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  • 00:00

    On the 10th April, 1912, RMS Titanic set out on its maiden voyage from Southampton to New

  • 00:07

    York. On the night of 14th April, the ship struck an iceberg in the Atlantic ocean. Two

  • 00:19

    and a half hours later, the world’s newest and greatest ocean liner sank below the waves.

  • 00:26

    Over 1,500 people died in the freezing waters.

  • 00:31

    Since the day of the disaster, legend has overtaken fact and there are many questions

  • 00:36

    surrounding the sinking. Was the voyage doomed from the start? Could the accident have been

  • 00:41

    avoided? Who benefited financially? Was it even the Titanic that actually sank? Theories

  • 00:47

    have encircled this tragedy for over a century, and we’re about to set the record straight.

  • 00:53

    I’m Stu and this is Debunked, where we sort the truths from the myths and the facts from

  • 01:01

    the misconceptions!

  • 01:04

    It’s a classic case of dramatic irony. Movies and novels love to point out that the owners

  • 01:17

    of the Titanic boasted that it was “unsinkable”. But was this ever said?

  • 01:25

    Well, yes and no. White Star Line, the company that owned Titanic sold the ocean liner on

  • 01:31

    its luxury rather than its indestructibility. And luxury is what the passengers were interested

  • 01:37

    in. After all, if you spent the equivalent of $50,000 in today’s money on a top-class

  • 01:41

    Titanic ticket, you’d be more interested in the swimming pool, the walk-in wardrobes

  • 01:46

    and the 10-course dinners than the height of the bulkheads. Still, Titanic was the most

  • 01:51

    advanced ship ever built at the time, and a brochure published in 1910 does say...

  • 01:57

    “...AS FAR AS IT IS POSSIBLE TO DO SO, [THIS] WONDERFUL VESSEL [IS] DESIGNED TO BE UNSINKABLE.”

  • 02:03

    However, the moment that popularised the “unsinkable” boast didn’t happen until after the Titanic

  • 02:09

    hit the iceberg. In New York, a man called Philip Franklin was in charge of White Star

  • 02:14

    Line’s office on the night of April 15th, 1912. When the first news came through over

  • 02:20

    the radio that Titanic was in distress, he tried to reassure the passengers’ worried

  • 02:24

    relatives and reporters by telling them...

  • 02:26

    “THERE IS NO DANGER THAT TITANIC WILL SINK. THE BOAT IS UNSINKABLE, AND NOTHING BUT INCONVENIENCE

  • 02:32

    WILL BE SUFFERED BY THE PASSENGERS.”

  • 02:34

    After this, the words “Titanic” and “unsinkable” became inseparable - but only ironically.

  • 02:40

    Franklin would go on to grace the cover of TIME magazine in 1926 for his business success

  • 02:44

    as a shipping executive.

  • 02:45

    Legend has it that Catholic workers in Titanic’s shipyard refused to work because its hull

  • 02:49

    number, 390904, written backwards spells “NO POPE”.

  • 02:56

    For one thing, the number 390904 was never assigned to Titanic in any way.

  • 03:00

    On the other hand, it’s true that Catholic yard workers didn’t work on Titanic - because

  • 03:04

    they weren’t hired to. The company that built Titanic, Harland & Wolff, prided itself

  • 03:08

    on the fact that it only hired Protestants.

  • 03:11

    However, another story purportedly proves Titanic was doomed. As you know, whether you’re

  • 03:17

    going to sea or outer space, it’s tradition to christen a ship by breaking a bottle of

  • 03:21

    champagne over its bow. But when it came to christening the Titanic, the bottle refused

  • 03:27

    to break. Although it’s true that no champagne bottle ever smashed against Titanic, this

  • 03:32

    is because it’s a purely optional tradition that White Star Line didn’t follow. Instead,

  • 03:39

    they kept all 12,000 bottles of wine intact for the passengers to drink. Most of those

  • 03:44

    bottles are still with the shipwreck - and might be drinkable even today.

  • 03:49

    “BOTTLES KEPT AT THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA ARE BETTER KEPT THAN IN THE FINEST WINE CELLARS.”

  • 03:59

    Another myth says Titanic suffered the curse of an Egyptian mummy in its hold.

  • 04:02

    Unfortunately for fans of horror/disaster movie mashups, the cargo manifests prove there

  • 04:05

    was no mummy on board Titanic. This story almost certainly comes from The Washington

  • 04:10

    Post.

  • 04:11

    Less than a month after Titanic sank, the Post ran an article about WILLIAM T. STEAD,

  • 04:16

    a journalist who drowned when Titanic went down. Hebelieved strongly in the curse of

  • 04:22

    a mummy that was brought to the British Museum in 1889.

