months all judging each other etc lol
@toranziancentralnetwork
@toranziancentralnetwork Год назад
@@jaymac7203 Yeah usually you just think about the living conditions, not stuff like the boredom and the socialising stuff.
@demon36900
@demon36900 Год назад
.io
@LoganLavery
@LoganLavery Год назад
That was luxury compared to what my great grandmother, her parents and siblings endured the year before in steerage on the ‘London’. The voyage to Wellington lasted 4 months and several passengers and a crew member died. The ship’s surgeon kept a regular journal of the voyage and a book called ‘No Simple Passage’ has been written about the voyage since.
@putinsgaytwin4272
@putinsgaytwin4272 8 месяцев назад
Yeah, during the famine, the ships were called "coffin ships" since most ppl on the ships died. Yet a ticket to get on the ship would be worth far more than those people's houses.
@janehollander1934
@janehollander1934 Год назад
26:25 loved how the tour guides, the ship's interpreters, introduced a whole set of new issues/problems/ideas that I (and probably more viewers) had never considered of ever thought about before. Truly very enlightening👌🏻- loved watching this video (the time just flew by✌🏻).
@brontewcat
@brontewcat Год назад
This really shows how luxurious the Titanic was. The steerage passengers on the Titanic had better accommodation than the first class on this ship. It really makes me appreciate how hard it was for many of my ancestors to get here. Although a lot of my ancestors had much more cramped and difficult passages including being weighed down by chains. I had two ancestors on the Second Fleet, which was almost but not quite as bad as for the slaves being shipped across the Atlantic on the Middle Passage.
@tacodias
@tacodias Год назад
To be fair the Titanic was 67 years younger that the SS GB… that’s a substantial gap during that age. If you look at the Boeing 707 and look at planes 67 years younger, you’d be looking at balloons…
@joshuathomas8529
@joshuathomas8529 Год назад
@@tacodias Not quite you would be looking at the Sop with pup or open cockpit biplane bomber. Sound about the right comparison. Still the SS Great Britten would have been amazing compared to the sail ships that my ancestors came across from England to the United States on.
@tacodias
@tacodias Год назад
@@joshuathomas8529 the Boeing 707 had its first flight in 1954. 1954-67=1890. The Wright Brothers flew for the first time in 1903…
@brontewcat
@brontewcat Год назад
@@tacodias I understand that - but that is the point about how ships developed and what was considered luxurious became standard within decades. Actually I think the cabins on the Titanic were way beyond steerage on most ships at the time of the Titanic, as in steerage a lot of passengers did not have cabins.
@joshuathomas8529
@joshuathomas8529 Год назад
@@tacodias If your comparing the progress of avation to the progess of ships their are leaps and bounds different if you want to get technical. The frist time a man left the earth for the skies was in 1783. Baloons made very small progress untill after the internal combustion engine. If ships made the same level of progress that plain did we would be traveling the stars buy now. In a space of less than 50 years we went from the Wright flyer that did not cover the lenght of a 747 in its first flight to the B-36 that could fly from the U.S to France and back with out stopping.
@jonathanbailey1810
@jonathanbailey1810 Год назад
I went 'aboard' in 2020 as it was two friends' 60th birthdays (same day!). As it was under Covid semi-restrictions only small numbers allowed on at a time. I took the opportunity to hop into a bunk. I'm 5'4" and 9 stone. I was really squashed, couldn't roll over, and had to be levered out by my friends!
@carag2567
@carag2567 Год назад
20:50 Natalie's costume is so SPOT ON ACCURATE for the 1840s I am distracted in the best way possible 😍 Not even paying attention to what they're saying, something about fruit? I'd forgotten the year of the SS Great Britain's maiden voyage by this point so when I saw her enter in this outfit, understanding that it could be no earlier than 1837, I guessed 1840ish. It was 1841. This is the kind of commitment to history that takes my breath away! When others are so passionate about telling the story authentically right down to the tiniest of details. Absolutely marvelous! 👏👏👏
@Ukraineaissance2014
@Ukraineaissance2014 Год назад
From what I recall all the stuff on there is based on the 1850s
@carag2567
@carag2567 Год назад
@@Ukraineaissance2014 Literally 1841.
@envitech02
@envitech02 Год назад
Natalie looked exactly like Jodie Foster in Anna and the King.
