50 Incredible History Moments That Were Caught On Camera Decades Ago
History and photography have always been good buddies, and many images have been ingrained into our minds as posters for various important past events.
But as people continue to dig through archives, more and more interesting shots are emerging from the days gone by. And the Instagram account 'Historic Pictures' is trying to get a hold of as many as possible.
Sharing moments from different eras, it has accumulated 676K followers, so let's see what has resonated with them and take a look at the account's most popular uploads.
Also, don't miss the chat we had with Laura Di Stefano, who has a Ph.D. in medieval history and runs the blog The Historian Traveller — you'll find it in between the photos.
More info: Instagram
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Her dad told her, "If you marry that man you will never set foot in this house again." Mary soon learned that most people felt the same way. The first years of their marriage living in Birmingham were hell-- no one would speak to them, they couldn’t find anywhere to live because no one would rent to a black man, and they had no money. But they didn't give up. Gradually life became easier. Mary got teaching jobs, ending up as a deputy head teacher. Jake worked in a factory and then got a job at the Post Office. Slowly they made friends, but it was difficult. Mary used to tell people, "before I invite you to my home.... my husband is black." Some would never talk to her again. Last year they celebrated their 70th anniversary and they are still very much in love, and never regretted what they did.
Every time I see this photo I wish Mary was my gran or auntie... she looks so nice and happy
Jesus Christ. Having to disclose your husband is black as if he's got some contagious disease or something is absurd... this is a beautiful yet dark story.
There's those "Great!" days they want to take us back to again.
I find it cringe that these sorts of attitudes where a thing when I was a little boy. Some of the Jim Crow laws still existed when I was a boy. But also shout out to my mom that I never knew about them until I was older. Not because they were a secret but because I grew up in an area that was not blatantly racist and my mom's example was always treating every human being like a human being.
People are ridiculous. Love to these people who persevered in the face of idiocy.
It wasn't that long ago when Instagram became an educational tool. It's still far from being the main one, but the platform is certainly on the radar.
"History is often taught through books, archival sources, and archaeological evidence," Dr. Laura Di Stefano told Bored Panda.
"However, most of the time, while accurate, these sources frequently provide a unilateral view of facts, focusing mostly on specific events and 'famous' figures from certain periods."
August 8, 1982. A line drive foul ball hits a four year old boy in the head at Fenway. Jim Rice, realizing in a flash that it would take EMTs too long to arrive and cut through the crowd, sprang from the dugout and scooped up the boy. He laid the boy gently on the dugout floor, where the Red Sox medical team began to treat him. When the boy arrived at the hospital 30 minutes later, doctors said, without a doubt that Jim's prompt actions saved the boy's life. Jim returned to the game in a blood-stained uniform. A real badge of courage. After visiting the boy in the hospital, and realizing the family was of modest means, he stopped by the business office and instructed that the bill be sent to him.
A real human being. Too bad we don't more like him in today's world. Bless you Mr. Rice.
We do, they’re just hard to find in this over populated world.
Load More Replies...To give us an example, Dr. Di Stefano named Charlemagne (or Charles the Great), whom we have all been taught about in school.
"A simple research online and we would know almost everything about him, from the simplest concepts we learned as children when we first studied history, to the most complex research conducted by historians for academic purposes."
"What we don't know, at least not to a great extent, is the lives of common people who lived during his era. What did they do? Did they have love stories? Did they aspire to see the world as they knew it? Did they struggle for independence from their parents or despise their lives?" Dr. Di Stefano wondered.
“When she applied to run in the Boston Marathon in 1966 they rejected her saying: “Women are not physiologically able to run a marathon, and we can’t take the liability.” Then exactly 50 years ago today, on the day of the marathon, Bobbi Gibb hid in the bushes and waited for the race to begin. When about half of the runners had gone past she jumped in. She wore her brother’s Bermuda shorts, a pair of boy’s sneakers, a bathing suit, and a sweatshirt. As she took off into the swarm of runners, Gibb started to feel overheated, but she didn’t remove her hoodie. “I knew if they saw me, they were going to try to stop me,” she said. “I even thought I might be arrested.” It didn’t take long for male runners in Gibb’s vicinity to realize that she was not another man. Gibb expected them to shoulder her off the road, or call out to the police. Instead, the other runners told her that if anyone tried to interfere with her race, they would put a stop to it. Finally feeling secure and assured, Gibb took off her sweatshirt. As soon as it became clear that there was a woman running in the marathon, the crowd erupted—not with anger or righteousness, but with pure joy, she recalled. Men cheered. Women cried. By the time she reached Wellesley College, the news of her run had spread, and the female students were waiting for her, jumping and screaming. The governor of Massachusetts met her at the finish line and shook her hand. The first woman to ever run the marathon had finished in the top third.”
According to runnerworld.com "1896 -The day after the (men-only) marathon, Greek woman Stamata Revithi runs the marathon course of the first modern Olympic Games" and "1926 - Londoner Violet Piercy becomes the first woman to run a marathon recognized by the International Association of Athletics Federations, finishing in 3:40:22."
I think the writer intended that she was the first woman to run the Boston Marathon. Not any marathon ever. That was my take, anyway.
Load More Replies...Amazing that it happened in 1966, not 1866. And we still have a long way to go with misogyny and racism.
There was a story that I read on the BBC sport website recently, about the 1928 Amsterdam Summer Games. This was the first time women were permitted to run the 800m. But the reaction afterwards was how you’d probably expect. There were stories in the New York Times saying it would ruin their bodies, turn them into men (?????), the Daily Mail said that it would age women prematurely, there were also news articles in France, Germany, Netherlands, everywhere saying this cannot continue. The next time women could run the 800m was the Tokyo Games of 1964.
More here about Gibb and Switzer who ran it the next year. One of the race organizers tried to rip her race number off but her bf and coach prevented it. Great pic. https://www.flotrack.org/articles/5063928-bobbi-gibb-kathrine-switzer-reflect-on-life-defining-boston-marathon
I think one lesson here is that racism, sexism, and the "isms", aren't as widely embraced as it seems. Not to say there wasn't a significant portion of people don't hold these terrible views. I think that if you are the kind of person that takes a "live and let live" world view, you also are the kind of person that doesn't feel entitled to tell people what to do with their own lives. Whereas a sexist/racist has lots of ideas about what and how the object of their hate should doing. Hence they always seem to get the head start by getting into politics. It is only when hater starts making laws hurting people do the live and let live crowd step in to government to stop it. We need a system that requires basic human decency before being allowed to hold public office. If we had that, the ugly group we have now would never have held office.
Racists and bigots are able to view someone who is of the group(s) they hate positively, especially in light of exceptional behavior/actions/talent, etc. (see: they're one of the "good ones"). It's one thing to cheer on an outstanding display of athleticism or a musician's performance and even celebrate the shattering of a gender or racial barrier if they are the first "of their kind" to do so in the particular event, occasion, or venue. It is completely another for the same people to welcome the Black family who just moved in next door, their daughter's Hispanic boyfriend, or to react to their child coming out as LGTBQ+ with an outpouring of love and acceptance. I do share your desire for some barrier to public office for Neanderthals and troglodytes, but I fear ever-shifting definitions of human decency depending on who's doing the defining, and have no desire to see such an arbitrary and ambiguous standard attain the force of law.
