Lusitania's Final Voyage - The Full Story - 3D Animation
111 years ago today, the RMS Lusitania was 12 miles off the coast of Ireland when a single torpedo slammed into the starboard side of ship. 18 minutes is all it would take for the great liner to vanish beneath the waves taking 1198 souls with her. The sinking would spark outrage across the globe and was the first of many factors leading to the US Involvement in the First World War. This video is a compilation of all our Lusitania Remembrance videos from 2025 in one easy to watch format to commemorate 111 years since the Sinking of the Lusitania. Several pieces of music in this video were kindly provided by the channel 'John R. Allen' and "Louis L.' You can listen to more of their wonderful ship related pieces at their YouTube channels! / @johnrallen1878 / @louislplayerpiano Several colourised photographs of Lusitania's Interiors were kindly provided to us by Oceanic Star Line, producer of the finest ship colourisations out there! You can view more of their fantastic colourisations on their Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/oceanic_sta...

Lusitania Sinks in REAL TIME | 18 Minutes of Terror

We Finally Know What Actually Happened To The Hindenburg

Titanic's Southampton Departure - April 10th, 1912 - A Month to Remember

EP 46: What They Don't Tell You About Trailing a Soviet Sub for 38 Days

The Final Hours of TITANIC - New 2026 Real Time Sinking Animation

Lusitania's Final Departure - May 1st, 1915

What Happened to Germany's Royal Family After They Lost the Throne?

EDMUND FITZGERALD: The Full Story (50th Anniversary)

How Scharnhorst was Sunk: Battle of the North Cape 1943

The Terrible Disaster of the SS ARCTIC (1854)

The Life & Death of TITANIC - 3D Ambience Animation

Racing against time | LOT Flight 16

Olympic Sinks the Nantucket Lightship - May 15th, 1934

This Is What Brexit Cost the World

Every Rank in the Roman Legion Explained

We Were Wrong About The Titanic

What Happened to the Habsburgs After Their Empire Collapsed?

Verdun 1916: The 300-Day Hell of World War I

James Webb's Red Dots Have an Answer — And It's Not Good

