Civilising the Sea
Dr Sam Willis tells how the Victorians found preventative solutions, from rockets that could fire rescue lines to lifejackets, lifeboats and the Plimsoll Line.
Shipwrecks are the nightmare we have forgotten - the price Britain paid for ruling the waves from an island surrounded by treacherous rocks. The result is a coastline that is home to the world's highest concentration of sunken ships. But shipwrecks also changed the course of British history, helped shape our national character and drove innovations in seafaring technology, as well as gripping our imagination.
The terrible toll taken by shipwrecks was such that in the winter of 1820 some 20,000 seaman lost their lives in the North Sea alone. That's 20 jumbo jets. But in the final part of his series, maritime historian Sam Willis tells the stirring story of how the Victorians were finally driven into action, finding various ingenious solutions - from rockets that could fire rescue lines aboard stricken vessels to lifejackets, lifeboats and the Plimsoll Line, which outlawed overloading.
In Africa, he traces the legend of the Birkenhead Drill - the origin of 'women and children first'. Decorum even in disaster was the new Victorian way and it was conspicuously on hand to turn history's most iconic shipwreck - Titanic - into a tragic monument to British restraint.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Next
You are at the last episode
Clips
-
Mastering the sea
Duration: 02:23
-
The origin of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution
Duration: 02:55
-
The custom of the sea
Duration: 01:27
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Sam Willis |
Producer | Tom Cholmondeley |
Director | Tom Cholmondeley |
Broadcasts
- Mon 16 Dec 2013 21:00
- Tue 17 Dec 2013 03:00
- Thu 19 Dec 2013 23:00
- Sat 21 Dec 2013 20:00
- Sun 22 Dec 2013 01:55
- Sat 29 Mar 2014 20:00
- Sun 30 Mar 2014 02:55
- Thu 3 Apr 2014 00:15
- Mon 18 Aug 2014 21:00
- Tue 19 Aug 2014 03:00
- Fri 22 Aug 2014 01:00
- Sat 6 Feb 2016 20:00
- Wed 10 Feb 2016 03:00
- Wed 10 Feb 2016 22:00
- Thu 3 Aug 2017 20:00
- Fri 4 Aug 2017 01:15
- Sat 20 Jan 2018 19:00
- Sun 21 Jan 2018 02:15
- Mon 13 May 2019 23:25
- Tue 14 May 2019 02:55
- Thu 26 Mar 2020 20:00
- Fri 27 Mar 2020 02:15
- Tue 18 Jan 2022 22:30
- Wed 19 Jan 2022 02:30
- Thu 27 Jul 2023 20:00
- Fri 28 Jul 2023 02:45