Load More Replies...There’s a photo of some male runners trying to stop her, violently. You know, for her “safety”.
If they ever make a movie about her and they DON'T cast Margot Robbie, you'll know they couldn't afford her.
This is known as one of medicine’s most incredible moments. In 1922, at the University of Toronto, scientists went to a hospital ward with children who were comatose and dying from diabetic keto-acidosis. Imagine a room full of parents sitting at the bedside waiting for the inevitable death of their child. The scientists went from bed to bed and injected the children with the new purified extract - insulin. As they began to inject the last comatose child, the first child injected began to awaken. One by one, all of the children awoke from their diabetic comas. A room of death and gloom, became a place of joy and hope. They had also given the patent to the university of Toronto for just one dollar, so no company would be able to monopolize insulin production Thank You Dr. Banting and Dr. Best! Follow @historic for more! Photo Credits- Library and Archives Canada.
And yet people in a first world country die because insulin is too expensive...
It is amusing calling USA the first world country nowadays
Load More Replies...And now people skip insulin doses because they can't afford it because some people think giving everyone healthcare not attached to full time employment is socialism or communism. There's a sign on the side of the road near the Family Dollar on my walk to breakfast with a phone number to call to sell your diabetic test strips. WTF is wrong with the USA?
Additionally.... if you are allergic and get stung by a bee... better hope you have that $750.00 EpiPen. But they are passing out Narcan like candy on Halloween. I'm not saying they aren't worth saving, but why isn't the person stung by a bee worth saving too?
Load More Replies...Sadly, many people in the United States cannot afford this life-saving medication because of the outrageously high cost. It is disgusting that people in the United States have to bankrupt themselves to get medical care.
Omg. My uncle Leonard Thompson, was the first patient. He was the test case prior to this widespread distribution event. So proud of you Uncle.
I almost died from diabetic ketoacidosis. I was misdiagnosed by my family doctor, he said I didn't need insulin, just metformin. I ended up in the hospital 3 weeks later, almost in a diabetic coma. Spent two weeks in the hospital because of his misdiagnosis. I kept telling him that there was something very wrong with me because I did not feel well at all during those three weeks. He said it was all in my head, that there was nothing wrong with me. That guy almost killed me, he's not my doctor anymore. It was right at the start of the pandemic and doctor's appointments were over the phone in my town, that's why didn't get a second opinion. And I trusted him at that point.
"so no company would be able to monopolize insulin production". Yeah? So what the F*CK happened?
Some good news regarding insulin prices in he U.S: https://theintercept.com/2023/08/29/insulin-medicare-drug-price-negotiation/
The case would be different if we had more resources available to us from that time.
"If it was possible to have a picture of that frame of the Middle Ages, we would probably be able to catch some of these untold stories, which, in the end, are history too," Dr. Di Stefano said.
"Indeed, pictures offer exactly this. The possibility to uncover a glimpse of society that is not explored. A window into common people’s lives that is often shadowed by famous historical figures. Pictures can add new perspectives and open new discussions about known events of the past and the people who were part of it."
Simone Segouin, mostly known by her codename, Nicole Minet, was only 18-years-old when the Germans invaded. Her first act of rebellion was to steal a bicycle from a German military administration, and to slice the tires of all of the other bikes and motorcycles so they couldn't pursue her. She found a pocket of the Resistance and joined the fight, using the stolen bike to deliver messages between Resistance groups. She was an extremely fast learner and quickly became an expert at tactics and explosives. She led teams of Resistance fighters to capture German troops, set traps, and sabotage German equipment. As the war dragged on, her deeds escalated to derailing German trains, blocking roads, blowing up bridges and helping to create a German-free path to help the Allied forces retake France from the inside. She was never caught. Segouin was present at the liberation of Chartres on August 23, 1944, and then the liberation of Paris two days later. She was promoted to lieutenant and awarded several medals, including the Croix de Guerre. After the war, she studied medicine and became a pediatric nurse. She is still going strong, and this October (2021) she will turn 96.
She lived a real long life. Made it to 97 at least, she outlived betty white and roughly 95% of the WWII veterans
Load More Replies...Where's the Christopher Nolan movie about this woman? Lol. That would be awesome?
The word hero gets thrown around too easily IMHO. Heroes save lives with little regard for the threat that may be there for theirs. Sporting achievements may be impressive but are very rarely heroic, they aren’t fit to tie the laces of the real heroes. Simone Seguoin walked the walk and talked the talk, even going on to do a selfless job after the war. The Nazis will have put a high price on her head, that would’ve put her at high risk every time she left anywhere safe. Proper. A proper hero.
This is such a powerful photo. It was taken in April, 1945, by Major Clarence Benjamin and shows a train of Jewish prisoners that had been intercepted by Allied Forces. This is the moment they learned that the train would not be heading to a Concentration Camp and they had been liberated.
Neither will I get tired of seeing this picture.
Load More Replies...Their emotions must be so powerful... imagine being free from the horror they already saw
I know what you mean, but the caption says the train was intercepted before it got to a concentration camp. They would have seen lots of horror elsewhere though. Oh, unless they were going from one camp to another.
Load More Replies...Hope, yes. Joy? Not so much, relieved is the better word. Theres hardly any joy knowing most of your family, if not even some of your family, got wiped out or are about to get wiped out.
Load More Replies...There's so much emotion etched into the face of the woman holding the hand of her daughter. I cannot even begin to fathom the emotions that these people felt.
That poor baby girl and all those poor people. It’s amazing that they escaped deaths grip! You can just see the relief in that mothers eyes
In 1968, several months after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. had been assassinated, Mister (Fred) Rogers quietly did something at that time that was quite unthinkable - he not only hired a black man to take on a regular role in his children’s television program, “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” - and asked him to play a police officer. He would also regularly invite Officer Clemmons to cool his feet in the same pool - together. Years later, in 1993, Officer Clemmons would make his last appearance on Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood. In a touching moment, Mister Rogers once again invited Officer Clemmons, to join him at a pool in the front yard. Two friends, one white, one black, soaked their feet together and discussed the importance of friendship and being kind to one another. As they said their goodbyes, Officer Clemmons emotionally thanked Mister Rogers and said, “I like being a human being right here and now.” A great reminder that wherever there is a human being, there is an opportunity for kindness.
its so hard to believe things like this were controversial a little over 50 years ago. On the other hand, looks like we made an u turn and heading back for those "good old times" :-(
As a mirror image to my above comment… absolutely disgusting.
Load More Replies...Famed photographer Sebastião Ribeiro Salgado and his wife Lélia started a project to plant two million trees and now, 20 years later, the seeds have grown into a lush forest in the Minas Gerais region of Brazil.
I love seeing trees grow back, but I always wonder where the water comes from. I know that large areas of forest can generate their own water cycle, but in this case the area looked barren.
