We may read volumes upon volumes of history books and make our teachers proud. But there’s nothing more all-telling than real pictures that document wonders of the past. With Joseph Niepce’s camera obscura used in 1827, humans realized that capturing fleeting moments and preserving them was possible. And they never looked back.
This time, we are taking you on a heartfelt roller coaster that will take us back to the past. From the image of the nine kings of Europe photographed together for the first and only time to the snap of workers painting the Eiffel tower, these are one-of-a-kind moments.
In an unstaged manner, they reveal what genuinely made humans proud, moved them to tears, or left them heartbroken. Sometimes, the pics just show what kept them busy during the day. Fasten your seat belts, relax, and enjoy the time travel.
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In 1969, When Black Americans Were Still Prevented From Swimming Alongside Whites, Mr. Rogers Decided To Invite Officer Clemmons To Join Him And Cool His Feet In A Pool, Breaking A Well-Known Color Barrier
Mr. Rogers was a rebel. He pulled more of these stunts to fight injustice and racism in order to teach children a sense of moral and ethical reasoning. He was a tv show host with a sense of what's wrong and what's right.
Incredible Photograph Of A German Soldier Going Against Direct Orders To Help A Young Boy Cross The Newly Formed Berlin Wall After Being Separated From His Family, 1961
His comrades wouldn't hesitate to kill him if they saw what he was doing.
Charles Thompson Greets His New Classmates At Public School No. 27 In September 1954, Less Than Four Months After The Supreme Court Ruled That Racial Segregation Was Unconstitutional. Charles Was The Only African-American Child In The School. Photo By Richard Stacks For The Baltimore Sun
To find out just the meaning behind these historical photographs in a broader sense, Bored Panda reached out to Marcelo Guimarães Lima, a visual artist (drawing, painting, printmaking), writer and teacher. In his art, Marcelo employs figurative and abstract approaches to explore questions related to personal, historical, social, and political issues of our diverse life-worlds.
Marcelo explained that the birth of photography changed the image of the world in a profound way because “it did change the world for us, image viewers and image producers.”
According to the artist, the historical photographs that eternalized these significant moments of the past show us both permanence and change: “The change of circumstances (that can also, at critical times, change the subjects), the permanence of challenges and struggles related both to the short and the long durations and processes.”
Princess Diana Shakes Hands With An Aids Patient Without Gloves, 1991
Imagine what a massive gesture this must have been at the time. People probably thought she had lost her mind.
A Policeman In San Francisco Scolds A Man For Not Wearing A Mask During The 1918 Influenza Pandemic, 1918
Jewish Prisoners After Being Liberated From A Death Train, 1945
The killing of Jewish people went on, even when the Third Reich was collapsing. Befehl ist Befehl.
Marcelo also explained that ambiguities of photography also reflect the ambiguities of situations. “The rhetoric of photography is that of a mediated immediacy and its effects are also related to the context of ideas expressed or directed also by the linguistic context (captions, text, etc).”
As a result, it all comes down to the circumstances on which the interpretation of the message relies. It also changes it. For example, “'The Queen of England as a war mechanic during WWII' is a now a kind of ironic piece, or rather, the inherent irony of the image/message is what comes to the fore now,” Marcelo said.
Members Of Dutch Resistance Celebrate The News Of Adolf Hitler's Death, April 1945
Margaret Hamilton And The Handwritten Navigation Software She And Her Mit Team Produced For The Apollo Project, 1969
Statue Of David By Michelangelo, Encased In Bricks To Prevent Damage From Bombs, During World War 2
The history of photography is as incredible as history itself. After all, without cameras, these historical snaps wouldn’t exist.
But it turns out that the birth of photography was quite recent (in a historical context), that is, less than two hundred years ago.It all started in 1826 with the photographic process invented by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, which he used to make the earliest known surviving photograph from nature. Known as heliography, the process refers to a wireless telegraph that signals by flashes of sunlight (generally using Morse code) reflected by a mirror.
Heliography was followed by the daguerreotypy method of photography, developed by Louis Daguerre, who made daguerrotypy sixty to eighty times quicker than Niepce’s initial method. In Great Britain, Henry Fox Talbot was also experimenting with talbotypy, which used paper coated with silver iodide.
