Apparently, John Jacob Astor (the richest man of that time and who died on the Titanic) released the dogs. After placing his newly wedded wife in a lifeboat, she told him to find their dog (which was in the kennels) so that they could have a fighting chance at survival.
@09feb1992 "John Jacob Astor (the richest man of that time and who died on the Titanic) released the dogs. After placing his newly wedded wife in a lifeboat, she told him to find their dog (which was in the kennels) so that they could have a fighting chance at survival. " Some fools like to sneer at the wealthy, but the majority of first class passenger men, honorably stood by and did not force their way into a boat. Most of them died......honorably.
@beatleslove99 It shows te elevators in the movie. They are just really early and old fashioned elevators, where someone had to control it. No buttons or self closing door
How did dogs survive ? Are you trying to tell me people took their dogs onto the boat before another human being ? :S Now, I am an animal lover myself.. But COME ON. If you need to choose between an animal... or a real person, who would probably have a family out there somewhere.. I think I would go with the human.
@tic07096903 Two of the dogs survived - they went in the lifeboats with their owners. A survivor recalled seeing Gamon de Pyecombe (the French Bulldog) swimming in the water after the ship had gone down. A few days after the disaster, passengers on another liner sailed close to the scene and saw many bodies in the water. One was of a woman with her arms tightly around a large St. Bernard-type dog - they had died clinging to each other and were frozen together. Heartbreaking.
@beatleslove99 Elevators were invented before the 20th century (i.e. before 1900). Titanic was one of the 1st ships to install an elevator, but it was only used for 1st class passengers.
That was a different family from who we see running in the clip above. That little girl's name was Cora and remember they were trapped behind gates. The family above found their way to the Grand Staircase.
Charles John Joughin was the man throwing chairs over the railing. He consumed a great amount of alcohol, but was not drunk. He left the boat next to jack and rose in the movie (man with mustache) he found his way to collapsible #B and stayed in the water for around 2 1/2 hours. He later swam to another life boat and was saved. He died in December 1958 I believe.
Yes, a man (I believe he was an alcoholic Chef, to be honest) was sprinting about the top deck, tossing the benches (Which doubled as life-preservers) overboard. I don't remember his name, or if he survived or not.
@CaseyMcLaughalot That's what I think I would have done, but nobody really knows until their put in that situation. People were still oblivious that the ship would sink.
Yeah He did survive and admitted that he was drunk the entire time or was very much under the influence of alcohol they found him and a few other men on top of a upside turned boat when the other ship came to rescue the survivors.
I always felt sorry for the dogs that were seen in the first half of the film, i always wondered if they survived and what happened to them while the boat was sinking, i guess they all died.
ok, i know this may sound wrong - and i'm upset for all that lost their or their love ones lives. but the thought of those dogs dying - it makes me wanna cry!!
Yes, it is true that some of the families did fare better off than others, but the fact that so many did not still resonates clearly in the minds of historians of the disaster. Of the 115 children traveling aboard the ship at the time, only 60 were saved. Of the 55 who died that night, all but one of them were from Third Class.
To add some relief to those who see the image cast above in relation to the actual disaster, the family with the little girl survived. The only family travelling in Third Class aboard Titanic which fits that description was the Kink Family. Swiss immigrants Anton and Luise Kink and their four-year-old daughter Gretchen were moving from Zurich to Wisconsin, and all three of them escaped aboard Lifeboat No. 2, which I believe was launched sometime around 1:50-1:55 AM that night
@jaguar4u2 yep. I've seen the program this was made for and the scenes are re-enacted in the order which according to several historians happened that night.
@xprinceofspainx Yes. It is important to remember the truth to what happened that night. There were 88 children travelling in Third Class, and in all only 34 survived.
I believe we even see this girl, sister and mother in the boat later during "Not without you!" scene. The dad says, "It's goodbye for a little while.."
However, you state that the Dad survived too, so perhaps I'm wrong, or Cameron erroneously killed him off.
I have that same french bulldog
redphantom85617 1 month ago
Apparently, John Jacob Astor (the richest man of that time and who died on the Titanic) released the dogs. After placing his newly wedded wife in a lifeboat, she told him to find their dog (which was in the kennels) so that they could have a fighting chance at survival.