Plus, about 25% of Brazil seats over the imesurable Guarani Aquifer, which is the second largest aquifer -underground water source - on the planet (it is ridiculously large). In the city I was born, about half the houses used water straight from their own gardens, for free, which meant a lot of swimming pools. Nowadays, those are far more rare, since government regulated water usage. There is a lot more danger of farmers contaminating the water than of overuse.
Load More Replies...There should be a new worldwide law, every time a baby is born, or a person dies, a tree is planted. Imagine how many trees we could have :D
We need to follow this couple's excellent example and we can replant areas for wildlife to live!
Mississippi’s first interracial marriage, August 1970.
well, legally-recognized interracial marriage...just after loving v. virginia decision ruled antimiscegination laws unconstitutional...
That was 53 yrs ago. That is a long time time to me.. I was going on 11 at the time.
Load More Replies...Both look very happy! (But the sideburns are 👀 head turning)
Only when the word interracial is no longer in our language will anything really have changed.
In 1988, Israel Kamakawiwo'ole called the recording studio at 3am and said he had to record a song right away. 15 minutes later, Israel arrived at the studio. The studio owner, Milan Bertosa said, "And in walks the largest human being I had seen in my life." A security guard gave the 500 pounds man a large steel chair to sit on. Milan said, "Then I put up some microphones, do a quick sound check, roll tape, and the first thing he does is 'Somewhere Over the Rainbow.' He played and sang, one take, and it was over."
I love his version. They play it a lot on the Margaritaville channel on XM radio. My husband doesn't like it because it makes him sad because 50 First Dates makes him cry!
I LOVE that movie. When my husband was deployed in Iraq 50 first dates just came out. He called and told me to watch it, that he would do everything for me that Henry did for Lucy. We lost him on deployment in 07. Now when I need to hear him say he loves me, I watch that movie. ❤️
Load More Replies...He really did. It was a strong voice, but delicate at the same time. Hard to describe.
Load More Replies...He was so greatly respected in Hawaii that after his death, the flags were flown at half-mast, and his casket was laid in the state capitol building. His funeral was attended by over 10 thousand people, when his ashes were scattered into the ocean.
On February 8th, 1943, Nazis hung 17-year-old Lepa Radić for being a Yugoslavian Partisan during World War II. When they asked her the names of her companions, she replied: “You will know them when they come to avenge me.”
This is heartachingly sad. Disturbingly, nationalism and fascism is on the rise around the world and we all need to stand up and speak up against hatred or it will just keep on repeating.
"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing"
Load More Replies...I know that I could never be that brave. The picture gives me awful feelings in my stomach
Me too. And she looks so calm. I'm sure she terrified but she is not showing it
Load More Replies...Every inch and ounce a true hero , Lepa you were right . Your compatriots came for you and avenged your murder .
In 1912, Jim Thorpe, an American Indian, had his running shoes stolen on the morning of his Olympic track and field events. He found this mismatched pair of shoes in the garbage and ran in them to win two Olympic gold medals that day.
He was a Native American or a member of the Sac and Fox Nation. There is no such thing as “American Indians”.
It is a term that Native Americans have used to describe themselves in the past, though: American Indian Movement https://g.co/kgs/ixvepu
Load More Replies...For fūcks sake, Somewhere in Ohio was just trying to look on the brighter side of things, is it such a crime not to be depressed all the time?
It was a really, really tone deaf comment considering this man was a victim of the same racists who had conquered his people's land and committed genocide on them for centuries. Then trying to make him the poster boy for the "American spirit" that allowed all of that.
Load More Replies...And Avery Brundage was insanely jealous of him, and did everything he could to destroy Thorpe's reputation, records, and achievements. It's a short-odds bet that Brundage stole his shoes.
And because he played one season of semi-pro baseball to help out his family, had his medals revoked by racist Avery Brundage. The Olympics was started by and run, for most of its history, by the rich. Elites who could afford to train at a sport were the first Olympians and they did not like being showed up.
One shoe was given to him by a teammate and he found the other in the trash. https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/jim-thorpe-shoes-olympics/ Also on the team were George Patton and a Hawaiian swimmer named Duke Kahanamoku.
The couple on the Woodstock album cover is still together 50 years later.
Unfortunately, the Woman (Bobbi Ercoline) passed away back in March, at the age of 73. They were married for 54 years. But they are immortalized by the album cover :) woodstock-...69ff4c.png
*edit because for some reason it cut off half the comment. Iirc, the linked picture was taken at the field where Woodstock was held, "recreating" the iconic image. It's really wholesome :)
Load More Replies..."For a small amount of perspective at this moment, imagine you were born in 1900. When you are 14, World War I starts, and ends on your 18th birthday with 22 million people killed. Later in the year, a Spanish Flu epidemic hits the planet and runs until you are 20. Fifty million people die from it in those two years. Yes, 50 million. When you're 29, the Great Depression begins. Unemployment hits 25%, global GDP drops 27%. That runs until you are 33. The country nearly collapses along with the world economy. When you turn 39, World War II starts. You aren’t even over the hill yet. When you're 41, the United States is fully pulled into WWII. Between your 39th and 45th birthday, 75 million people perish in the war and the Holocaust kills six million. At 52, the Korean War starts and five million perish. At 64 the Vietnam War begins, and it doesn’t end for many years. Four million people die in that conflict. Approaching your 62nd birthday you have the Cuban Missile Crisis, a tipping point in the Cold War. Life on our planet, as we know it, could well have ended. Great leaders prevented that from happening. As you turn 75, the Vietnam War finally ends. Think of everyone on the planet born in 1900. How do you survive all of that? A kid in 1985 didn’t think their 85 year old grandparent understood how hard school was. Yet those grandparents (and now great grandparents) survived through everything listed above. Perspective is an amazing art. Let’s try and keep things in perspective. Let’s be smart, help each other out, and we will get through all of this. In the history of the world, there has never been a storm that lasted. This too, shall pass." Photo by Lewis Hine
It would take a pretty flexible person to encounter all those things on a level that really made an impact. Esp Korean and Vietnam wars was not something people globally had a big involvment in. I spoke to people in the 80.s about their memories of hard times. (Sweden). They where like, "OK, the flu was bad, but the two ww wasnt really something we endured, it was mostly a lack of coffe and following it distantly in the newspapers. The Depression didnt get so bad here, life went on pretty much as usual, and the American wars och cold war wasnt something we really thought about"
The birth lottery. Many people where I live (the US) seem to think that somehow makes them special. I believe that a good person can be born anywhere, under any circumstances, and through good acts and perseverance, become 'special.'
Load More Replies...There are individuals on every part of the world. Struggling with injustice, corrupted scheming and lies spread by those, who have no shame. If you separating the world in parts, than you are the part of the problem.
Load More Replies...This was my grandparents' lives, although from a British perspective. My Grandmother, all her life, would remember the Titanic disaster as if it had happened yesterday. 'All those poor people', she'd say. She was 12 when it happened, and it was the first major international tragedy she could remember. She didn't say anything at all about the two world wars she lived through.