An American Soldier Cradles A Wounded Japanese Boy And Shelters Him From The Rain In The Cockpit Of An Airplane During The Battle Of Saipan While Waiting To Transport The Youngster To A Field Hospital. July, 1944
What a great photo! I like very much the expressions of both, the boy and the soldier
A Serbian Soldier Sleeps With His Father Who Came To Visit Him On The Front Line Near Belgrade, 1914/1915
Louis Armstrong Playing For His Wife, Egypt, 1961
Some beautiful love song, I'm sure... Or, maybe, "What a Wonderful World"
Only in 1889 did the world welcome the very first roll film pioneered by George Eastman. In 1913, these photographical inventions were followed by the very first 35mm camera engineered by German inventor Oskar Barnack.
1957 was the year of the first digital camera, which was a binary digital version of an existing camera that allowed the transfer of images into a digital computer.
Today, you can no longer imagine the internet and social media without photos (what would we do without cat pics?!). But it wasn't until 1992 that Tim Berners-Lee published the very first photograph on the web. It was a picture of a comedy band called Les Horribles Cernettes, which was a house project at CERN Laboratory Switzerland, where Tim was developing the World Wide Web.
Anne Frank’s Father Otto, Revisiting The Attic Where They Hid From The Nazis. He Was The Only Surviving Family Member (1960)
It shows we sometimes forget that people still had lives and memories after their told stories have ended
A Man Rides A Bus In Durban, Meant For White Passengers Only, In Resistance To South Africa’s Apartheid Policies, 1986
The look of disgust on the face of that woman on the right shows how disgusting she herself is.
Ruby Bridges, The First African-American To Attend A White Elementary School In The Deep South, 1960
If you think it was a long time ago, Ruby Bridges is 66 today and has Instagram account
Young Queen Elizabeth As A Mechanic During WW2 (C. 1939)
A Man Arrested For Cross-Dressing Emerging From A Police Van, New York, 1939
Albert Einstein, His Secretary Helen (Left), And Daughter Margaret (Right) Becoming U.S. Citizens To Avoid Returning To Nazi Germany, 1940
Soldiers Returning Home From WWII, 1945
Freddie Mercury With His Mother, 1947
When Nazis Asked Lepa Radic Who Were Her 'Accomplices' Before They Hanged Her She Responded: 'You'll Know Them When They Come To Avenge Me.' Young Serbian Girl Was Hanged At The Age Of 17 Near Gradiska In 1943. During The Battle Of Kozara, She Lost Her Father, Brother (15) And Her Uncle
David Isom, 19, Broke The Color Line In A Segregated Pool In Florida On June 8, 1958, Which Resulted In Officials Closing The Facility
A German Soldier Returns Home Only To Find His Family No Longer There. Frankfurt, 1946
WWI. A Canadian Soldier Tries To Comfort A Little Belgian Baby, Who Was Hurt And Whose Mother Was Killed By An Artillery Shell. November 1918
May 20, 1910: The Nine Kings Of Europe Photographed Together For The First And Only Time
Standing, from left to right: King Haakon VII of Norway, Tsar Ferdinand of the Bulgarians, King Manuel II of Portugal and the Algarve, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany and Prussia, King George I of the Hellenes and King Albert I of the Belgians. Seated, from left to right: King Alfonso XIII of Spain, King George V of the United Kingdom and King Frederick VIII of Denmark. it took place during the funeral of King Edward VII.
A Hired Reader Reads To Cigar Makers Hard At Work In Cuban Cigar Factory (Ca. 1900-1910). Because Many Cigar Factory Employees Were Illiterate Lectors Were Hired To Read Novels, Poetry, Nonfiction Works, And Newspapers Determined By Consensus
“The Drunk Basket.” In The 1960s, Bars In Istanbul Would Hire Someone To Carry Drunk People Back To Their Homes
Russian Inmate Points An Identifying And Accusing Finger At A Nazi Guard Who Was Especially Cruel Towards The Prisoners In Buchenwald Camp
I have seen this photo somewhere else too, there is an excellent follow-up. Despite being starving and exhausted the prisoners had staged a revolt as the Allies approached. Literally attacking their guards with their bare hands and overpowering them. If this is the photo I believe it is, then, while the Americans watch on the prisoner is "selecting" a number of guards ( as prisoners were selected for death) to be handed over to the Russian Authorities. The German guards knew what that meant.