09feb1992 1 month ago
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@09feb1992 "John Jacob Astor (the richest man of that time and who died on the Titanic) released the dogs. After placing his newly wedded wife in a lifeboat, she told him to find their dog (which was in the kennels) so that they could have a fighting chance at survival. " Some fools like to sneer at the wealthy, but the majority of first class passenger men, honorably stood by and did not force their way into a boat. Most of them died......honorably.
SteveLLW 3 weeks ago
I wouldn't leave my dog! I just took it in a life boat... :l
JanWillemKoning 1 month ago
@beatleslove99 It shows te elevators in the movie. They are just really early and old fashioned elevators, where someone had to control it. No buttons or self closing door
ChileChocolate 1 month ago
How did dogs survive ? Are you trying to tell me people took their dogs onto the boat before another human being ? :S Now, I am an animal lover myself.. But COME ON. If you need to choose between an animal... or a real person, who would probably have a family out there somewhere.. I think I would go with the human.
HighlandBilby 1 month ago
@HighlandBilby Only one survived. Presumably, someone had it on his lap.
tic07096903 1 month ago
@tic07096903 Two of the dogs survived - they went in the lifeboats with their owners. A survivor recalled seeing Gamon de Pyecombe (the French Bulldog) swimming in the water after the ship had gone down. A few days after the disaster, passengers on another liner sailed close to the scene and saw many bodies in the water. One was of a woman with her arms tightly around a large St. Bernard-type dog - they had died clinging to each other and were frozen together. Heartbreaking.
RoonJazz 1 month ago
@HighlandBilby Why should you not save a small dog that can fit on your lap? And not take any "human" space on a lifeboat?
09feb1992 1 month ago
Yeah cuz they had elevators in 1912.
beatleslove99 1 month ago
@beatleslove99 Elevators were invented before the 20th century (i.e. before 1900). Titanic was one of the 1st ships to install an elevator, but it was only used for 1st class passengers.
09feb1992 1 month ago
would have climbed up the damn elevator shaft!
Djonemore 1 month ago
@Marineaqua924 they were around 100 dogs aboard titanic and around 53 survived I seen it on a documentary about titanic
joshledury1 1 month ago
@joshledury1 you saw it.
xXanniedeeXx 1 month ago
what ever happened to the dogs that were released?
marineaqua924 2 months ago
@CJCody2006 Thank you. And sorry for the misunderstanding.
dietrich10441 2 months ago
@CJCody2006 What are you talking about?. In another deleted scene, the girl and her parents drown.
dietrich10441 2 months ago
@dietrich10441 I'm talking about in real life, not in the movie.
CJCody2006 2 months ago
@dietrich10441 the girl and her parents that drown in the other deleted scene was another family, not the family that appear in this scene
robiking011 2 months ago
@robiking011
That was a different family from who we see running in the clip above. That little girl's name was Cora and remember they were trapped behind gates. The family above found their way to the Grand Staircase.
BVictor21 1 month ago
Charles John Joughin was the man throwing chairs over the railing. He consumed a great amount of alcohol, but was not drunk. He left the boat next to jack and rose in the movie (man with mustache) he found his way to collapsible #B and stayed in the water for around 2 1/2 hours. He later swam to another life boat and was saved. He died in December 1958 I believe.
juehs34 3 months ago
Yes, a man (I believe he was an alcoholic Chef, to be honest) was sprinting about the top deck, tossing the benches (Which doubled as life-preservers) overboard. I don't remember his name, or if he survived or not.
Kleptmann 4 months ago
@Kleptmann his name is Charles Joughin and yes he did survived
flamingbartman 4 months ago
@CaseyMcLaughalot That's what I think I would have done, but nobody really knows until their put in that situation. People were still oblivious that the ship would sink.
clwgirl510 5 months ago
@CaseyMcLaughalot
there was a man who was tying deck chairs together that night , idon't think he survived though
16517 5 months ago
Yeah He did survive and admitted that he was drunk the entire time or was very much under the influence of alcohol they found him and a few other men on top of a upside turned boat when the other ship came to rescue the survivors.
charlieiscool1000 3 months ago
Yeah!!! Drown!