My grandparents and great grandparents didn't either. It was too emotionallu turbulent for their generations and many suffered PTSD (or shell shock) as it was then know. It was a 'get busy living' attitude. The men returning were returning to children they had never met or that didn't remember them. There was too much to adjust to.
Load More Replies...My grandfather was born, 1895, died 1982. Saw creation of the automobile, first airplane and the shuttle
That's an interesting perspective. When I'm having a s**t day, I try to think of Tsutomu Yamaguchi. He was the guy that survived both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombs, within three days of each other. I guess somebody really wanted him dead. Or he was pretty unlucky. Probably the latter. He seemed like a nice guy actually. But yeah, I don't get worked up about a late train anymore.
Either that or someone really wanted him to live since he survived both and lived to be 93.
Load More Replies...The number of deaths in the holocaust is wrong. Yes, six million jews were killed at the camps, but the total number of deaths would be propably near 20 million
It was about 11 million - 6 million Jews and 5 million others.
Load More Replies...Dresses made from old sacks I think... heard a story about a company adding prints to their sacks once they knew they were being repurposed as kids clothing
A member of the 369th Infantry Regiment (aka "Harlem Hellfighters") holds a puppy that he saved during World War I (1918)
I love these kinds of heroes who don't overlook animals. So wholesome. 💗
Fighting under French command because General Pershing told his French counterparts that they were a "constant menace for Americans"... It was the American unit that fought for the longest duration in WWI. It was also awarded the highest decoration for a military unit by the French (nothing from the USA of course), not counting the numerous individual French awards.
Thus photo always makes me deeply sad. If you stare into this man’s face you see so much pain, knowing white folks didn’t deem men of his colour important enough to armor properly. Deemed important enough to die for the country, but not enough to give the same rights as white men. So much dishonor this man and many alongside him must have seen…
I find it interesting how they were allowed to fight in a war, but not allowed to join a public swimming pool up to almost 50 years later…
Exactly! And I find it "interesting" - and incomprehensible! - that they needed to be "allowed" to do anything they wanted to do! How any (supposedly) human being can look upon another human being as a lesser form of humanity simply because of something as inconsequential as the color of their skin (or anything else, for that matter) - this I have never been able to understand. But then, I always was color blind...
Load More Replies...Members of the Blackfoot Tribe in Glacier National Park, 1913.
Can they give it back to them? Can we put the politicians in the reservations?
How elegant! Like they are calling to nature. It is such a powerful picture.
Anne Frank (1929-1945)
Very profound. What a massive waste of human potential WW1 and WW2 were. Every war come to that. Imagine what our world would be like now if throughout millenia every human was free to make a contribution.
Even nowadays is not every human free to make a contribution. Imagine yourself being borned iin some remote village in Chad. The chances you'll never know what proper, higher education, stable phone and internet-connection means, are higher, than the chances of knowing. And maybe, giving these -for us- now basic possibilities, you may find out, what causes in us, humans the disease, we call cancer. But you'll never have the chances to make that contribution....
Load More Replies...Robin Williams joins the Denver Broncos Cheerleaders in 1979.
i love him and the fact that he’s SLAYING the uniform 🩷🩷
Load More Replies...He has good legs! Added to the “things I never knew about Robin Williams” pile.
That would be illegal in some states nowadays thanks to some idiots who walk among us. Vote 'em out!
Crazy. When I grew up we had a lot of people pushing stereotypes of what was feminine or masculine and we as kids were allowed to watch and nothing was said. We turned out just fine. Sad to see us go backwards. Robin Williams certainly did ok with Mrs Doubtfire. John Travolta as Edna Turnblad in Grease was wild. Lucille Balled dressed as a man several timesIt wasn’t all for laughs though. Many celebrities did not conform to traditional gender dress codes. Grace Jones, Boy George, David Bowie, some famous drag queens such as RuPaul and Divine, became quite famous during the era.
Load More Replies...Next year it will be 10 years since we lost this great man. And every time I see a pic of him it still shocks me when I remember he is gone. So surreal to this day.
When Jim Carrey met Stephen Hawking.
He was amazing. I’m reading one of his books right now and there’s clever bits of humour sprinkled throughout it :)
Load More Replies...I speak for all people who use a wheelchair for mobility: those of you who are able-bodied aren't as clever as you think when you pretend we ran over your foot.
what if you did run over my foot? (my lil bro once did that with a go-cart)
Load More Replies...A father comforts his son, David Kirby, on his deathbed in Ohio, 1989. Widely considered the photo that changed the face of AIDS.
The AIDS crisis was a deliberate act of social warfare by the Reagan administration, on ideological and religious basis. In early 1980 Reagan's spokesperson was publicly laughed off the "Gay Plague" at a media event, and after about 5000 confirmed deaths Reagan stated he had no concerns on the issue. When the Congress authorized emergency response, Reagan's men tried to fight the bill and ultimately he slashed the CDC funding to prevent any activity. in 1985, 5 years and 8000 deaths into the epidemic, the president repelled a CDC's proposal for a prevention plan. Only in 1987 Reagan authorized a token presidential commission, led by the wildly incompentent and biased Admiral Watkins, who surprised everyone by coming out with some sensible suggestions (also thanks to a certain dr. Fauci being part of the technical panel). Reagan stalled any initiative until he went out of office.
I remember how afraid everyone was of AIDS, how quickly it killed. Children with AIDS weren't allowed to go to school for fear of spreading the disease. Many TV shows had episodes where a character may have AIDS, showing how the other characters responded. Life Goes On and The Golden Girls both did well with those. A lot of the hate was because of the many homosexuals who got it, but a lot was simply absolute terror. Nowadays, AIDS is a condition rather than an immediate death sentence. It's amazing to me how quickly it was brought mostly under control. When we try, we are truly amazing. It makes me proud of the human race.
I found the Degrassi High episodes very impactful. I was watching them in the early 2000s (they aired in the 80s/90s), and I don't think I had seen it addressed on tv before that. If the Australian Broadcasting Corporation hadn't aired the repeats ahead of the new version, I wonder when I would have come across anything like it.
Load More Replies...United Colors of Benneton used this picture in an advertisement. Brave company, so much respect.
Yes, I was thinking of that. The (printed) advertisement did not go too well with the public.
Load More Replies...Dear Sydney. I think of you often. I think of the if only…… if only a lot of things. 💔🏳️🌈⚽️🐣🐇 Sydney loved soccer and Easter.
I feel that Freddie Mercury's death did more to nake homosexuality acceptable and show the public ithat AIDS can affect anyone, even the rich, famous and popular.
Wow - this one really got me in the feels. What a powerful photo and so very sad.
Terry Fox, after losing one of his legs to cancer; embarked on an east to west coast marathon in Canada to raise money for cancer research. He made it 143 days into his run before he lost his battle with cancer at the age of 22 - 1980
Canadian Hero that still inspires with the Terry Fox run held in elementary schools every year.
