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At 11:39 PM on April 14, 1912, a 24-year-old sailor named Frederick Fleet had exactly 37 seconds to save 2,224 lives. He had no binoculars. The key to the cabinet had been left in a pocket in Southampton four days earlier. This is not a video about a ship sinking. It is a video about the four days that came before — reconstructed hour by hour, deck by deck, dish by dish from original menus preserved in museums, 1912 Senate inquiry testimonies, and passenger manifests never fully explored on screen. You will discover what the 337 first-class passengers ate on the final night (an 11-course dinner that took four hours to serve), why the third-class families sleeping six decks below had almost no chance once the hull opened, and the six iceberg warnings that arrived at the bridge and changed nothing. One of them never even reached the captain. 👉 SUBSCRIBE for historical deep-dives reconstructed with AI and primary sources 💬 COMMENT: Which of the three classes would you most want to understand better — and why? 🔔 HIT THE BELL — New episodes drop weekly ❤️ SHARE this if someone in your life thinks they already know the Titanic story ⚠️ PRODUCTION NOTE: This video uses AI-generated visual reconstructions based on authenticated historical records, including original menus held at the National Maritime Museum (Greenwich), the Maritime Museum of Southampton, and testimonies from the 1912 U.S. Senate and British Board of Trade inquiries. All dialogues and scene descriptions are derived from documented survivor accounts. #Titanic #Titanic1912 #TitanicHistory #RMSTitanic #TitanicSinking #HistoryDocumentary #AIHistory #TitanicSurvivors #EdwardianEra #MaritimeHistory