  • 04:25

    Except, it’s not really a mummy - it’s just the painted lid of a wooden coffin. In

  • 04:30

    fact, the whole curse was invented by Stead himself just for fun, and he told it to his

  • 04:34

    fellow passengers on board Titanic. When survivors recounted this, The Washington Post put the

  • 04:39

    disaster and the mummy together. Presto - curse concocted.

  • 04:44

    Weirdly, in 1886 William Stead wrote a short story about a steam ship that sinks and doesn’t

  • 04:50

    have enough lifeboats aboard, resulting in unnecessarily high casualties. Which brings

  • 04:55

    us onto the next common misconception about Titanic.

  • 05:02

    One of the most tragic facts about the Titanic is that there weren’t enough lifeboats for

  • 05:06

    all the people on board. This is often attributed to corporate greed and a callous disregard

  • 05:11

    for human life - at least, for humans who hadn’t bought a first class ticket.

  • 05:18

    The idea that class prejudice led to many unnecessary deaths is often backed up by the

  • 05:22

    claim that third class passengers were locked below decks while the ship sank. It’s absolutely

  • 05:30

    true that there were lockable gates on Titanic’s lower decks, because U.S. immigration control

  • 05:36

    required it - and these gates were locked at night. But as soon as the order to lower

  • 05:40

    the lifeboats was given, the gates were opened too. The bigger problem third class passengers

  • 05:45

    faced was the sheer distance between their quarters and the lifeboats on the top deck.

  • 05:49

    It’s not a huge surprise that 60% of first class passengers survived compared to just

  • 05:54

    25% of third class passengers, when poorer passengers had farther to go to reach the

  • 05:58

    limited spaces on the lifeboats.

  • 06:00

    But while it is true that Titanic didn’t have enough lifeboats to save everyone, the

  • 06:04

    shipbuilders actually provided more lifeboats than were required by law.

  • 06:09

    Regulations were based on the size of a ship and not on the number of people on board.

  • 06:13

    In 1912, the Board of Trade required British vessels that weighed over 10,000 tons to carry

  • 06:19

    16 lifeboats with capacity for just 50% of passengers and crew. Titanic had 20 lifeboats,

  • 06:26

    enough for 52% of the people on board. So in fact, Titanic exceeded requirements of

  • 06:32

    the time.

  • 06:33

    118 STICK FIGURES SPREAD OUT FROM THE TITANIC. 71 OF THEM GET UNEVENLY DISTRIBUTED ONTO LIFEBOATS.

  • 06:34

    THE MOST FULL LIFE BOAT HAS 8 IN (TEXT: 88% CAPACITY) AND THE LEAST FULL LIFEBOAT HAS

  • 06:35

    3 IN (TEXT: 33% CAPACITY) *THE REST CAN BE DISTRIBUTED BETWEEN 3 AND 8 PEOPLE PER LIFEBOAT.

  • 06:36

    THE REMAINING 47 STICK FIGURES SLOWLY FADE AWAY IN THE SEA.

  • 06:37

    Sadly the tragedy was exacerbated by the fact that the lifeboats were not used to their

  • 06:38

    full capacity. The boats could carry 1,176 people, but in the end only 706 people were

  • 06:39

    saved. Records show that the most loaded lifeboat was at 88% capacity. The least full lifeboat

  • 06:45

    held only a third of the people it was designed to carry.

  • 06:49

    This may partly be a result of the famous order to evacuate women and children first

  • 06:54

    - a command that really was given by Captain Edward Smith. This gave rise to a story that

  • 07:02

    one man snuck onto a lifeboat by disguising himself in women’s clothing.

  • 07:07

    VThis is false. For one thing, four different men were accused of being the cowardly cross-dresser.

  • 07:14

    The extensive inquiries into the sinking prove that all four of these men got on lifeboats

  • 07:18

    in perfectly permissible, pantalooned or bepanted fashion. In the case of William T. Sloper,

  • 07:23

    the accusation came from a reporter who was annoyed that he was refusing to talk to the

  • 07:28

    press. And J. Bruce Ismay fell afoul of the rumour because he was the chairman of White

  • 07:32

    Star Line, and many people felt he should have gone down with his ship.

  • 07:37

    Only one male survivor was encountered wearing an item of women's clothing - third-class

  • 07:42

    passenger Daniel Buckley. He was already in a lifeboat when a female passenger threw her

  • 07:47

    shawl over him to hide him from crewmembers who were forcing men out of their lifeboat.