BarryDennen12 6 months ago
@BarryDennen12 Help we're drowning!! XD
coombeslauren 2 months ago
Some humans die. my response - :|
Dogs drown and die. my response- D: Poor doggieess! </3
ipawd1737 7 months ago 2
@ipawd1737 ipawd1737 dies. my response = I don't care!
HarryW2011 6 months ago
@HarryW2011 hahah grow a pair dumbass(;
ipawd1737 6 months ago
finally xD what I've asked to myself... what did happen to the dogs? hahahaha.....
5KellyChan5 7 months ago
where you upload this scene ?
DAVYJonas1 7 months ago
@DAVYJonas1 This is from an old computer program called James Cameron's Titanic Explorer.
CJCody2006 2 months ago
I always felt sorry for the dogs that were seen in the first half of the film, i always wondered if they survived and what happened to them while the boat was sinking, i guess they all died.
PlushieLenny 7 months ago
@PlushieLenny no 3 of the 10 dogs onboard survived
paxton111100 6 months ago
even the dogs are trying to find any possible way to survive
Scizor3D 7 months ago
Dose anyone know what documentary this is from?
dlw401 8 months ago
Looks like the dogs wanted to get to the lifeboats as well.
ChowderPoop 8 months ago
Dogs, really...DOGS!
2012Castle 9 months ago
those poor dogs :((((( mans best friend
rabidsquirrelfur 9 months ago 42
@rabidsquirrelfur I read somewhere that at least 4 dogs were saved by swimming to the lifeboats :)
coombeslauren 5 months ago
@coombeslauren Only two dogs were rescued from the ship, and both were snuck aboard by their owners when the boats were being loaded.
CJCody2006 2 months ago
@rabidsquirrelfur Three lived, if it makes you feel better.
mikamai 3 days ago
We sail on a ship in 35 days that has 16 lifeboats, each holding 360 passengers. Truly amazing how far we have come!
alwayson09 10 months ago
at 0:11 it makes me laugh the guy with his fucking suitcase
xprinceofspainx 10 months ago
ok, i know this may sound wrong - and i'm upset for all that lost their or their love ones lives. but the thought of those dogs dying - it makes me wanna cry!!
partygirl209 10 months ago
It's just sick that on the Titanic, more first class men lived then third class women and children. Also, only a couple of the dogs lived...:(
chesiregirl 11 months ago
Yes, it is true that some of the families did fare better off than others, but the fact that so many did not still resonates clearly in the minds of historians of the disaster. Of the 115 children traveling aboard the ship at the time, only 60 were saved. Of the 55 who died that night, all but one of them were from Third Class.
CJCody2006 11 months ago
To add some relief to those who see the image cast above in relation to the actual disaster, the family with the little girl survived. The only family travelling in Third Class aboard Titanic which fits that description was the Kink Family. Swiss immigrants Anton and Luise Kink and their four-year-old daughter Gretchen were moving from Zurich to Wisconsin, and all three of them escaped aboard Lifeboat No. 2, which I believe was launched sometime around 1:50-1:55 AM that night
CJCody2006 1 year ago 24
@CJCody2006 nice research! They are one of the lucky families that were able to stay together through out the whole night.
chinitonamoreno 1 year ago
how come this scene is not on special edition, i have the 4 disc edition
Gencturk92 11 months ago
@CJCody2006 thats 30 - 25 min before the stern of titanic sank completely, are you sure?
and about what little girl are you talking?
jaguar4u2 11 months ago
@jaguar4u2 yep. I've seen the program this was made for and the scenes are re-enacted in the order which according to several historians happened that night.
CJCody2006 10 months ago
@CJCody2006 are you talking about in real life ?
xprinceofspainx 10 months ago
@xprinceofspainx yes.
CJCody2006 10 months ago
@xprinceofspainx Yes. It is important to remember the truth to what happened that night. There were 88 children travelling in Third Class, and in all only 34 survived.
CJCody2006 2 months ago
@CJCody2006
I believe we even see this girl, sister and mother in the boat later during "Not without you!" scene. The dad says, "It's goodbye for a little while.."
However, you state that the Dad survived too, so perhaps I'm wrong, or Cameron erroneously killed him off.
Cluedokid25 2 months ago