It’s almost time for the Terry Fox run now, just a few weeks away I think :)
Load More Replies...Out of curiosity, how far across Canada did he make it? I feel awful because this man deserves recognition but I had not heard of him prior to this post. But thankfully the comments here inform me that he is well recognized and respected within Canada.
He ran the equivalent of a marathon EVERY day for 143 days, over 5,300km. He raised millions and his legacy runs continue to raise money every year.
Load More Replies...Fun fact, my aunt is working to try and find a cure for cancer. I really hope she finds one.
The run is coming up in September. It is held in many countries now. I remember the run. I remember when he visited Toronto. I remember when he stopped. I remember when he died. His funeral was televised all over Canada. There is a statue of him in my “ hometown”. Port Coquitlam B.C.
One of the earliest photos showing a Native American with a wolf - unlike the myths created about wolves by settlers, Indians maintained a close and respectful relationship with wolves.
There’s a reason we domesticated wolves into dogs. There’s also a reason cats domesticated us. Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy suggests mice are in charge. Nope. Cats. Cats are generally in charge.
We sleep on their towels for a reason.
Load More Replies...When I would visit my babysitter’s parents on the rez, her son and I would visit the kids up the street. Their uncle came to visit. I told him he had a nice dog. Nope, it was a nice wolf. The wolf laid down on the porch and I got to scratch his belly. His person would let him go out at night to be a wolf. He would come back in the morning and be the the most regal of animals.
Be kind and respectful to the natural world around you and it will return the favor
Pandas, I'm sorry for asking, isn't Indians a bad word when used to signify the native Americans? I'm not from USA or Canada, that's why I asked. Thanks
Imsouravmitra, First Nation is, what I believe, the correct term.
Load More Replies...Myths created about wolves by settlers? What are those myths, exactly?
They weren't exactly "myths" so much as the settlers outright refusing to adapt their lifestyle to be in harmony with them, labeling them as enemies of settlement and pushing for their extermination as a threat to livestock.
Load More Replies...A portrait of the Twin Towers in NYC made with the faces of the victims of the 9/11 attacks on the towers.
I tried to find the name of the artist or a source but couldn't. This, from Igram, however, is the highest resolution image I found so you might use it.
Load More Replies...I've still got a tourist brochure and a box of matches from the restaurant at the top.
Load More Replies...The number of people who died is staggering, but I have always wanted to know how many people actually escaped from the two towers. Has anybody found that out?
2,977 victims, 18-25 survivors (I’m getting mixed answers) including 15 rescue workers.
Load More Replies...A young boy playing the banjo with his best friend, circa early 1900s.
Barack Obama with his mother on Halloween (1964)
don't know why someone downvoted you for stating your own opinion. i find it very annoying when people downvote because they disagree. not the point of a downvote.
Load More Replies...This photo made me realize Barack and I are almost the same age. Just googled - I am within about three weeks of being a year older than him. Spoiler - he amounted to more in life. LOL
Nah. You have your own gifts to share and I'm certain you're loved for who you are ❤️
Load More Replies...As an Aussie, I also miss the time when you had a mentally stable president. (I do mean Obama.)
Load More Replies...Barack is in this photo? All I see is a dashing pirate and his first mate.
The man's name on the left was Horace Greasley. He was a British POW famous for escaping over 200 times to visit his girlfriend, a local Jewish girl. Why did he keep going back? Loyalty. He returned every time with extra food or other contraband to share with his fellow captives. Greasley spent 5 years as a prisoner of war, during which time he served as camp barber and worked in the marble quarries. Following capture, the men were forced to march for ten weeks from France to Poland. The men suffered deplorable conditions and spent a winter, in temperatures as low as -40C, lodged in an old horse stable. Those who survived the march and train transfer were beaten, tortured, and starved. Greasley was once beaten so badly he lay unconscious for 2 days. In 2008, his biography, "Do the Birds Still Sing in Hell?" was published. Two years after its release, he died at age 91. When I see this photo, I always admire the defiance in his face. He refused to be broken. Be that guy. Oh and by the way, the German officer he's staring down is Heinrich Himmler.
Great story, but the guy in the photograph isn't him. The photo was taken in Minsk, Belarus and depicts a Soviet soldier (as easily identifiable by the cap he's wearing). It was a still from a Nazi propaganda film and the picture ended up in the US National archives. When Greasley died a British newspaper (The Telegraph) used it as a stock photo to symbolise a defiant POW, and it somehow got taken literally by people.
these websites are notorious for having nonsense under their pictures.
Load More Replies...Babe Ruth posing with African American fans (1925) Babe Ruth, according to baseball historian Bill Jenkinson, was not racist. He chose to play games against “so-called Negro League teams” in 1926, 1927, 1928, and 1929, at a time when others refused to do so. Besides playing, Jenkinson said, Ruth would sit with black players in the dugouts, talk and socialize with them before and after games and mingle in the segregated stands. He scheduled games in locations where interracial competition was not only against local norms but also against the law. Babe Ruth’s daughter, Julia Ruth Stevens, said that she believes her father’s appreciation for black players hurt his chances of becoming a manager for an MLB team in the years before Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier.
I was in the stands at Yankee Stadium when Babe Ruth made his final appearance there. I had just turned 7 years old and didn't realize at the time what a momentous occasion it was. Two things have stayed with me since that day: The roar of the crowd when he appeared and the following silence of the crowd, which was like an intense spiritual experience.
Also a legendary photo was taken of that moment. A cancer riddled skinny body of a man who once evicted balls into the stands, had to support himself with a bat. A very sad picture of a legend of the sport. https://pixels.com/featured/babe-ruth-the-sultan-of-swat-retires-at-yankee-stadium-colorized-20170622-wingsdomain-art-and-photography.html
Load More Replies...Ruth was hardly the shameless rascal he's made out to have been. "Pride of the Yankees" (about the original Iron Man, Lou Gehrig) featured a 50-something Ruth playing himself, so that people believed he was always fat. (In reality, he could run out umpteen triples a year in his youth), and his reputation for drinking (he was set up breaking prohibition to stir opposition) was used to play off Gehrig's ultra-square character. (No, seriously... Gehrig was really Captain America. Compare MCU to Pride of the Yankees!) He was a sinner (he cheated on his wife amid an endless stream of party girls), but in spite of his failings, he was also a man of deep faith, having been raised as an orphan in a Catholic orphanage.
African American pitcher D¡ck Redding was so good that his fellow Georgian, Ty Cobb, reportedly refused to hit against him in batting practice. No wonder. Legend has it that D¡ck struck out Babe Ruth three times in one game on nine pitches. Says Deas: “Ruth told him if he was a white man how far he’d go in baseball.” During WW2 Satchel Paige struck Ruth out 4 times in exhibition games but to be fair, both were long past their prime by then. (Edited to show the person's name, a vernacular version of Richard)
They weren't "so-called Negro League teams", they were actually called Negro League teams.
looking at the babe, i've always thought that he was at least a 1/4 to 1/8 black...