  • 07:51

    He kept the shawl on when the lifeboat set out onto the cold waters of the Atlantic.

  • 07:57

    This is the only case of a man escaping Titanic thanks to women’s clothing. But his story

  • 08:02

    didn’t emerge until after newspapers had already made the claim about other men.

  • 08:08

    However, even the order to evacuate women and children first wasn’t strictly obeyed

  • 08:12

    by First Officer William McMaster Murdoch. He was happy to let men on the boats when

  • 08:17

    he couldn’t find any women and children to put on.

  • 08:20

    You may remember Murdoch from the James Cameron movie. He’s the Scottish officer who shoots

  • 08:26

    himself after shooting some male passengers trying to force their way onto a lifeboat.

  • 08:36

    This never happened. As I said, Murdoch did let men onto his lifeboats, and there are

  • 08:37

    no reported incidents of crewmembers killing passengers.

  • 08:42

    It’s a commonly held belief that Captain Smith and his crew were trying to set the

  • 08:48

    transAtlantic speed record and win the Blue Riband accolade, and as such ignored multiple

  • 08:54

    warnings about dangerous ice on the route.

  • 08:57

    It is true that Titanic was going at full speed when it hit the iceberg, but it wasn’t

  • 09:02

    because Captain Smith was trying to set records. Titanic was built for comfort, not speed - it

  • 09:07

    was about 5 knots [5.7 miles, 9 kilometres] slower than the fastest liners of the day.

  • 09:11

    Besides that, the route Smith followed was 200 miles longer than the fastest shipping

  • 09:16

    lane across the Atlantic. Ironically, he chose this route to avoid dangerous ice further

  • 09:22

    north…

  • 09:23

    In reality, the story that Smith was trying to set a speed record comes from American

  • 09:28

    newspapers. In particular, from the newspapers owned by WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST.

  • 09:33

    Hearst was angry with J. Bruce Ismay for not cooperating with the press. So, in addition

  • 09:37

    to printing the rumours about Ismay dressing as a woman to survive Titanic, Hearst made

  • 09:42

    up a story that Ismay ordered Captain Smith to make the crossing in record time, regardless

  • 09:48

    of passenger safety.

  • 09:49

    However, it is true that on the day it sank, Titanic received six warnings of dangerous

  • 09:56

    ice ahead. At least three of these were reported directly to Captain Smith. The official U.S.

  • 10:01

    Senate inquiry concluded that...

  • 10:04

    “NO [OFFICERS’] CONFERENCE WAS CALLED TO CONSIDER THESE WARNINGS; NO HEED WAS GIVEN

  • 10:09

    TO THEM.”

  • 10:10

    So the U.S. government clearly felt Captain Smith acted badly. But remember, Smith was

  • 10:15

    never able to speak in his defence, and the same Senate report didn’t trust witness

  • 10:20

    statements that the ship broke in two - which we now know is exactly what happened.

  • 10:26

    So why was Smith travelling at full speed through icy waters? Well, the answer may lie

  • 10:31

    in a fire in one of Titanic’s coal bunkers. Coal frequently caught fire on steamships

  • 10:37

    thanks to spontaneous combustion, and this happened on Titanic. In 2004, engineer ROBERT

  • 10:43

    ESSENHIGH FROM OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY pointed out that a common method of controlling fires

  • 10:46

    like these was to shovel the burning coal into the boiler. Obviously, this meant the

  • 10:49

    boiler was constantly generating steam, which means the ship would have to keep cruising

  • 10:52

    at high speed. Although, Essenhigh admitted he was just speculating.

  • 10:57

    Another myth surrounding Captain Smith is that he was drunk when Titanic hit the iceberg.

  • 11:02

    In truth, he was in his cabin, getting his normal night’s rest after attending a first-class

  • 11:05

    dinner party. So he probably wasn’t in the best frame of mind to steer the ship clear

  • 11:10

    of icebergs - but he didn’t have to. Instead, Smith had put First Officer Murdoch in charge,

  • 11:16

    and it was he who had to make the urgent decisions when the lookouts in the crow’s nest spotted

  • 11:20

    the iceberg.

  • 11:26

    Witnesses said that Murdoch ordered the engines to reverse and the helm to steer hard astarboard

  • 11:31

    - away from the iceberg. This was part of a standard maneuver to sail around obstacles

  • 11:37

    in the water. It might have worked except that the crew lookouts didn’t see the iceberg

  • 11:43

    until it was too late. This is partly because the binoculars in the crow’s nest were in

  • 11:46

    a locked case, and no-one had the key. In fact, SECOND OFFICER CHARLES LIGHTOLLER had

  • 11:52

    promised to buy new binoculars for the lookouts once the ship arrived in New York. Unlike

  • 11:57

    Captain Smith and First Officer Murdoch, Lightoller survived.