A French Women Welcomes An American Soldier Two Days After Liberation. Strasbourg, France, 22 November 1944
September 3, 1967: The Day Sweden Switched From Driving On The Left To The Right Side Of The Road
7'3'' (221cm) Jakob Nacken, The Tallest Nazi Soldier Ever Chatting With 5'3'' (160cm) Canadian Corporal Bob Roberts After Surrendering To Him Near Calais, France In September Of 1944
18-Year-Old Keshia Thomas Protects A Fallen Man, Believed To Be Associated With The Ku Klux Klan From An Angry Mob Of Anti-Clan Protestors. Ann Arbor, Michigan USA. 1996 By Mark Brunner
Strange how proud boys need to hide behind women when they are in trouble. Why don't they proudly stand back and stand by in the face of the same violence they so proudly advocate?
Rosa Parks's Booking Photo Following Her February 1956 Arrest
Here Is How An Ukrainian Immigrant Celebrated Stalin's Death, 1953
Into The Jaws Of Death, 6th Of June, 1944
Imagine stepping out into the cold water knowing that the chance you'll live to see the next day is next to zero. True heroes. So sad that a lot of them died to fight what now is celebrated by millions of Americans.
Crowd In Times Square, New York City Celebrating The Surrender Of Germany, May 7th, 1945
Kinda looks like my town on the day Biden won, except we wore masks.
Fire And Fury: B-25s Are Pictured Flying Past Mount Vesuvius In Italy As Lava And Ash Spews From The Top Of The Volcano. The Eruption Killed 57 As It Destroyed The Village Of San Sebastiano And San Giorg In March 1944 While Allied Forces Were Battling For Supremacy In The Skies
Nikola Tesla, The Last Photo Ever Of The Famous Scientist, 1st Jan 1943
If you’re driving a Tesla and someone steals it, is it an Edison?
A Nurse With A Sick Child During Smallpox Epidemic, Wrocław, Poland, 1963
Thanks to the invention of a vaccine, small pox is as good as non-existent anymore. But for some strange reason anti-vaxxers want to introduce this killing disease again. Just as they don't want to get rid of Covid-19.
I don't understand how anyone can look at this picture and not at least consider vaccinating their kids...
Load More Replies...I wonder if there would be so many anti vaxers or not wanting to wear a mask if Covid was as visible as smallpox?
I am old enough to remember the day the polio vaccine was brought to our school (an American school for the children of military personnel on Okinawa, Japan). We were all lined up in separate lines by classes, and given the shots, every kid in the school. I was just a second grader, but I remember the Moms who came in with their babies, begging the nurses to innoculate their children, too. Yes, they did. They brought extra because they knew there would be babies there whose moms saw the shot as salvation from iron lungs, wheelchairs, and baby gravestones. When I see antivaxxers spouting their garbage on Facebook, I wish I had a time machine to take them back to the time of plagues and show them all those healthy kids running and playing and swimming without fear.
What's frightening about smallpox is that the eruptions are also internal.
Ah yes, the "good old days" when we didn't have vaccinations. I can see why people want to go back to that.
Actually, it wasn't Edward Jenner who saved us all from smallpox, it was a woman called Lady Mary Wortley Montagu. She invented the inoculation, which is grinding up smallpox scabs and rubbing them into open wounds. The patient still got smallpox, but of a much milder sort. Edward Jenner then improved the idea of the inoculation, creating the vaccine. But without Lady Mary, many of us wouldn't be alive today.
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu DIDN'T invent this, she heard of and saw it in the Ottoman Empire where it was a common practice. She got the Embassy surgeon to innoculate her son in this manner and when she returned to England she promoted the practice. But even so, it was Surveillance and Containment, practiced by the Smallpox Eradication Program, that finally wiped out smallpox in just 10 years, after 170 years of western innoculation, variolation and vaccination. Thank Dr Donald Ainslie Henderson for that.
Load More Replies...That poor baby, he is just covered in them. Must have been so painful. Those women! So brave. I imagine many of them must have gotten it from their charges.
I want the vaccine to have dead virus not the live virus. No one gets the disease from a dead virus. the body makes just as good as a resistant to the disease as a live virus. There are numerous cases of people getting the disease from the live virus.