Randall Champion accidentally touched a low-voltage line, electrifying himself and stopping his heart. A fellow linemen J.D. Thompson performed mouth-to-mouth CPR until paramedics arrived. Champion survived. This famous photo is known as "The Kiss of Life." (1967) (Photo by Rocco Morabito) Taken in 1967 by Rocco Morabito, this photo called “The Kiss of Life” shows a utility worker named J.D. Thompson giving mouth-to-mouth to co-worker Randall G. Champion after he went unconscious following contact with a low voltage line. They had been performing routine maintenance when Champion brushed one of the low voltage lines at the very top of the utility pole. His safety harness prevented a fall, and Thompson, who had been ascending below him, quickly reached him and performed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. He was unable to perform CPR given the circumstances, but continued breathing into Champion’s lungs until he felt a slight pulse, then unbuckled his harness and descended with him on his shoulder. Thompson and another worker administered CPR on the ground, and Champion was moderately revived by the time paramedics arrived, eventually making a full recovery. What’s even more incredible is Champion not only survived this thanks to Thompson, but he lived an extra 35 years. He died in 2002 at 64 years old. Thompson is still alive today. Rocco Morabito was driving on West 26th Street in July 1967 on another assignment when he saw Champion dangling from the pole. He called an ambulance and grabbed his camera. “I passed these men working and went on to my assignment”, says Morabito. “I took eight pictures at the strike. I thought I’d go back and see if I could rind another picture”. But when Morabito gets back to the linemen, “I heard screaming. I looked up and I saw this man hanging down. Oh my God. I didn’t know what to do. I took a picture right quickly. J.D. Thompson was running toward the pole. I went to my car and called an ambulance. I got back to the pole and J.D. was breathing into Champion. I backed off, way off until I hit a house and I couldn’t go any farther. I took another picture. Then I heard Thompson shouting down: He’s breathing!”.
Performing CPR is no easy feat, but from that height??? Insane. He's a real hero.
Just a little correction.... the article stated that CPR was not performed until they were both safely on the ground. He couldn't perform CPR on the pole. 👍
Load More Replies...It only takes 1.5 amps to stop the human heart. If you complete the circuit, the results are usually fatal.
Load More Replies...On November 27, 1967, a soldier of the 30th regiment of the Baekma Division (백마부대) rescues Vietnamese children at the battle of Dien Can. This soldier's name is An Sang-Byung (안상병).
There’s a terrible story about how Hugh Thompson, a helicopter pilot (and a non-commissioned officer) interrupted the My Lai massacre in Vietnam. He had the courage to stand up to the US army officer in charge who claimed his orders were to kill all the unarmed civilian occupants. He evacuated as many as he could. The murderers didn’t even see their victims as people. It’s chilling what war does to people.
A mom helping her kids beat a hard level in Super Mario Land, 1990s.
Brings up memories of me helping my "dad" beat video game puzzles.
Sorry to pry, but why is dad in quotation marks?
Load More Replies...David Bowie chatting with Freddie Mercury backstage at Live Aid, 1985.
I see three LOL (sorry, his pants are a bit tight).
Load More Replies...Again with the bulge, Freddie. At least we know he still dressed left. I wonder if Freddie was Bowie's inspiration for his Goblin King with his famous bulge. 🤣
I was just telling my husband I wish I had been alive for this concert. This had to be one of the most amazing shows ever. So many amazing artists and legends there.
Juliane Koepcke, age 17, was sucked out of an airplane after it was struck by a bolt of lightning. She fell 2 miles to the ground strapped to her seat and survived. However, she had to endure a 10-day walk through the Amazon Jungle before being rescued by a logging team. Out of 93 passengers and crew, Juliane was the only survivor of the LANSA flight 508 crash that took place December 24th, 1971
10 days in the Amazon, no supplies, no tent/protection. Damn, that's amazing.
you forgot "fell out of plane" 0_0 usually it ends there.
Load More Replies...She broke her foot/leg and I believe shoulder too. So not only did she survive falling out of a plane with no chute, and then walking 10 days through a jungle filled with predators, poisonous creatures, and disease, she did it while suffering what most of us would be in an ambulance on our way to the hospital for.
Saw a movie when I was young, still too powerful images that will prevent me to re-watch it.
I re-watched the movie on YouTube. It's still a powerful story
Load More Replies..."When I Fell From the Sky" by Juliane Koepcke is a well written book on her miraculous story.
I remember reading short version of that book in the Reader's Digest. I seem to remember reading that the searchers found evidence of other survivors, but their bodies were never found.
Load More Replies...I want to meet her! That would be an awesome movie and i bet she write a book - me needs to research
But not, presumably, with the other passengers and crew of the plane...
Load More Replies...A powerful photo showing a priest holding a dying soldier while bullets are fired around them, Venezuela, 1962
Of all the incredible photos in this section, this is the one which moved me to tears
In 1964 a group of high school kids skipped class to go see the Beatles. They didn't get into the concert but while they were driving Ringo pulled up beside them and snapped their picture. When they told their friends no one believed them. Fast forward 50 years and Ringo publishes a book of his photographs. They were in it. They retook the shot as a look today.
What about dude number six behind the one on the very right? You can see his face over the shoulder...
Who is the guy in the very back right hand corner? You can barely see his face
German Soldiers React To Footage Of Concentration Camps, 1945.
Paul Valéry with additions from Fernand Raynaud: "War is the massacre of good people who do not know each other for the benefit of bad people who know each other but do not massacre each other"
Is the context here that they didn't know the conditions prior to seeing this footage or just shame at being called out on it?
There is an excellent film called Labyrinth of Lies about the next generation of German people who realise what their previous generations did. Most of us grew up being taught about the Holocaust in school but it was hidden for so long.
100 year old picture show how amazing the traditional Rwandan hairstyle was.
And noone has started that again? I suspect they slept on some kind of neck support to keep hair intact?
This reminds me of Chris Rock character’s hairstyle in the movie “The Fifth Element”
Traditional for both men and women? If just for men, then the caption is annoying.
Amasunzu is worn by both men and unmarried women :)
Load More Replies...A young man demonstrating against low pay for teachers, ca. 1930. “I left school to earn $21 a week. My teacher’s pay is $17.78 a week.” Photo: Paul Thompson.
But now the New Klan is forcing teachers to say that slavery was ok but being gay is not.
Load More Replies...Seams that it‘s better not to go to school in some countries. No student debt + higher earnings? Well…
1967: Kathrine Switzer was the first woman to run the Boston marathon. After realizing a woman was running, organizer Jock Semple went after her to stop her. However, Switzers boyfriend and other runners provided a protective shield to protect her for the entire marathon.
Bobbi Gibb was not officially registered for the marathon but Katherine was.
Load More Replies...as if that total turd of a nasty human being was fast enough for her! Glad the others stood up for her. 1967. JFC.
obbi Gibb was actually the first woman to run the race in 1966. Unable to enter officially (the race director wrote back to tell her that women were not physiologically capable of running marathon distances) she took a bus for three and a half days across the country and ran it anyway. Switzer was the first woman to officially enter and run the race.
Robin Williams, 1974
I grew up pretending Robin Williams was my real father, and the abusive man living in my house was just a cruel demon. I miss you Robin.
