The Ship That Was Crushed in Siberian Ice
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 13 เม.ย. 2024
- In 1933 a Russian cargo ship was making a groundbreaking trip across northern russia, through the arctic, in hopes of establishing a permanent trade route known as the northeast passage. Like so many ships before, it got stuck in the increasingly thick winter ice and was trapped for months at the mercy of the ocean currents below. Then, one day in February, there was a deep groaning from the ship’s hull. Immediately afterward, the captain yelled for everyone to abandon the ship. This is the story of the maiden voyage of the Chelyuskin
As per TH-cam's new AI disclosure policy, you may see a box pop up that says "Altered or synthetic content". To give specifics on how it's used on this channel, we use it to generate some scenes where real and stock images are not available, as well as some of the AI tools in various programs to speed workflow. Otherwise, all scripts, voiceovers, video editing, etc. is done by humans.
Podcast ➡️ www.spreaker.com/show/scary-i...
Story Suggestion Form ➡️ shorturl.at/mqAK3
Discord ➡️ / discord
Instagram ➡️ scaryintere...
Attributions/Special Thanks for Photographs:
Christopher Michel, Copernicus Sentinel data 2021, Norway Nasjonalbiblioteket
Writing and research by Rich Firth-Godbehere
DrRichFG
/ @horrourstories
This video contains light dramatic reenactment but no actual footage or pictures of anyone being harmed or who has been harmed.
And a huge thank you to the Scary Interesting team of writers, editors, captioners, and everyone else who make this channel possible.
DISCLAIMER: The pictures, audio, and video used in the videos on this channel are a mix of paid stock, by attribution, royalty-free, public domain, or otherwise fall under the guidelines of fair use. No copyright infringement is intended. All rights belong to their respective owners. If you are or represent the copyright owner of materials used in this video and have an issue with the use of said material, please send an email to sean@scaryinteresting.com. I will respond immediately. - บันเทิง
Its incredible they almost all made it off the ice. The captain must have been a great leader to keep morale going for such a long difficult time.
This is one of those stories where early on I realize "this has exceptional detail.... someone wrote a book from first-hand experience, didn't they?" This of course leads me to suspect that a lot of time was spent writing diaries, possibly after the expedition was over.
They had women on board 😂
Considering there was a birth, technically he broke even
@@Reticulating-Splines And the baby LIVED! :D
Bro said they broke even lol . But yeah good job by the captain for sure.
Seems like the expedition leader Otto had a good head on his shoulders. The influence of good leadership and planning has in such a desperate situation, should not be underestimated.
Russians do wonders when governed by germans for whatever reason. Romanov royal family or mr. Schmidt here are good examples
I fully agree. That was an incredible feat! 🙏⚘️
If you fail to plan you plan to fail
Only one casualty, and out of unfortunate circumstances. An amazing result for captain Otto.
arguably, there were more casualties... not those of the ships crew, but those of civilians who would have survived had the pilots involved in the rescue been at their day jobs... you see, most of these aircrafts worked ferrying doctors to remote villages in "Siberia", and the time spent rescuing was a time in which there were people lacking medical help. of these, a number died.
@@stanislavkostarnov2157was just thinking the same thing but we also can’t assume there was any medical events going on either. It’s only assumed but they also wouldn’t fly the doctors and supplies out if they didn’t need it. I don’t think there was significant casualties at all though.
@@cccc285 we have actual statistics, I believe it was something like 35 permanent injuries *(we are talking amputations due to infection where limbs could originally be saved) and I think it was 3 or 4 deaths... it was a while back I might be off with the numbers...
(there was a paper on it presented by Diletant-Media a while back, if you read in Russian)
@@stanislavkostarnov2157 Maybe, but I'm talking numbers, not speculations.
We so often hear of the British expedition of The Terror and The Erebus. Which ended in abject failure, not to mention misery. I had never heard of the Chelyuskin so this was a real treat.
Not least because of the fact that women and children were on the ship but also the heroic rescue and fantastic leadership by Otto Schmidt.
Thanks for this.
It’s interesting how it can go either way. On Auckland island south of NZ there were 2 simultaneous shipwrecks. One went Lord of the fly’s the other held it together.
@@donnydodoI’d love to read about that do you know the names of the ships?
@@donnydodoI’d like to know the names of the ships too :) Thanks
It doesn't make sense to me why they brough civilians in this trip, though, shouldn't it be just military personel?