True, but most vaccines DO use dead virus, or only pieces of the virus. The live polio vaccines are being phased out. Some other vaccines are being worked on. NONE of the covid vaccines are live. None of them.
Load More Replies...Brought to you again by the people who say Science is of the devil and that there is not such thing as Intersex people and that anyone who believes in science is deceived by the devil. There world is not a good place to be these days!
Smallpox killed millions and millions of people, throughout the past several centuries. Those lucky enough to survive ended up with scars on their faces and hands - but those scars , thanks to the fortunate human ability to heal, didn't reflect the horror of the original lesions. Take a good long look at this poor baby, and the horrible lesions on his face and hands. Who would wish this on their children, or allow it to happen to other people's children?
If covid did this, we would not be seeing vaccine hesitancy.
You're absolutely right. It all comes down to risk assessment. Doctors stopped recommending smallpox vaccination when cases dropped below a certain number locally because there were risks from the smallpox vaccine. When people are more frightened of the vaccine than they are of the disease, they avoid the vaccine. When they're more frightened of the disease than the vaccine, they take the vaccine. If covid made you suddenly break out in big blisters, we'd ALL be vaccinated by now. As it is, we don't even see sick people because they're all in quarantine. This is why doubters don't believe in it.
Load More Replies...Syphilis was the great pox. You WOULD hate to see it. That was a scourge the world has forgotten about. Great big festering ulcers, insanity and paralysis, and congenital syphilis meant deformed and brain damaged babies. Horrendous treatments but no cure... If I had to choose, I'd take smallpox.
Load More Replies...Small pox is a very deadly disease. I still have my vax scab on my left arm to prove I was vaxed for smallpox. Look at his blackened hands and face.
Poor baby.......Now days, some people wouldn't want to vaccinate their children!
The NYT very recently ran an article about how NYC's health commissioner led the smallpox vaccination of SIX MILLION New Yorkers in one month! Now there are even hospital staff refusing to take the Covid vaccine . There are centers that have discarded outdated vials because not enough people showed up.
I don't mean this to sound harsh; maybe though, if anti-vaxxers SAW what this disease does, they might understand the importance of having vaccines... This photo is heart-wrenching!!
Unfortunately, it wouldn’t make a difference as they are only affected by things that impact them directly due to their self absorption. And they have so much confirmation bias, they only *hear* what they want to be true.
Load More Replies...What a dreadful disease and the thought that this may return because of some misguided belief that vaccines are harmful. Seriously, plaster this picture all over the world to make a point. That child will be horribly scarred for life.
Smallpox has been eradicated - that means it's gone, globally. You can't catch it, it's not around any more. It IS locked away in a couple of laboratories, for study purposes, and some countries (the US for one) have large stores of vaccine in case smallpox is used as a bio-weapon. But there's NO possibility of this disease returning because of vaccine refusal. It's gone.
Load More Replies...This is a very frightening photo, and today, we still have so many people in medicine who risk their health on the front lines.
wow... i never saw small-pox before, that brings it into a new light.
Ruth Lee, A Hostess At A Chinese Restaurant, Flies A Chinese Flag So She Isn’t Mistaken For Japanese When She Sunbathes On Her Days Off In Miami. Dec. 15, 1941
Inside Of An Airplane In 1930
Soviet Citizens Look At The "Wall Of Sorrow", Honoring The Hundreds Of Thousands Of People Killed By Stalinism. In 1988, The Soviet Government Allowed Information Regarding The Victims Of Stalin's Great Purge To Become Public
That's an terrible historic figure, who made so many people and nations suffer, in his attempt to establish the new dictatorship, this time named communism, instead of Hitler's national-socialism
"Human Fly" George Willig Scales The Exterior Of The World Trade Center's South Tower In 1977. Completing The Climb In 3.5 Hours, He Was Arrested At The Top After Signing Several Autographs, And Was Fined $1.10 By The City - A Penny For Each Floor He Passed
That is the cheapest fine I have ever heard of, even with inflation it is approx $5.
Portrait Of Arctic Explorer Peter Freuchen And His Wife, Fashion Illustrator Dagmar Cohn, 1947
Fun fact: He doesn't have a leg on this picture. He lost it in 1926 to frostbite.