Nan-nu, nan-nu. Doubt if the spelling is correct but you get it.
Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. in college, fall of 1937
He served with distinction in WW2 and was awarded the Silver Star for pulling a wounded fellow crewman to safety while under fire. All four of FDR's sons served during the war.
Wow I feel really weird for thinking he’s cute…he like, gone now…but he was a cutie back then
He looks like the kind of person they could cast in a movie if they needed a young, handsome, rich guy. Like if they made a movie about his life and cast this guy and you watch the movie and think - yeah, they always cast the pretty boys for these roles but I bet he was more average looking in real life. TLDR: He has a nice smile
Only three years older than JFK, and possessing the same level of charisma, Jr.’s political career didn’t have a similar trajectory to JFK’s. Ostensibly because of a lack of drive, but more likely because he’d crossed party lines to support Eisenhower rather than Adlai Stevenson.
Wow. I'll bet he never spent Saturday nights staring at the four walls in his dorm room.
How is this the first time I've seen this photo? A little disappointed in myself.. So. Fricking. Handsome.
Princess Diana on a yacht in Portofino, Italy, in August 1997. She died on the 31st of the same month
This photo is disgusting. The reason she died was because the paparazzi relentlessly persued her in a complete disregard for her privacy. The person who took this photo might have even been part of the mob that led to her death.
Actually she died because she wasn’t wearing a seatbelt. Everyone wearing one survived. Everyone without was killed
Load More Replies...Actually this photo reminds us that life is short - one min you're enjoying your life and the next you're dead. RIP Princess D
This is a colorized photo of 16 year old German soldier, Hans-Georg Henke, crying as he is captured by the US 9th Army in Germany on April 3rd, 1945. He was a member of the Luftwaffe anti-air squad and burst into tears as his world crumbled around him. His father died in 1938, but when his mother died in 1944 leaving the family destitute, Hans-Georg had to find work in order to support the family. At 15 years of age he joined the Luftwaffe
Hitler's last ditch, the "Volkssturm" (translates to "people's storm"). Old man and children, poorly equipped and with little to no training forced to continue the war, just to add up death and suffering on both sides. And to follow his agenda that said "if Germany looses the war nobody deserves to life through it"
Load More Replies...quick google learned that he was sent home by the US and died in 1997. No idea what he made of his life, though.
"Joined" is an interesting word for being drafted in the so-called Volkssturm of kids and elderly.
Henke survived the Second World War and went on to become a member of the Communist Party in East Germany. He continued to tell this picture's story until his death on October 9, 1997, at the age of 69.
In the Battle of Berlin, there were Hitler Youth as young as 12 operating artillery. I went to school with a guy whose dad was captured by the Americans - he was a 14 year old combatant.
Also... Men were given 2 choices: Go to the Front, or be shot. My Grandfather was one of them. It was his only (slim) chance of survival. Not only did he end up at the Front, but spent 3 years in a Russian POW camp. Henke is probably crying because finally, the nightmare is over.
Personally most powerful scenes from Schindler's list are the German officer portrayed by Ralph Fiennes, when he was sending his eldest son to fight the war. Proud father of victorious country. When he was sending his youngest son, he was broken mand who already lost two sons in which he realised was pointless and lost war.
Yesterday September 10th, 18 years ago 246 people went to sleep in preparation for their morning flights. 2,606 people went to sleep in preparation for work in the morning. 343 firefighters went to sleep in preparation for their morning shift. 60 police officers went to sleep in preparation for morning patrol. 8 paramedics went to sleep in preparation for the morning shift. None of them saw past 10:00am Sept 11, 2001. In one single moment life may never be the same. As you live and enjoy the breaths you take today and tonight before you go to sleep in preparation for your life tomorrow, kiss the ones you love, snuggle a little tighter, and never take one second of your life for granted.
This is really sad. But the War on Terror should not have happened . An eye for a eye leaves everyone blind.
The "terror" was just an excuse. That war was about oil. Even conservatives are beginning to admit that.
Load More Replies...this again what about 2 million innocent lives in Iraq & almost 0.5 million in Afghanistan ?
Exactly. I feel for the 9/11 victims but I feel even more bad for the victims of the War on Terror. (I think that's what you call it) . At least america has healed from it. It might take decades for Iraq and Afghanistan to heal. War on terror? I think a better name is is War of Terror
Load More Replies...I saw the second plane hit because my employer shut down our office after the first hit as his intuition was terrorist attack. Remember it was thought to be an accident until then? Some of my friends worked there and I wish I hadn't seen it.
Load More Replies...Watching this unfold in high-school was... I don't have words. The poor teachers were traumatized too. Everything was awful.
Yup. Freshman year of high school. None of the teachers would tell us what was going on but they were watching news updates in between classes.
Load More Replies...Don't forget to mention all the other massive catastrophe where life was snuffed out without warning, all do with some male posturing and trying to take control. How dare you think that the world revolves around one catastrophe.
The creator of the popular cartoon Shrek, William Steig, drew his character from the professional wrestler Maurice Tillet. The real prototype knew 14 languages, played chess brilliantly, and despite his frightening face and great strength at first glance, he was a very modest and friendly man. He was born in 1903 in Russia, in the Urals, into a French family, which in 1917 returned to France in connection with the revolution.
Also, "frightening face" is a poor choice of words.
Load More Replies...Acromegaly is a disability. Calling his face "frightening" is ableist and mean
Queen meets the Queen, 1974
these websites never have good background info. You are obviously correct.
Load More Replies...Jeannette Charles, meet the bulge in Freddie Mercurys pants 🫣😲
Don't stop him now, he's having such a good time. We're seeing his balls.
Load More Replies...Freddy: Get me the tightest, penis compressionest, testicle grippingest pair of pants in my wardrobe! But let's keep it formal and leave enough room for my shins. I'm meeting The Queen, afterall.
Yes, they're both slaying (even if that isn't the real queen of England
‘We are dying from overthinking. We are slowly killing ourselves by thinking about everything. Think. Think. Think. You can never trust the human mind anyway. It's a death trap.’ - Anthony Hopkins.
You need to listen to this man, just don't let him invite you over for dinner.
We are dying of repeating mindless exclamations, of being driven by emotions, without second thought!
Wonder if this was the picture on his psychologist business card
Rysstad, Norway, 1888 - 2013
As an American I agree, and you shouldn't be downvoted for your comment. It's not rude, or disrespectful. It's the truth.
Load More Replies...Definitely not here in the USA. Lush country side? Pffffft- lookit that view! How many houses can we build?
Are you kidding me? USA is huge. Bucolic scenes like this are all over this country.
Load More Replies...Julia Stiles, Heath Ledger, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and Larissa Oleynik take a polaroid selfie on the set of 10 Things I Hate About You, 1999.
The way that photo looks - the quality not the subjects - is why I roll my eyes that in the digital age some people want to use polaroid film. Back when it was our only option if you wanted to see a photo 'right now' but the quality was never as good as a decent traditional film camera.