@@ryuunosuk3 Why would a cargo ship be crewed by the military?
I’m amazed that it turned out so well for them. That’s rare in these stories
Definitely.
For real
was honestly expecting something awful.
Nice black metal pfp. What band is it?
What's up with spoilers appearing while I watch the start of the video. Fullscreen mode is mandatory I guess.
Despite the dire situation and the hardships the crew had to endure, it was really refreshing to hear a story about a stranded ship where the survivors didn’t immediately give in to savagery and violence…
Just got off graveyard shift and now I have something to watch before bed. Thanks!
Same😅
I miss the graveyard shift. No people, easy commute, it was great.
Me too.
You went from graveyard shift to graveyard ship. Now I feel bad for making that joke, damm
Same here buddy.
These folks did so damn well. I never hear these types of stories where people make almost all of the correct decisions
It’s evidence of slavs being white fr.
It's like a horror movie where they see one person mess up and everyone learns from it.
I lived in Kotzebue, Alaska (on the Chukchi Sea) for a few years. It was -55 degrees F the day that I landed there. Despite that I fell in love with the place. I miss it every day.
I want to move north, right now I live in Utah and despite adoring the sand we don't always get much snow.
@@mariawhite7337I don't like sand. Its coarse and rough and irritating, and it gets everywhere.
Was it unbelievably cold, share some anecdotes pls
@@clintoruss153 Dude I think MINUS FIFTY FIVE DEGRESS Farenheight counts as 'mother freaking cold'
@@mariawhite7337 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Try to imagine the feeling you have hearing the sound of an approaching airplane engine sitting on a melting icesheet for 8 months without a ship. In the first place it is incredible they were able to locate the expedition so precisely after so many months on shifting ice in the middle of an ocean, without GPS.
Why incredible? Marking your position on a dry land (and ice is far more like dry land than moving ship) is easy with navigational instruments, and the ship surely had multiple officers who had to pass rigorous exams in their use and knew how to find out location well...
It sounded more like they were on the ice sheet for about 3 months (Feb-Apr). The 8 months is the entire trip (Aug to Apr).
@@KuK137 The radio helps a lot as well. Using a second receiver, you can locate a radio transmitter very precisely just by using a map and the two directions to the transmitter. After that you can guide the plane to that location from the ground using the plane's radio and the same two ground stations just as easily. The advantage that GPS gives you is that you just need a receiver to know where you are, so you don't give away your presence or position, which is a huge deal in warfare and very economical for civilian use.
This is the first of these stories Ive heard where people are actually competent and didnt devolve into canibalism or somebody turning into a tiny dictator
Third trimester is a wonderful time for an arctic voyage
Inuits,Lapplanders and Siberians give birth in or near the Arctic everyday!!
Right? What was she thinking?
She was probably forced along with a husband. It was a trade route. Perhaps he had a new job somewhere new? After the first birth it also becomes less of an ordeal for many women, do perhaps a bit of hubris as well.
okay ngl that ice cracking sound and effect at the end of the intro was awesome
i CONCUR
[NOT YELLiNG, JUZT LiKE TYPiNG iN CAPZ]
That Otto sounded like an outstanding leader.
Epic beard on top of it.
While it makes total sense it's still wild seeing on the map what looks like blue ocean but there was an entire camp there, cos it was mostly just vast expanses of frozen ice. The maps showing the different locations just made those thoughts even more jarring, it's insane to think how much of the northern waters and the Arctic Sea in general are just covered by such thick layers of ice that it's safe to set up camp on it. Wild.
Great video as always!
Are? We're quickly moving the word to 'were' with CO2. You don't even need reinforced ships now in summer, soon you will be able to travel the passage 8-9 months a year...
@@KuK137 yeah, but what was it like in 1700?> :D
@@KuK137 Not so fast, rising CO2 levels won't just mean thin ice and happy sailing days. Yeah, the ice will be thinner, but the weather will also be way more unpredictable, violent and dangerous. I can take my own nation of Denmark as an example of this, despite Denmark lying quite a bit further south than these seas. Denmark is almost entirely surrounded by water, with the only exception being the southern end of Jutland, which is connected to mainland Europe. Jutland is, however, the only peninsula of Denmark. Everything else is islands upon islands and all of Denmarks weather, including Jutland, is entirely governed by the ocean currents and the location of the jet stream.