@fouracrefamily9801
@fouracrefamily9801 2 месяца назад
Absolutely!
@krystaldispatchbetttymcgin7702
The reenactors are so charming. What a lovely tribute to a time and its people!
@johannebaker9730
@johannebaker9730 Год назад
This Great ship was lying in Stanley harbour Falklands for many years before being restored. Great video thank you. I’m in the Falklands at the moment and the wee museum here would love this. 😊
@tebec3624
@tebec3624 Год назад
Watching this on Christmas Eve and feeling soooo grateful that I did not have to endure that journey nor the “food”. I felt dizzy just watching this. Definitely made me thank God for my blessings!
@jillwanlin9558
@jillwanlin9558 Год назад
That was great fun! Great insight into what a voyage would have been like for both upper and lower class. I can understand why people left their country to seek out a better life. I’m sure it sounded like a great adventure. But I have heard other accounts at the shock of the conditions lower class people had to endure. And for months on end it must have been hell. But we also know that many did succeed in making a better life for themselves. Love the two young men in this series. Thanks again! 🙏🇨🇦
@howler6490
@howler6490 Год назад
The "swing-back " bench was a feature of the trams in Glasgow when I was a wee boy. When a tram reached terminus, the driver simply went to the other end and started off again.Folk could choose how they wanted to travel..
@robertcottam8824
@robertcottam8824 Год назад
Blackpool trams were the same.
@kjw1856
@kjw1856 Год назад
Awesome historical reenactment! I particularly appreciated the period costumes, and prepared food items and menu/rations. The competing perspectives at end of voyage exposes very different, personal “experiences” between steerage and 1st class - shown literally side by side - was effective and quite sad.
@elizabethhannah4704
@elizabethhannah4704 Год назад
Thank You for a very immersive, accurate and interesting "voyage". We really have nothing to compare to the experiences and lives these people endured. They really were tough.
@j-c4709
@j-c4709 9 месяцев назад
I'd have happily endured the upper class
@frydemwingz
@frydemwingz Год назад
That first class ticket would totally be worth it just for the peace and quiet. Trust me, that's the best thing you can get on a ship after many months at sea. I was on a modern destroyer and the 3rd rate areas actually didnt look too bad for space, but you still dont even have access to a place to chill and calmly shave and wash up in the morning. that makes all the difference, even above good food. I dont care what anyone says. I was happy with white rice and canned fruit all day long, I just wanted a place to read and relax.
@ImNotaRussianBot
@ImNotaRussianBot Год назад
I agree. I would gladly pay for two tickets to have the whole room to myself. But those thin walls and all those people just feet away would bother me. I'd definitely bring a book for each anticipated day of travel along with some games and art supplies.
@paulalwayslearning8573
@paulalwayslearning8573 Год назад
That was enthralling and the two that worked on board were great hosts. Loved this, thank you.
@Finallybianca
@Finallybianca Год назад
Knowing that Some relatives came to New York on this ship in steerage it really makes me appreciate their journey.
@RavenGent
@RavenGent Год назад
This is excellently done and using diaries and passengers helps give a more insight into what the journey aboard the SS Great Britain was all about. Plus the dressing up enhances it even more, as a undergraduate of History I also practice some Victorian dress up to show people what people wore on daily basis and for special occasions.
@clairek.3634
@clairek.3634 Год назад
Thank you for sharing this. I'd always heard how much more luxurious the Titanic was than ships of its period, but I didn't have much to compare it to.
@StephBer1
@StephBer1 Год назад
My ancestors traveled from Ireland to Australia in 1848, refugees from the Potato Famine, not actual farmers, but the famine affected everyone. I'm not sure which ship they were on but they were from different counties in Ireland so would not normally have met. The girl was 18 and traveled with a brother and 2 sisters, while the man was 25 and traveled with a mate. They fell in love in steerage during the voyage, and married a year after reaching Australia, when he could "provide for a wife". Seeing the cramped quarters in this video, I'm amazed that anyone anyone in steerage could fall in love! The thing I always thought surprising about them were their names - Nicholas and Alexandra, like the ill-fated Russian Tsar and Tsarina. Great video.
@heru-deshet359
@heru-deshet359 Год назад
Excellent presentation. Rarely do I get riveted watching from beginning to end without speeding through.
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit Год назад
Thank you!