  • 12:01

    However, Charles Lightoller’s granddaughter, Louise Patten says Lightoller told her that

  • 12:06

    Murdoch’s order to turn hard a starboard was misunderstood by the helmsman. This is

  • 12:12

    because the helmsman was trained to steer modern steamships, which issued orders based

  • 12:18

    on the direction of the bow and rudder. In contrast, officers like Murdoch trained to

  • 12:22

    use the old-fashioned orders for sailing ships, which were based on the direction of the tiller

  • 12:27

    rudder, which is always opposite to the direction you want the bow to go.

  • 12:33

    So when Murdoch ordered the helmsman to turn hard a starboard - or right - he actually

  • 12:38

    wanted the helmsman to put the tiller as far right as possible to starboard and turn the

  • 12:46

    bow to the left. Instead, the helmsman turned the wheel right, as he had learned in training.

  • 12:53

    Interestingly Lightoller’s granddaughter revealed this to promote a book she wrote

  • 12:58

    in 2010; Lightoller himself never said a word of this to the authorities investigating the

  • 13:04

    tragedy. Supposedly he wanted to protect the reputation of the crew and the company, White

  • 13:09

    Star Line. But were these allegations to be true, then the Second Watch Officer who supervised

  • 13:15

    the Helmsman's actions would have also missed the error, meaning all 3 experienced crew

  • 13:21

    members would have got it wrong.

  • 13:25

    That’s right, there’s a theory about insurance fraud that meant the Titanic ship itself never

  • 13:33

    sank! Instead, some believe its sister ship, the RMS Olympic, was the boat that sank on

  • 13:39

    that fateful night.

  • 13:41

    Originally put forward by theorist Robin Gardiner in 1998, the theory goes like this. In 1911,

  • 13:48

    the Olympic collided with a Royal Navy warship. The accident damaged its hull and central

  • 13:54

    turbines. But the ship’s insurers refused to pay the $800,000 for repairs. Since the

  • 14:01

    Olympic was being fixed in the same dockyard that the Titanic was being built in, and since

  • 14:06

    Titanic followed the same design as Olympic, the owners decided to swap the ships, sink

  • 14:11

    the “Titanic” and collect the insurance to pay for repairs. The “Olympic” would

  • 14:16

    continue to sail the seas until it was retired in 1935 - but in reality, it was Titanic.

  • 14:24

    The tragic loss of life occurred because the plan to rescue everyone was completely botched.

  • 14:29

    According to Gardiner, the swap would have been relatively easy to achieve, because the

  • 14:34

    ship’s name was only put on removable objects like lifeboats and the ship’s bell.

  • 14:39

    Even though photographs clearly show that the ships’ names were put on their bows,

  • 14:44

    this theory seems quite plausible. Until you really think about it.

  • 14:48

    Maritime author Mark Chirnside pointed out that it cost $7.5 million to build Titanic,

  • 14:56

    but White Star Line insured it for just $5 million. This means the loss they made on

  • 15:02

    Titanic was greater than the cost of repairs on the Olympic. Furthermore, the shipwreck

  • 15:07

    has the number 401 stamped all over it - this was Titanic’s hull number, not Olympics.

  • 15:15

    Nevertheless, some people still believe it was a scam - and that the scam was the brainchild

  • 15:21

    of the owner of White Star Line, J. P. Morgan.

  • 15:25

    The theories involving J.P. Morgan don’t stop there either. He was one of the most

  • 15:29

    powerful bankers of the time, and if the financier didn’t sink Titanic as part of an insurance

  • 15:34

    fraud, he orchestrated it to kill his rivals who opposed the creation of the Federal Reserve.

  • 15:40

    But the titanic weight of evidence against this theory being true might explain why there’s

  • 15:45

    another version of it floating on the Internet, that says the Rothschilds planned it. But

  • 15:50

    there’s even less proof for this than the Morgan theory.

  • 15:54

    So I’m afraid for all the conspiracy enthusiasts out there, the story of Titanic is simply

  • 15:59

    a tragic example of a maritime disaster.