Last year we had the wettest year ever recorded, since recording the weather began in 1874, including a storm surge that flooded large parts of Denmark, left entire vacation home areas under so much water that it reached the roofs of the buildings and even flooded cities and turned them into temporary versions of a Scandinavian Venice. This year we got the wettest april ever, after getting a whole months rain in just 4 days and next week we can expect cold days and nights with frost and ice, despite entering the latter half of April, which normally means warmer weather. We've also had quite a few spring storms, which neither normally occurs and as I'm writing this it's raining once again and it's quite likely that we'll smash last years record as the wettest year ever recorded.
And Denmark still lies hundreds of kilometers below the Barents Sea. It will be much, much worse up there and it doesn't matter that the ice gets thinner, when it won't get so thin that ships can't be crushed in unexpected storms. The more the arctic ice melts, the more unpredictable, violent and dangerous the weather becomes.
Global warming lol... it's not happening!
Stories of human victories over strife will always be appreciated more than others.
No
First reaction: Oh boy, new video, nice!
Second reaction: technically I just cheered about the fact that now I'll be able to hear another tale about human suffering
I have morbid curiosity. I have watched thousands of people die on camera. Two just yesterday, both inhaling air duster.
@@Vicus_of_Utrecht I think you belong on 4chan if that's your bag, man.
Maybe they all survive… 🤞🏼
@@alexmartin3143 yeah this is one of those where early into the story I guessed they'd have many survivors just from the intensely detailed story.
You cheer about TH-cam videos
A harrowing adventure well told. After watching several stories in which there are many fatalities, I felt relief when I learned that all but one person was successfully rescued.
I've never said it before, but I'm a special fan of how you tell these stories. You have great pitch inflection, which keeps these stories from sounding flat, but your voice is also relaxing.
Oh nice my suggestion worked, glad you decided to do it, thanks! Was my favourite story from encyclopedia when I was small.
Thanks for the suggestion! I love researching this. Such an amazing story.
@@horrourstoriesthe work you did on this episode is amazing! huge props to you (and the rest of the team of course!)
There's also book from one of expedition member, Aleksandr Mironov (but no clue if ever published in other languages but russian and czech).
Wow this story is incredible. I can't believe I've never heard of this before. I was so relieved to hear that even the newborn made it! Imagine being in that environment and giving birth on a ship in the Arctic Circle. Giving birth wouldn't even be the scariest part, then you have to keep a newborn alive while stranded in the frozen Arctic. The captain, Otto, must have been quite a formidable and level-headed commander.
I love this one. A harrowing tale with all but one surviving is incredible.
This incident highlighted the harsh realities of Arctic navigation, where even well-planned voyages could end dramatically, underlining the importance of improved icebreaking technology and more accurate ice forecasting for future endeavors in such extreme environments.
Thank you for pronouncing Moscow correctly. Cossack is pronounce cos-sak rather than koh-sak for any future reference.
You put a lot of work into pronouncing difficult languages well, which is definitely appreciated
Who cares we all have different tongues
@@local_authority Russia, Moscow and Cossack are just English translations of Rossiya, Moskva and kazak, so yeah, we also don't call England Anglia when speaking English.
However, many consider foreigners struggling with quite simple words a bit funny :)
Koh Sak is a small island off the coast of mainland Thailand😂
@local_authority profound 🤯
Same thing
Спасибо!! Great job on this one, and well done with pronunciation of russian names and titles.
this feels like a frostpunk campaign
Good thinking!
Please make a video of the 20th century Arctic expedition ship Karluk, commandeered by Icelandic anthropologist Vihljarmur Stefansson, wherein the ship got stuck in Arctic ice off the coast of northern Alaska, and the sole survivors included an Inuit seamstress called Ada Blackjack who led the rescue of the remaining survivors and nursed em all back to health.
I'm not real thrilled with events going on in and around Russia these days, but I do have admit I find their language and some of their history fascinating.
Many of us aren't thrilled either, believe me
All things considered, this was one of the happier endings of the stories told in this channel (r.i.p to the quartermaster)
A lady went on the expedition pregnant. Jesus…
I had never even considered that the ice could literally expand and crush a boat..
THIS RECOVERY IS SO COOL. Only 1 death???????? HOLY HECK.