@elihernandez330
@elihernandez330 Год назад
Absolute hell. Imagine living even as a rich person back then.
@sham421
@sham421 Год назад
Did 20 year old "doctors" of the Victorian Era sound like 50 year old physicians today?
@cgmason7568
@cgmason7568 Год назад
Smoking
@madamedemonsieur
@madamedemonsieur 4 месяца назад
That was my first thought - "Couldn't they have found a twenty-something to read that bit?" 😄
@LuE87
@LuE87 Год назад
Loving the videos. Been to the SS Great Britain many times, it needs vids like this to ensure it is kept going!
@geraldstiling3735
@geraldstiling3735 7 месяцев назад
The restoration from corroded hulk to a wonderful ship is nothing short of miraculous🚢
@mrs.g.9816
@mrs.g.9816 Год назад
Fascinating! The ship has been beautifully restored, and I enjoyed the "tour", getting a sense of time travel. I also loved that you all donned period dress. It was really raw that the rich guy excluded the poor guy from the cricket game. Class discrimination "just isn't cricket"!
@andrewrobinson5837
@andrewrobinson5837 Год назад
The nifty invention at 22.20 of the swing over back for the chairs is still a feature in transport today. Public trains in Sydney NSW use them even today.
@jamesfrost7465
@jamesfrost7465 Год назад
Amazing this ship and the HMS Victory is still in existence. Dry docking them is the reason they are still with us. I'm a old school sailor and now a modelshipwright for a museum 28 years now. Some of the cures and food sailors had to endure is a test of sanity and what a human body can take. I'm currently building a new display with about 20 Ocean Liners. At this moment I am building a model of the Great Western, the worlds first true Ocean Liner built for passenger service. 1838!!! She made 64 crossings of the Atlantic!!! The Oriental Star is next. Wonderful job on this video. Terriffic wardrobe. Thank you. If I may add, in my opinion as a life long sailor, 63 years, professional model ship builder 28 years, (some of the largest model ships in the world) and nautical museum curator 28 years. The finest ship design I've ever seen is, the Golden Hind. She is perfect and you mates have a replica of her!!! That little rascal sailed around the World in 1577-78. Then Captain Drake was knighted Sir Francis Drake. Theres one to do a video about. Imagine spending two years aboard that!
@Andronichus
@Andronichus Год назад
Really interesting to hear your experience and current occupation. Kicking myself a little as I used to work in Southwark near the river and cut across the Millenium bridge by foot a few times into the City. Walking down the river Southbank mostly is possible except for a couple of places where it forces you inland; I guess if I'd looked hard it likely was the Hinde dock. Pity, as the trip back to London is so expensive now.
@iceprincess7674
@iceprincess7674 11 месяцев назад
Thanks! This is one of the most fascinating, indepth, and engaging shows I've come across on RU-vid, keep up the great work!
@hypercomms2001
@hypercomms2001 Год назад
I live in Melbourne. I remember seeing the SS Great Britain in Bristol. Amazing ship, but a tough voyage by our standards.
@Starphot
@Starphot Год назад
My ancestors from my father's and mother's side came to America from the late 1600's to mid 1700's as far these records go. Could you imagine the types of ships and lading was before the 19th century? We did have a restricted zone aboard my aircraft carrier called "Officer's Country" where enlisted and the lower commissioned officers were not allowed unless they had business there. Of course there were also the restricted security areas attributed to a military vessel as well. Small US naval vessels didn't have "Officers Country" as some that are on first name basis depending on the CO. I found that out while on shore patrol, returning a drunken sailor to his little tin can one night.
@jakecavendish3470
@jakecavendish3470 Год назад
Looks a hell of a lot healthier and safer than Ryan Air
@jimisi7424
@jimisi7424 Год назад
Fair play. That was both extremely well made and fascinating. Nice work!
@markwilliford5319
@markwilliford5319 Год назад
We owe a great deal of gratitude to past generations - especially the Victorians, for giving us the life we enjoy today - especially the toilet.
@queensapphire7717
@queensapphire7717 Год назад
I’m Irish, Steerage is our middle name. My dad in law (German) came over in boat in the early 50s (Austria to NY), in steerage accommodations, and he told me he was constantly surrounded by vomit and stink on any given day, during the entire trip, due to so many people getting seasick and the god awful food.
