She's a very cool guide, and WOW, I'm really impressed with the bit at 16:54, that they actually have an exhibit that lets you feel what the water would have felt like on the night of 1912, that's incredible, never seen anything like that in any musuem, whoever built this museum was very dedicated :O What makes this museum so special is that they actually have real stuff that was on the actual Titanic, like keys to a box that held binoculars, even some of the lifejackets. When the blonde woman said, 'It's getting painful,' after feeling the water, that really made me feel for the passengers who lost their lives to hypothermia :( All those names on the passenger list, the ones that are underlined survived, the ones that aren't didn't, there's so many, the majority of them, that aren't underlined, that's tragic :/
I visited the one in pigeon forge Tennessee with my husband and it was a really somber feeling being able to feel how cold the water really was at the time.
The guide is precious. I would love to go on this tour. I cry anytime I research the Titanic. So many tragedies before and after it’s sinking, all equally heartbreaking, whether bigger or small. Either way, amazing that we have things like this to see and really experience pieces of the ship and it’s fate.
M E L R O S E I have ALWAYS been interested in the Titanic & I even remember playing a computer game about it when I was younger so that would have been about 20 years ago now. Woah...I am getting OLD! My oldest daughter is going to be 11 this year & she has started showing an interest in the Titanic. I had no idea they even had a museum but I have got to take her now that I know. I wonder if it is still open because of the pandemic.
Hats off to the guide she is so amazing I mean watching it online it feels so good looking and listening to her she has explained everything detail do well and so humbly I wish I get a change to go there someday
On behalf of John Wesley Woodward and the musicians aboard the Titanic, I'd like to thank this lady and the museum for a kind and thoughtful memorial to all those who are at rest there with her.
I did this tour a couple years ago, it was awesome. The tour guides were all very enthusiastic like her which made the experience even more enjoyable. I’m definitely going to do this again when I go back.
I actually been here physically and it was phenomenal. Sadly me and my parents went through to quickly to actually experience so this in depth video really does help me experience it fully
I went to the one in Orlando and it's a surreal experience. Especially at the end when you find out if your guy survived. And I still have my boarding pass.
The RMS Titanic had two grand staircases. The one in the museum is a recreation of the forward grand staircase. The second grand staircase would have been the aft grand staircase which was similar to the forward grand staircase , but slightly less ornate( ex: had a square cock vs a carved clock depicting honor and glory, the cherub at the base of the railing was smaller ...). The aft grand staircase was destroyed when the ship broke in two. The only artifacts recovered of Titanic's grand staircase was from its aft grand staircase.(a bronze cherub)
Great personal tour! Was good to make it more person to person. Have been a Titanic fan since 1982 (yes, 3 years before it was found). Tour guide was fantastic and great how she interacted with the visitors! (pretty cute too!). Keep it up and can't wait to visit someday!
I went to this place it was for me and my cousins bday it’s so much fun!!! I remember that my person was a little Irish girl she was 4 i don’t remember if she survived though
in 2018 I had planned to visit Branson. Missouri and the Titanic museum. Unfortunately unexpected expenses forced me to cancel my trip. Hopefully I can soon reschedule.
Seems like fun been wanting to go but now I don't have to because I just pretty much did everything through you guys and watching on my couch thanks for saving me that trip and the admission fee LOL supposedly it is haunted because of the artifacts they brought in... I'm sure there's a lot more to see but I'm good
Went on tour with my high school musical theater group during my junior year. We stopped here and wow. It really was cool to see all this but also horrifying
I went to that museum in Branson and I loved it I love Titanic because we had a vacation at Missouri so just for me my mom bought tickets but I died me and my dad died my mom and my brother survived my brother was on three class me and my mom and my dad first class
aChTuaLLy he isn't on any passenger list ever and most people believe him to never have been on the ship, sorry I just had to it bugged me no matter when the comment was made.
I stayed in the motel down the street but was limited to what to see so we drove by but didnt go in I wished I would have hopefully there will be a next time !
“They said it was a moonless night.” Not true. It was a waning or waxing crescent (can’t remember which) moon the night the Titanic sank. But due to the frigid temperature and light refraction it may as well have been a moonless night since any light given from the moon wasn’t visible. Edit: There were people on the Titanic giving up their seats on the lifeboats and giving other passengers their life jackets knowing FULL WELL that they were going to die and yet 108 years later we have people who won’t even wear face masks to protect others around them. 🙄😂
Wearing masks doesn't protect people. It's better for some to develop immunity. Children who are brought up in especially clean environments are often prone to infection and allergies.
@Jason Montague it's still very odd to see a tragedy like this constantly being romanticized despite the fact that over 1,000 people died. It's important to talk about history like this, no denying of it. But again, it's odd to see since this isn't done with any other tragedy. Frankly, I'd say the movie is mainly to blame on that front.
@@chipettesforever1 Get over your virtue signaling. It's a museum, a place of learning and they are making it fun. BUT leave it to people like you that always have to find an issue with every damn thing. Damn Karen. Stay home with your mask on.
Only thing is she made 1 very large mistake.....she said it went to starboard before hitting the berg, but it didnt...it went to port, thats why the starboard side is dented and torn open now
The order was given hard a starboard, which would actually turn the ship toward port. That is how the steering mechanisms worked in 1912. She is correct.
I really hope I get to go there one day. Luckily, I don't have to wait to see an artifact from the titanic. I own a piece of coal that was on the titanic.
Interesting artifacts. But it is tacky for docents of any museum to talk about how much money these things are worth, especially since they were taken from a mass graveyard.
So titanic hit the iceberg on the starboard side. And she said he turned Hard starboard. That would make no sense. If he turned hard starboard he would of hit the iceberg on the port side. Idk if she got that wrong.
It’s weird but I think in the Naval terminology “hard to starboard” means turn all the way left… I’m not 100% but I think it’s in relation to once you’ve turned left, your rudders are pointing right, or “starboard”. But hopeful someone with more knowledge could set it straight here
@@annag2609 Yeah, buts it’s been years. We went there because my papa (he died a year before we went) wanted to go there. It was a four hour drive to Branson but I, and my nana pulled through. My mum didn’t mind the drive but we pulled through to get there
yeah the binoculars wouldnt have made any difference,why? lookouts didnt get binoculars back then, it wasnt part of their duties or equipment. Why? because binoculars allow yes to see a larger distance but narrow the vision, also, the bridge officers didnt care, or didnt want lookouts to identiy anything, that was not their job, their job was to spot somthing, whatever it was, and sound the bell 3 times to let the bridge know there was something right in front of the ship. Having binoculars would have narrowed their field of view, also binoculars tend to make people want to identify whay they are looking, that waste time. So thats why the lookouts didnt had binoculars back then, nor on Titanic, or most other ships. Also another detail, it was a moonless night not to mention there was a distorting optical ilussion invisible at night that creates the ilusion that the horizon is higher than it really is, hidding objects, so.... having binoculars would have been pretty useless.
~~~~~Lord's~~~~ adalah '"'sebutan dalam bahasa Inggris'"' bagi orang atau ilah yang memiliki wewenang, kendali, atau kuasa atas pihak lain, selaku majikan, pemimpin, atau penguasa. Di Britania Raya, sebutan ini digunakan sebagai gelar khusus bagi bangsawan-bangsawan pewaris gelar, dan sebagai sapaan takzim bagi kaum bangsawan.