Wow. It's amazing how much preparation and professionalism (and a little luck) kept almost everyone alive.
This was an awesome story. Out of all the stories from history that I’ve read, the ones where sailors get trapped in Arctic ice are some of the most insane. I imagine that being trapped out in the middle of the ocean with nothing but white as far as you can see would be one of the most horrible fates you could go through.
Never give up. 8 months on the ship / ice, and they nearly all survived
Along a similar theme, the story of the ww2 plane "glacier girl", might be an interesting story to cover. It was a p38 lighting doing reconnaissance in cold weather, crashed, buried in 100ft of ice and recovered years later. I got to see it fly for the first time in the early 2000s
Someone actually renovated it to the point it would fly again? Amazing!
@thurayya8905 yeah to the best I can remember it took quite a while, between locating, excavation, and fixing all the deteriorated parts. Pretty neat stuff
This seems to be the story where it looked to be it could be another "and they all died" but turns out one with least deaths over all and per person.
Saw this and was like, is this a rammstein video, then read the caption. Very similar picture but different ships.
This was a fascinating video. Arctice exploration is always fascinating to me.
Lol, I can see it now
This is so amazing! Thank you for covering this!
Makes me want to cheer - what stories! Thank you so much for sharing these!
"Oh yeah, let's take some babies on a dangerous trip through arctic ice. Whatever might go wrong?"
Breeders don’t think
What does that even mean?@@premiumaccount4166
@@premiumaccount4166 People who use hateful terms don't think, either.
It's hard to understand, but sometimes people don't have a choice, it's real life.
Well nothing went wrong with or because of the baby.
Everybody:"We are Fucked, we will die"**mourn.
Russia: "So, how can we enjoy this?"
Schmidt
@@MonTube2006 he still a soviet citizen and the rest of the crew is soviet
I literally have to play these scary interesting videos to fall asleep now. Something about the creepy but calmness of it just puts me down, i usually make it thru 2 whole ones but by the third im for sure out. Love learning thru this guys videos 😊
The map made it look like there was a random canal through that island between the Barents Sea and the Kara Sea. But when I looked it up, nope, it's a natural waterway zigzagging all the way through and it has several neighbors that go deep into the island but not all the way.
I used to live in Adak. The southern part of this video by far. The Bering strait has some of the worse weather in the fucking world. This story is crazy. In FALL? Into WINTER? WOW.
"He asked for help but they told him they had their own problems". Sounds like my country.
Sounds like my job
Sounds like my life
Congrats on the one million, really deserve it with all the effort you've put in since day one!
I want to give a shout out to the true unsung heroes: The sled dogs.
Whenever I hear of Russian ice breakers I think of that story about the whales trapped in Alaska. It was a Russian ice breaker that was able to finish the job of breaking the ice from the sea to where the volunteers had to stop due to the thick ice.
I can't get over how they were able to survive for 8 months 😮 sure made tough people back then 👍
Nome is same town where Balto and Togo led the famous dog-sled mission to deliver Diphtheria medication
what a crazy story. glad everyone survived this one. except the quartermaster...rip
Big fan, here!! I like to listen to these while doing my mundane house chores. The creepy ambient audio tracks and sound effects always add so much ("Blood Kiss", I think it's called?? is my favorite)! (I did notice the new animation during the intro sequence though; that was a cool touch!)
Keep 'em comin'!! ❤👍
You've made such a unique intro that I only have to hear the very first TONE to recognize who I'm watching. That's impressive
Are you a genuine woman
@@MonTube2006 why are you asking?
I was looking for a video to listen to while I start cleaning, absolutely perfect timing and I got so excited!!! You're one of my favorites here on TH-cam, thank you so much for working hard!💕
Same
congrats on 1 million!!! i love your videos and i’m so glad you’re getting the recognition you deserve!
Most stories of this type don't end as well... I'm amazed the crew found a way to thrive in those conditions.
Another great video from "Scary Interesting". Absolutely love this site.
The sun had set for the final time is a ridiculously terrifying thing to hear
That was one of your best episodes yet man. And that is saying something. Blow away that it turned out so well.
I'll be honest. When a new "scary interesting" video drops, I kick everyone out of my house for 30 minutes. 😂
I’m probably late, but happy 1Million dude!🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉 You deserve it and I can’t wait to see you grow even more!❤
Dope vids! Production quality just goes up up up!