@Alejojojo6
@Alejojojo6 Год назад
You are american no irish lol. Having irish ancestry doesnt make you irish. Also in 1950 people didnt travelled like they did in this video. This was in 1850... over 100 years before he indeed travelled.
@cplcabs
@cplcabs Год назад
@@diaryofahaphazardhousewife Its strange that you yanks have this identity crisis going on. You are proud to be from the US, but not so proud so have to add a nationality of Irish, German, Scottish, English etc. What is that about? I knew one yank whose great great grandparents or something were Irish when they went to the America's, so he was about as Irish as the Great wall of China. However, he thought he was as Irish as a Leprechaun. He went to Ireland once, bought a flat cap and wore it proudly all the whilst supporting the terrorists the IRA but didn't really know why. I took the micky out of him mercilessly because as well as thinking he was Irish, he was as dense as a piece of lead but then he was an ex Military Policeman.
@robertcottam8824
@robertcottam8824 Год назад
​​@@cplcabs To be honest, old boy, although I'm English, I'd never admit it in your presence, particularly abroad where folk might think that we have something in common. My family and I usually switch to French in the unwelcome presence of braying English folk from the lower middle classes. Don't know much about union flag-waving lumpenproletariat. Don't care to, either. Be nice to Americans. They're usually nicer than your sort.
@cplcabs
@cplcabs Год назад
@@robertcottam8824 well, I am betting you are a self hating Brit who welcomes the destruction of British culture and probably take to the knee. Your choice, thankfully people like you are in the minority. Having dealt with a lot of people from the US, I am nice to them and yes many of them are nice, but that doesn't detract from the comment that you responded to and indeed your comment to me is very much off topic, so pretty much pointless.
@EggandChris
@EggandChris 10 месяцев назад
​@@robertcottam8824absolute cobblers
@London-Lad
@London-Lad Год назад
The blond dudes a heart throb.
@renesagahon4477
@renesagahon4477 Год назад
They both are honey 😛!🥂
@Luluxxxx
@Luluxxxx Год назад
Fascinating documentary. Thanks for the upload. I visited SS Great Britain many times as a child but didn’t really appreciate the whole story of the ship until this programme. Fascinating detail into what would have gone on on such a long voyage. And the sunny weather in Bristol when it was filmed reminds me what a wonderful city it is ! (Used to live there when at university)
@joshuamoxham-smith2149
@joshuamoxham-smith2149 Год назад
Amazing content! A million times more exciting than History Channel
@shinnam
@shinnam Год назад
But no ancient aliens.... 🤗
@nobilesnovushomo58
@nobilesnovushomo58 Год назад
Imagine never going on a boat before and finding out about seasickness on a trip that’s going to last you six months.
@jj-if6it
@jj-if6it Год назад
I'd love some kind of luxurious Titanic-like boat journey one day, but for now I feel grateful I can fly from Australia to the UK in around 24 hours! Back when my parents were my age, it usually took many months on a boat.
@pterrypower5140
@pterrypower5140 Год назад
I really enjoyed this! To see and hear the accounts of folks on the journey made it come to life. Well done! Thank you
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit Год назад
Thanks so much!
@qap7
@qap7 Год назад
The more and more I learn about living conditions in the really not so distant past I am very grateful of the living standards that we have today.
@Studio23Media
@Studio23Media Год назад
Those benches blew my mind 🤯
@Kira-Namida
@Kira-Namida Год назад
"Bristol Docks, at high tide, gazing out across the ocean wide. When up pops a bloke in a stovepipe hat, says 'I'll do you a steamship to sail over that'" 🎩🎶
@lessieh1050
@lessieh1050 Год назад
Thank you for bringing this experience to life. To survive such a voyage in steerage, folks had to be hearty, determined, and darn lucky😳.
@justanotherdamnerd4434
@justanotherdamnerd4434 Год назад
I was able to board the SS Great Britain on a school trip- really amazing to see it all being used for this!
@jonahsebalius5012
@jonahsebalius5012 Год назад
I imagine one day far in the future someone will make videos about the horrors of long distance travel in small cars lol
@dafyddthomas7299
@dafyddthomas7299 Год назад
Excellent documentary - Brunel was certainly a stand out Genius along with Thomas Telford, Robert Stevenson et all
@scronx
@scronx Год назад
Love this and the entire cast! Bravo!!