Allied Soldiers Mock Hitler Atop His Balcony At The Reich Chancellery, 1945
Teenage Dating In Diner, 1950s, The States
Mobsters Hide Their Faces At Al Capone's Trial 1931
Nuclear Explosion Less Than One Millisecond After Detonation (1952)
Nintendo's First Headquarters In Kyoto, Japan (1889)
A Member Of The Ku Klux Klan Stands Behind A Police Officer For Protection, After A Mob Surrounded His Klan Rally In Austin Texas, 1983
Three Young Russian Women And A Little Girl Recently Liberated From A Slave-Labor Camp By The U.S. Army Lay Flowers At The Feet Of Four Dead American Soldiers, April 18, 1945, Hilden, Germany
"Eyes Of Hate", A Photograph Of Goebbels After He Finds Out His Photographer Was Jewish, Geneva , September 1933
'big Nims' Of The United States 3rd Battalion, 366th Infantry, Laughing At The Sight Of His Comrades With Gas Masks On, 1918
The joy on his face makes me happy, I'm posting to hide a trolls comment
Workers Painting The Eiffel Tower, 1924
German SS Guards, Exhausted From Their Forced Labour Clearing The Bodies Of The Dead At Bergen-Belsen, Are Allowed A Brief Rest By British Soldiers But Are Forced To Take It By Lying Face Down In One Of The Empty Mass Graves, 1945
But the Germans knew no one would shoot them in their neck, like they did with so many of the Bergen-Belsen victims.
A Game Of Human Chess St Petersburg Then Leningrad Russia Circa 1924
Wedding Bands That Were Removed From Holocaust Victims Before They Were Executed
Young Angela Merkel Having A Schnaps With Fishermen On The Island Of Rügen During Her First Mp Campain In Summer 1990
Union And Confederate Soldiers Shaking Hands At The 1913 Gettysburg Reunion
Proving we can overcome differences, but apparently, not for long. *sigh*
A Woman Mourns After The Us Navy Downs An Iranian Passenger Jet On 3 July 1988, Carrying 290 Civilians Including 66 Children
Why are we never taught things like this in school?? I never knew this happened- sick to my stomach
Babies Who Lost Their Parents During The Vietnam War Being Airlifted Back To The United States For Adoption, 1975
OK nobody should EVER complain again about a family with baby two rows down on their trip.
Arnold Schwarzenegger Seeing NYC For The First Time (1968)
Only One Of Two Photographs In Existence Of The Us Supreme Court In Session. Cameras Are Forbidden In The Supreme Court, But This Photograph Was Taken By A Young Woman Who Concealed Her Small Camera In Her Handbag, Cutting A Hole Through Which The Lens Peeped, 1937
View Of Boston, The Oldest Surviving Aerial Photograph Ever Taken. October 13th, 1860
Indian Soldiers Arriving In France, World War I, 1914
The Apollo 14 Landing Capsule (1971)
What Is Now The Fully Developed Las Vegas Strip, 1955
Construction Of The Golden Gate Bridge, Circa 1934
The Imprint Of A Mitsubishi Kamikaze Zero Along The Side Of H.M.S Sussex. 1945
Amazing reminder of the lengths the Japanese would go for their emperor.
The Waiting Room Of Chicago's Union Station (1943)
Whoa! The light filtering through the windows! It looks really cool.
