Bespoke.westernfront

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Bespoke.westernfront

Bespoke.westernfront

@BWesternfront

Bespoke Battlefield Tour operation creating tailor made historical & research based WW1 itineraries on the Western Front. Passionate guides keen to enlighten

Katılım Haziran 2020
13 Takip Edilen49 Takipçiler
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dan yeager
dan yeager@dyeager·
Superintendent Ford Almost saved the world from calamity in 1914 110 years ago 2 murders in Sarajevo changed the course of human history & In so doing the world was plunged into conflict & across Europe all experienced the #murderofinnocence #bryanlightbody
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Fascinating
Fascinating@fasc1nate·
Charles Joughin was the chief baker on the Titanic and one of its most unlikely survivors. He was interrogated by the British Titanic inquiry, which was tasked with finding out how the Titanic had sunk. Below is his interrogation by Mr. Cotter: "What did you do with the children when you put them into the boat? - Handed them into the boat or dropped them in. Threw them in? - Threw them in. And what did you do with the mother? - We wanted to throw her in, and I think she preferred to try and step in. What happened? - She missed her footing. You said that you never went into your boat. Why did not you go, seeing that you were in charge? - I would have set a bad example if I had jumped into the boat. None of the men felt inclined to get into the boat. When you found your boat had gone you said you went down below. What did you do when you went down below? - I went to my room for a drink. Drink of what? - Spirits. The Commissioner: Does it very much matter what it was? Mr. Cotter: Yes, my Lord, this is very important, because I am going to prove, or rather my suggestion is, that he then saved his life. I think his getting a drink had a lot to do with saving his life. In between helping women and children get inside the lifeboats, Joughin kept returning to his cabin for shots of heavy liquor. When the final lifeboats departed, Joughin remained calm and rode the Titanic down like an elevator. A drunk person is more likely to freeze to death than a sober person because of vasodilation (dilation of blood vessels). A drunk person is more prone to hypothermia because all the blood rushes away from the vital organs to the surface of the skin. However, in the case of Joughin, the North Atlantic Sea was approximately -2°C (26.4°F) that night, which was cold enough to constrict his blood vessels, and as a result, counterbalance the alcohol in his system. Joughin said he was relatively calm in the water and felt no pain. Joughin spent two hours in the water before he was able to climb aboard an overturned lifeboat. He was later saved by a passing lifeboat.
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