@jj-if6it
@jj-if6it Год назад
I just love these kind of videos, please keep them coming!
@ArceneStorms
@ArceneStorms Год назад
I have been to the SS Great Britain twice, and it has been a really cool experience. I adored the passenger cards that we could get, along with the Being Brunel museum and the immersive experience that was touring the ship. I wouldn't be able to survive on a voyage, though.
@gromit8023
@gromit8023 Год назад
Having celebrated our wedding on the ss greaylt britoan. Murder mysteries amd sea shanties nights I can say the ship and staff are amazing ! :D
@robertcorradi8573
@robertcorradi8573 Год назад
Really enjoyed your presentation..... Really entertaining. Very informative . Good chemistry between you two . Excellent & thank you . Subscribed
@andythompson2009
@andythompson2009 Год назад
Great documentary! Thanks!
@tradward
@tradward Год назад
$5000 for an 80 day cruise across the globe in first class standard of the day is a pretty good deal in today's economy if you ask me.
@tristinhoriquelme7303
@tristinhoriquelme7303 9 месяцев назад
My ancestor did It. They left Zurich, walk on the bare foot to Amsterdam and then Sail to Brazil. (2000 left 400 passei away) Arrival in Brazil they walk UP Hill 50 Miles to Friburgo. No portuguese até ALL Just German speaker. That was hard.
@mikeseier4449
@mikeseier4449 Год назад
Just found this channel. If your other videos are half as good as this one; I’ve hit the jackpot!.. subscribed.
@mizstories9646
@mizstories9646 Год назад
I'd like to see those state rooms. The ones that were a little better than the normal first class rooms. I want to know if they were bigger and/or nicer. It could be that they are exactly the same and were only considered better because of where they were. Also, I'd like to see the captains quarters.
@toranziancentralnetwork
@toranziancentralnetwork Год назад
The captain's quarters is actually in their other video about *working* on the ship, it might actually be smaller than the Saloon Class cabins. It only had a bed really.
@kariannecrysler640
@kariannecrysler640 Год назад
I love how tall you boy’s are compared to the shipways & beds. Guess shorter was standard then lol
@renesagahon4477
@renesagahon4477 Год назад
Two healthy looking lads that’s for sure
@endokrin7897
@endokrin7897 Год назад
Great video! Very hands-on and visual (instead of reciting boring facts and figures) I go crazy if I'm couped up indoors for a day during bad weather; I shudder at the thought of spending 3 months onboard! Even two weeks (voyage to New York) would be torture. Everything was so different back then. 🙄🤨 I suppose they were used to it and had a different mindset. But it seems like torture.
@DJL78
@DJL78 Год назад
More of these two! ❤❤❤
@michaelbrown9891
@michaelbrown9891 Год назад
First class presentation and tour of this amazing historical ship. 😊
@HKTimbo
@HKTimbo Год назад
The Hong Kong star ferry has those reversible benches. Kind of caught on….😄. Very interesting to see how we traveled mid 18 hundreds 👏🏻👏🏻
@HaurakiVet
@HaurakiVet Год назад
Sheet luxury. People of my ancestors generation sailed (not steamed) three months to get to NZ. No bunks, just partitioned areas along each side of the ship about the size of a double (not queen or king) bed. These were one per family. Down the centre of the ship was a long table with bench seating for eating and any task needing a table. Somehow two of my forebears met and felling love under such conditions and married upon arrival in NZ (forget all that garbage about captains having the power to marry, just another Hollywood myth). A long way for a new life with virtually no hope of ever seeing relatives in UK ever again. Tough people.
@thefreestylefrEaK
@thefreestylefrEaK Месяц назад
Excellent episode. Entertaining and educational. Thank you.
@renesagahon4477
@renesagahon4477 Год назад
Very well done. I enjoyed watching this
@womanofsubstance8735
@womanofsubstance8735 Год назад
It is no wonder that so many of those who survived steerage did so with a lovely case of scurvy unless they could smuggle some fruit and veggies aboard. Of course, most people in those days would not have known the importance of fruit and vegetables. The 2-plus weeks from England to the US would not have been bad, but the trip to Australia might have been a little rough. My mom's people came in steerage from Ireland, and my dad's people came, some by ship around South America, and some by ship from Germany then by wagon train to the West coast of the US. It would have been rough by today's standards, in any case.