I really enjoy these videos that you do in the early modern period 16th to 19th century
Thanks for the Sunday episode. Take care, keep safe.
you always have amazing stories and photos
I’m from Zimbabwe I listen to your videos when I’m scaring lions away from my village 🫡
😮
No you don’t.
@@fareastslavYes he does. I was the lion and he scared the crap out of me.
A rare episode where just about everyone survived. The same can't be said for those poor souls on the Franklin expedition. Even now, no one knows the fate of the men who left their ships and attempted to find help heading south.
Wow i thought for sure they were doomed! Great work rescue!
This really exemplified what a difference good leadership makes. Otto seemed to be very intelligent and as well prepared as possible for this situation, Im pretty sure that with other/worse leaders the loss of lives would’ve been a lot higher
Not only the leadership but the capacity of the staff, it is clear that it was a well-prepared expedition with people trained in several areas who managed to keep the situation under control.
Excellent story - had not heard it before. Well done - thanks.
You need to research and do a video of the USS Jeannette wreck. Such a fascinating story that even includes the last islands that had a wolly mammoth population. Seriously look it up. Do it. Your viewers will love it
Imagine being one of the kids born on that ship; must be crazy to tell people.
Should do a video about the Great Lakes Ship wrecks. They have lost hundreds of ships and thousands of people have died in the lakes. There are some definite good stories out of those wrecks too. Good and bad
Great historic rescue. Good information. Thank you.
Amazing story and well told!
Really enjoyed this one. This one was a lot more inspiring and less sad than a lot of the others. Also I know it was such a small part but damn, the women aboard were badass. "Don't send me, send someone weaker and less useful!!!" I'm sure every single person there wanted to get out of there and for them to be told "Hey, you can get out of here, no questions asked and in relative comfort" and they're like "nah, we want to do what's best for the group!"
Also nice that it seems like morale was generally really good, so everyone stayed civilized and didnt devolve into wild beasts like some of the other stories
Right? That was pretty cool.
8 months stuck in satans freezer and only 1 person died not gonna lie thats impressive
Now that's what I call a successful coordinated rescue. Probably the last time America and Russia would ever work in coordination... sigh
despite the very terrifying topic of being stranded in the artic/crushed by a glacier, this story has kinda a feel good tone. its nice to see when humanity works together
Your the man !!!!
Love seeing that i missed one of ur newer videos 😊❤
Wow, what a story! I thoroughly enjoyed it!
Finally a story where everyone doesn't die lol. Awesome channel!!
I just gotta say this year your are in Rareform. Great topics I've never heard of and the information is shown in such a cool and exciting way w/ great editing.
Wait, why were there so many people on the ship? Especially a pregnant woman?!
Soviet ideas of equality I suppose. Not so different from USA today…
Wow, you are such a good storyteller Sean! Well done to you and your team.
DAMN ! You have over a million subscribers!!!!! Congratulations man !!!
Incredible story Sean……thanks x
There's been about 15 people, if my research is correct, that have died in space. I'd love to hear you cover their stories. Or similar one's
Alone and well equipped- that sounds like heaven !!!
As long as the ship doesn’t leak or run out of … anything
That is amazing. not expecting that good of an outcome
I love Chuck Cheese! Their pizza is really underrated.
the team is doing amazing - editing looks sick! great works and thank you guys
Your storytelling skills are my favourite. I actually love you more than MrBaller. Your voice is calming, and paints vivid pictures of horrific events. Thanks for your work!
l feel the same way about his voice!
The 10 people that put thumbs down on this video are jealous youtube creators 😂
Thank you for all the awesome videos!
congrats on 1 mill subs 🍻here's to a million more 🎉
I have watched every single video you have posted and the video quality just keeps getting better and better. Keep up the great work!
Another shipwreck story in the artic did not go in the way i expected. Even if it was the 1930s and technology was better by that time standard, i was surprised that practically everyone survived. Thats impressive resilience in such weather conditions
Meanwhile, the native people swung by, to check on them.
😊
k😊
Every time I learn how much countries and people were willing to search for the NW passage, I wonder why they even kept trying. If the only way you find to get there is routinely covered in ice that it’s easy to get stuck in, it’s hard to imagine that it would ever be that much faster to be worth the risk
Love your work. Thanks!
Thanks so much for watching and supporting the channel!