The Uniform Of Archduke Franz Ferdinand From 1914, Whose Assassination Triggered The Outbreak Of World War I
A Coca Cola Advertisement Made By Spreading Grains For Pigeons In Saint Mark's Square, Venice, 1960
Unit Control Desk Of The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, April 18, 1983
The First Successful Flight By The Wright Brothers At Kitty Hawk, NC (1903)
The Cologne Cathedral Stands Amidst The Ruins Of The City After Allied Bombings (1944). The Cathedral Suffered Fourteen Direct Hits By Aerial Bombs During The War But Did Not Collapse
Yup, good book by a tail end gunner about how all the planes used it as an aiming point
Motel Manager James Brock Pours Muriatic Acid In The Monson Motor Lodge Swimming Pool, To Get Black Swimmers Out Of The Pool. June 18, 1964
Abraham Lincoln's Hearse As It Passes An Ornamental Arch At 12th Street In Chicago, Il (1865)
Eniac: The First General-Purpose Digital Computer (C. 1947-1955)
The Walled City Of Kowloon (1989)
A US Marine Gives A Cigarette To A Japanese Soldier Buried In The Sand. Iwo Jima, 1945
Pelé Takes A Break During The Filming Of Escape To Victory – In The Stadium Of A Jewish Team Filled With Nazi Flags In A Communist Country In 1981
Nicholas II Of Russia With The Family (Left To Right): Olga, Maria, Nicholas II, Alexandra Fyodorovna, Anastasia, Alexei, And Tatiana. Livadiya, Crimea, 1913
Soviet Peasants Listen To The Radio For The First Time, 1928
18 Year-Old Muhammad Ali Stands Alone At The 1960 Rome Olympics
The Mcdonald Brothers In Front Of The Not Yet Opened First McDonald's, November 1948, San Bernadino, CA
The Guinness Brewery, Dublin, 1910
Colored Photo Of Russian Peasant Girls (1909)
It's not coloured in afterwards, it's a very early three-composite colour photograph by Sergej Prokudin-Gorskij.
At 4:31 Am, An Unauthorized Photo Taken Of Stalin Inside Of The Kremlin Shows The Very Moment He Was Informed That Germany Had Began Their Invasion Of The Soviet Union. It Was Taken By Komsomolskaya Pravda, Editor In Chief. He Was Ordered To Destroy It, But Instead Saved It. June 22, 1941
Stalin thinking, "How do we make this the most painful experience possible ?" Which, I suspect, he usually thought anyway.
Earliest Known Photo Of Chernobyl Disaster, Taken By Powerplant's Photographer, Dawn Of April 26th, 1986
Two days after the explosion, the authorities in Poland issued an order to make us, all the kids in the country, drink the Lugol’s iodine. It’s between 500-1000-km-distance from Chernobyl and major cities in Poland. The liquid was supposed to protect your thyroid gland against the effects of radiation. No idea if it actually worked.
The Lottery Used By The Selective Service To Determine Who Would Be Drafted For Vietnam First. In Each Capsule Is A Day Of The Year, Determining The Order Of Draftees By Their Birthday. Washington D.C. 1969
Trump was born in 1946. He was 23 by that time. So sad he had a bad case of bonespur. He would have beaten the enemy single handed.
JFK's Funeral At The Capitol. November 1963
Hiroshima Before And After The Atomic Bombing On August 6th, 1945
Two Homeless Men Squat In The Shadow Of The Recently Completed World Trade Center In 1975...
"The Eyes Of The World Are Upon You". June 5th, 1944. One Day Before D-Day
My grandfather said it was one of the worse days of his life. Those who arrived on the beaches of Normandy either made it or they didn't. If they didn't drown from the weight of their gear or some drowned because they didn't know how to swim, others were shot as they got off the boat and onto the beaches. In his later years he would tear up as he spoke of his "brothers" he trained with but didn't make it on D-Day.
New Map Of Europe Displayed Outside Philadelphia's Independence Hall After WWI (1918)
New Yorkers Stop To Watch The "Seinfeld" Finale, Times Square, 1998
French Troops With War-Torn Flag, 1917
The First Public Demonstration Of A Computer Mouse, Graphical User Interface, Windowed Computing, Hypertext And Word Processing, 1968
This made me laugh! It reminded me of my miserly Aunt offering me a computer she wasn't using in 2003. We went to the shed and she dug out a box with a Tandy 1000, 8 bit computer from 1987. She was so proud of her generosity. I never told her I took it in to be recycled as soon as her back was turned.
Boy Standing In Front Of Fallen Statue Of Lenin, Ethiopia, 1991
@Francisco, Marxism-Leninism has very little to do with actual socialist policies. Marxists are "socialist" in the same way that the DPRK is "democratic"
Lyndon B. Johnson Yelling At The Pilots Of A Nearby Plane To Cut Their Engines So That John F. Kennedy Could Speak As Kennedy Is Seen Trying To Calm Him Down. Taken During The 1960 Presidential Campaign In Amarillo, Texas
Black Man Going Into The 'Colored' Entrance Of A Mississippi Theater (C. 1939)
Rasputin And His Followers, 1914
President George Hw Bush Gazes At The Capitol In Helicopter After Leaving Clinton Inauguration. 1992
John Lennon And Yoko Ono Bought A Large Billboard In Times Square In 1969 Declaring That 'War Is Over If You Want It'
The problem is that most people want wars to end, but people in power and businessmen don't.