@andream9470
@andream9470 Год назад
They mention the lime juice provided when talking about 3rd class rations. How well it really worked....anyone's guess.
@Psychol-Snooper
@Psychol-Snooper Год назад
Scurvy had been understood for almost a hundred years before this ship's keel laying.
@AroundTheWorldWithEase
@AroundTheWorldWithEase Год назад
Being a woman as I am, uh, no way. I wouldn’t even go back to the middle of the 20th century, let alone the 19th.
@SodaKatana
@SodaKatana Год назад
Awesome work on this video guys...thank you :-)
@laurienichols1209
@laurienichols1209 5 месяцев назад
Loved this series learned so much.
@neskire
@neskire Год назад
This really puts things in perspective. I would rather fly from the UK to Australia (which I did some years ago) in less than 24 hours than sail on this ship for 2 months. And yet I have friends and relatives who say that flying from the US to New Zealand (where I now live) would take too long and would be a great hardship!🙄
@neogeo1670
@neogeo1670 Год назад
remember people where alot shorter than us today... that why the bed where smaller and much else... its all about how much better we eat: For British men, the average height at age 21 rose from 167.05cm (5ft 5in) in 1871-75 to 177.37cm (5ft 10in) in 1971-75 10 years later thats a significant number all due to better nutrition
@robertknowles2699
@robertknowles2699 Год назад
Yep, it's interesting to compare forbearers's origin and opportunity to eat, whether rural or not-so-rural.
@joshprado4353
@joshprado4353 Год назад
Oh I absolutely love documentaries like this.
@michaelkubis7573
@michaelkubis7573 Год назад
Stumbled across this video by accident. Very glad that I did. I definitely want to learn much more about this ship.
@j.j.1064
@j.j.1064 Год назад
Thank you so much for this wonderful presentation. I noticed that nobody had sloppy handwriting. It always disciplined and legible. You trying to get into a bunk would have been an aberation. The average height of a male in 1850 was 5'4" and women were smaller. I went to Australia I'm 1964 on SS Arcadia in second class as a migrant. Although the cabin was pretty basic the service was 5 star and etiquette was observed to a minute degree. In fact the service you would expect on a modern day cruise ship would be inferior to what I experienced as a second class passenger. ie having fresh fruit and tea along with a ship's paper brought to you by a dedicated cabin steward and after returning from a restaurant menu breakfast including kippers with a dedicated waiter for the entire trip. White table cloths and cloth servitetes. 4 meals a day bf/ lunch/ afternoon tea and scones/ formal 4 course dinner requiring tie and jacket. EVERY DAY. As a migrant the Australian gov paid for it -£10 +children under 16 free.
@billkallas1762
@billkallas1762 Год назад
How often were the coal fired boilers used for propulsion? Was it possible to re-coal on the way to Australia?.....Sailing to NYC was probably done under power, most of the way.
@outlawbadge1
@outlawbadge1 Год назад
Love the old sailing ships and seeing what it could have been like staying onboard. Wow 9:30
@cloverg7821
@cloverg7821 Год назад
What a fascinating video, thank you for uploading! :)
@sephardiris
@sephardiris Год назад
I'm fairly certain I couldn't survive Victorian anything, mate.
@TheRiverPirate13
@TheRiverPirate13 Год назад
I wonder what passengers of this fine vessel would think of the cruise ships of today. It looks to me that either you entertained yourself or you ended up bored out of your mind! I do wonder though if they ever "fished" off the vessel to offer fresh seafood to the 1st class passengers?
@2DogsVlogs
@2DogsVlogs Год назад
Wow, what they have done too that ship is amazing. Last time I was on the ship it was used for storage. You walked down into the hull and all you saw was a big open space with big holes through the steel. Only floor was the steel deck. Never knew it originally had multiple levels.
@tylerhaines8662
@tylerhaines8662 Год назад
Great Video. The mid 19th century often feels overlooked, when so much progressed during that time. I learned a lot.
@robertknowles2699
@robertknowles2699 Год назад
David R. MacGregor 's 'Fast Sailing Ships' emphasis is on Sail rather than social comparison if comfort. I admire builders of time you mention , but Plimsoll Line displacement mark gave an improved chance of survival for Merchant ship carrying Passenger , animals, and crew serving them.
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