All

The example sentences of EVACUATE in videos (15 in total of 16)

this determiner may modal partly adverb be verb, base form a determiner result noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner famous adjective order noun, singular or mass to to evacuate verb, base form women noun, plural and coordinating conjunction children noun, plural first adjective
lucky adjective guests noun, plural were verb, past tense able adjective to to evacuate verb, base form before preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner smoke noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction fumes noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner corridors noun, plural became verb, past tense too adverb
the determiner long adjective or coordinating conjunction strong adjective earthquake noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present your possessive pronoun signal noun, singular or mass to to self noun, singular or mass evacuate noun, singular or mass all determiner tsunami noun, singular or mass evacuation noun, singular or mass zones noun, plural .
taking verb, gerund or present participle advantage noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner major adjective storm noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction had verb, past participle forced verb, past participle most adverb, superlative of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner inhabitants noun, plural to to evacuate verb, base form .
why wh-adverb for preposition or subordinating conjunction safety noun, singular or mass reasons noun, plural obviously adverb so adverb that preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun can modal evacuate verb, base form the determiner plane noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner language noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction your possessive pronoun
everyone proper noun, singular in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner area noun, singular or mass managed verb, past tense to to evacuate verb, base form quickly adverb and coordinating conjunction save verb, base form what wh-determiner animals noun, plural they personal pronoun could modal from preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner
it personal pronoun was verb, past tense clear adjective that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner situation noun, singular or mass was verb, past tense untenable adjective and coordinating conjunction the determiner decision noun, singular or mass was verb, past tense finally adverb made verb, past participle to to evacuate verb, base form .
with preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner revelation noun, singular or mass , the determiner united verb, past participle states proper noun, singular gave verb, past tense the determiner japanese proper noun, singular government noun, singular or mass two cardinal number weeks noun, plural to to evacuate verb, base form tokyo proper noun, singular ,
to to evacuate verb, base form and coordinating conjunction see verb, base form completely adverb the determiner patient noun, singular or mass can modal bite verb, base form into preposition or subordinating conjunction place noun, singular or mass to to assist verb, base form seating noun, singular or mass but coordinating conjunction i personal pronoun like verb, non-3rd person singular present to to
we personal pronoun see verb, non-3rd person singular present kilgore proper noun, singular through preposition or subordinating conjunction john proper noun, singular milius proper noun, singular ' possessive ending eyes noun, plural , as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner man noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction honor noun, singular or mass who wh-pronoun takes verb, 3rd person singular present great adjective care noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction helping verb, gerund or present participle evacuate noun, singular or mass
earrings noun, plural which wh-determiner could modal tear verb, base form a determiner safety noun, singular or mass slide noun, singular or mass if preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun were verb, past tense to to evacuate verb, base form the determiner plane noun, singular or mass coming verb, gerund or present participle
on preposition or subordinating conjunction july adverb 9 cardinal number , 2006 cardinal number , kings proper noun, singular island proper noun, singular rushed verb, past tense to to call verb, base form rescue noun, singular or mass teams noun, plural to to help verb, base form 27 cardinal number stuck verb, past participle riders noun, plural evacuate verb, non-3rd person singular present son proper noun, singular of preposition or subordinating conjunction beast proper noun, singular .
the determiner idea noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun could modal safely adverb and coordinating conjunction efficiently adverb evacuate noun, singular or mass hundreds noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction passengers noun, plural from preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner plummeting verb, gerund or present participle
if preposition or subordinating conjunction ever adverb there existential there were verb, past tense a determiner need noun, singular or mass to to evacuate verb, base form , support noun, singular or mass fellow noun, singular or mass passengers noun, plural who wh-pronoun might modal require verb, base form help noun, singular or mass .
to to evacuate verb, base form chips noun, plural quite adverb a determiner bit noun, singular or mass better adjective, comparative and coordinating conjunction it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present going verb, gerund or present participle to to make verb, base form sure adjective that preposition or subordinating conjunction we personal pronoun have verb, non-3rd person singular present a determiner nice adjective clean adjective cut noun, singular or mass .

Use "evacuate" in a sentence | "evacuate" example sentences

How to use "evacuate" in a sentence?

  • The belly laugh is the best way to evacuate anguish.
    -Jean Vanier-
  • I think that anyone who moves to establish a Palestinian state and evacuate territory gives territory away to radical Islamist attacks against Israel.
    -Benjamin Netanyahu-
  • I'm OMAC! Evacuate this section! I'm going to destroy it!
    -Jack Kirby-
  • See, that’s the difference,” Mauvin said. “I suffer a loss and people console me. Royce suffers a loss and whole towns evacuate.
    -Michael J. Sullivan-

Definition and meaning of EVACUATE

What does "evacuate mean?"

/iˈvakyəˌwāt/

verb
remove from dangerous place.

What are synonyms of "evacuate"?
Some common synonyms of "evacuate" are:
  • remove,
  • clear,
  • shift,
  • expel,
  • evict,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.