Street Scene In Antwerp, Belgium, Showing Citizens Turning Out For Celebration A Few Hours After The Germans Surrendered And An End Of World War I. 11th November 1918
An Anti-Communist Revolutionary Holds A Molotov Cocktail Behind His Back During The 1956 Hungarian Revolution
Hitler Reacts To A Kiss From An Excited American Women At The 1936 Olympic Games
Washington D.C The Morning After The Assassination Of Martin Luther King, 5 April 1968
105mm Shells From An Allied Bombardment All Fired In A Single Day On German Lines, 1916
Fidel Castro Laughing At A Newspaper Headline While Visiting New York In 1959
Robert H. Goddard And His Invention, The First Liquid Rocket (1926)
Father of modern rocketry. He was ridiculed for his work at the time.
The Fenelon Place Elevator, One Of The Shortest And Steepest Railroads In The World
Tons of funicular railways in the UK that are short and even steeper than that! They quickly take people up a level, often from the shore up cliffs to where the shops etc are. No walking up there pushing a wheelchair or pram, for example. Plus, they're fun.
A Soldier From The Hampshire Regiment Engulfed In Smoke During A Chemical Weapon Training Exercise, 1941
Vladimir Kosma Zworykin Shows Off His Cathode Ray Television (1934)
Soviet Soldiers, On Their Backs, Launch A Volley Of Bullets At Enemy Aircraft In June Of 1943
Richard Nixon Waves Goodbye As He Boards A Helicopter After Resigning The Presidency Earlier That Day (Aug. 9, 1974)
Ham The Chimpanzee Preparing For His Mercury-Redstone 2 Test Flight, Conducted On January 31, 1961
The Old And New Alignments Of Pennsylvania Route 61 Following The Centralia Mine Fire
Historical photo : war, war, war, segregation, war, war, invention, war war, random stuff, war, war... How awesome are we...
Fascinating, a great perspective of some of the most important historical moments of humanity ( those that could be photographed)
I really like these posts. I enjoy learning about history.
I'm not sure about #40. It looks more like the Taiwanese flag. (idk if it is historical)
I LOVE historical photos and it is nice to see a bunch without a disproportionate amount of advertising and click-bait.
Thank you!! These are so interesting and enlightening...puts things in perspective...
After reviewing the photos I am saddened as to how little that we have learned relating to the task of respecting each other and just getting along. Maybe even learning to enjoy and appreciate our differences. Might isn't always right.
I have seen so many photos of history but this post was mind blowing I have never seen this photos before in any post since I have joined the internet or any social platform.
I have seen so many photos of history but this post was mind blowing I have never seen this photos ever.
war&hate. So touching there was bit of humanity left in the lands of total idiots. But nothing to boast with for human kind under the weight of dead bodies.
Some great pics, but only a couple changed how I view history. BP loves it's clickbait.
The slanted-historian and professor of social segregation is having another unstable moment.
Historical photo : war, war, war, segregation, war, war, invention, war war, random stuff, war, war... How awesome are we...
Fascinating, a great perspective of some of the most important historical moments of humanity ( those that could be photographed)
I really like these posts. I enjoy learning about history.
I'm not sure about #40. It looks more like the Taiwanese flag. (idk if it is historical)
I LOVE historical photos and it is nice to see a bunch without a disproportionate amount of advertising and click-bait.
Thank you!! These are so interesting and enlightening...puts things in perspective...
After reviewing the photos I am saddened as to how little that we have learned relating to the task of respecting each other and just getting along. Maybe even learning to enjoy and appreciate our differences. Might isn't always right.
I have seen so many photos of history but this post was mind blowing I have never seen this photos before in any post since I have joined the internet or any social platform.
I have seen so many photos of history but this post was mind blowing I have never seen this photos ever.
war&hate. So touching there was bit of humanity left in the lands of total idiots. But nothing to boast with for human kind under the weight of dead bodies.
Some great pics, but only a couple changed how I view history. BP loves it's clickbait.
The slanted-historian and professor of social segregation is having another unstable moment.