I know polaroid cameras are a bit of a fad again, but I like my instax 300 for the colour blends and that it develops fast. It's sometimes nice to be able to hand a tangible photo to someone minutes after taking it. Maybe it's just me :)
Load More Replies...On this day in history, September 11th 2001 President Bush is interrupted at 9:07 a.m. during a school visit in Sarasota, Florida., by Andrew Card, his chief of staff, and informed that a second plane has hit the World Trade Center.
To be fair, that was some pretty heavy information to take in. His actions in the years following should be condemned more so than this moment.
As per my comment above, both his actions in the years following and in the year before should be condemned. This photo is basically the only point when he acted like a sensible person.
Load More Replies...I remember this moment like it was yesterday. My now 23 year old, sound asleep. My EX-husband (you'll know why in a moment) calls the house... I'm in tears, he can barely understand me... and he asks me "what's wrong" (really?) and I can barely get the words out, and asked, "have you not seen the news?" and I sh*t you not, his calm and cool response to me is... "yeah, what? did you know someone there?" I SCREAMED: "I feel like I know EVERYONE there!!" Never, EVER looked at him the same again.
i think everyone would have had that same "oh s**t!" panic face in his shoes
It was picture day at my school in Texas. The teachers snapped at us to be quiet when we weren't being particularly rambunctious. I didn't really understand what happened until my mom picked my sister and I up early from school and explained it to us (I was the oldest in fifth grade). It was also my friend's older sister's birthday. She thought everyone hated her after they celebrated my friend's birthday the day before. They were born two years apart but their birthdays are one after the other.
I had a VERY "War of the Worlds" experience on the day 9/11 happened. I was at a work conference and we were at a cafe having coffee. When I walked by the bar, I heard the radio and thought at first it was some sort of show. Then I sort of stopped to listen....and realized it was not some sort of radio play. I ran back to my work colleagues and started frantically telling them about it. They thought I was being overly dramatic and overreacting...until we turned on the TV. One woman had a family member who worked in the Twin Towers and started panicing for his safety. I live in Stockholm, Sweden. That is how this event touched everyone in some way.
This is a look of pure shock. He handled that moment very well. Nodding, digesting what he just heard, didn’t panic. He would have been a great president if he kept his cool instead of panicking and starting the b******t war on terror.
It's utter incompetence, he was warned several times and froze in place when he was supposed to start leading.
Load More Replies...A mom uses a trash can to contain her baby while she crochets in the park, 1969.
Marilyn Monroe without makeup, 1960.
The RMS Queen Elizabeth pulling into New York with service men returning home after the end of World War 2, 1945.
I would not want to have been the plumber who had to deal with the stopped up toilets!
Chichén Itzá when it was discovered in 1892 vs. Present day. Chichén Itzá is a complex of Mayan ruins on Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula. A massive step pyramid, known as El Castillo or Temple of Kukulcan, dominates the ancient city, which thrived from around 600 A.D. to the 1200s. Graphic stone carvings survive at structures like the ball court, Temple of the Warriors and the Wall of the Skulls. Nightly sound-and-light shows illuminate the buildings' sophisticated geometry.
And now, it's a genuine tourist trap. Those nightly sound and light shows are punctuated with the locals hawking their goods at the top of their lungs. "CHEAPER THAN WALMART!" And when it rains, out come the plastic ponchos for sale... which are most definitely NOT cheaper than Walmart. My favourite is that piece of wood they try to sell you that, when you blow into it, sounds like a jaguar or cheetah. They honk on those every 1.5 minutes because God forbid you should ever be able to hear your tour guide with a megaphone. If they could clear the grounds of those folks... put them outside the gates, so the tourists can encounter them before and after the visit, then I'd say this is a must-see. But Alas!
They didn't know what it was at first. But when they fully uncovered it, they all said "Itza pyramid!"
Knife grinders in France 1902,they worked lying down to save their backs and had dogs sit on their legs for warmth
Puppers. I wish it was mandatory to have companion dogs whilst you worked.
During the Vietnam War, cannabis was consumed because the plant grew in the wild in Vietnam. For that reason, many soldiers had their first experience smoking the drug, and it helped them continue fighting, “You get really stoned…. Then, you know, who like, who cares about the war?” Many military leaders also encouraged cannabis consumption when there were problems among their soldiers. Unlike alcohol, which was still the drug of choice, marijuana kept the soldiers mellow and focused, which helped resolve conflicts between men. When the soldiers smoked together, they used an unorthodox method involving a firearm by packing a bowl of marijuana in a shotgun chamber, soldiers smoked long drags together. We do not ever condone attempting this method to smoke.
We, my friend and I, when I was about 18, had a method smoking pot. One of us put the joint backwards in his mouth and gently exhaled, then fresh smoke came out. It was called 'shotgun', the name is based on the way the soldiers in Vietnam smoked it.
I hated that! Also germany, mid nineties ... the older boys insisted to do that ... I hated it. Just smoke it, and leave out the Tara, was my method. Still is.
Load More Replies...Well, thats a more harmless way to use a gun them the traditional one..
A young Barack Obama with his grandfather, Stanley Dunham, 1960s.
Hiroshima 1945 vs. 2020
While Somewhere over the Rainbow is inexplicably playing in the back of your head, making you cry even more? >.>
Load More Replies...Cue the inevitable armchair strategist who'll lecture us about how the bombing of Hiroshima was actually a good thing, in 10... 9... 8...
Good thing? No. But there is a sensible theory where -lacking the American bombing of Japan, with USA already working on several other bombs and the USSR nuclear program in fast pursuit- the first use of a nuclear device in anger would have been in a full blown USA-USSR war. At that point it wouldn't be just two bombs but who knows how many. The nuclear deterrent was a major force in keeping the "cold war" cold, without a major public show of force it would not have had the same efficacy.
Load More Replies...On the morning of September 11, 2001, 25-year-old Andrea Haberman was sitting in an office on the 92nd floor of the North Tower. At 9:00 a.m., she took out her phone and called her fiance as part of a little game they had to see who could call the other first in the morning when one was out of town. Andrea won, but 40 minutes later, a plane slammed into the tower, leaving no chance for escape. Months later, workers at Ground Zero found her phone.
Licence of prostitution issued to Tea Cup sally, circa 1898, Arizona.
its not circa when you have a date.... literally march 10th, 1898 its right there.
“Please Don’t Kiss Me!” – Mom asks not to kiss her baby to avoid catching the flu in the 1930s
In the olden days, Santa Claus would gather up naughty children, toss them in his basket and whisk them away to the North Pole to serve as his slaves. That’s where the legend of Santas elves came from.
JFC those poor kids. I assume this is one of the many variations of "Sinterklaas"
74 years ago, many young men lied about their age for a purpose...
The boy in the center is not older than..what? 14y? OMG right into the jaws of death.
TBH, the Oran landing was a piece of cake by WW2 standards. Beach defenses were minimal, having received a bashing by naval artillery. Local resistance fighter hampered prompt reinforcing and the beach was captured in a fell sweep. The real fuckups were the naval part, with ships crashing hard onto the beach and into each other; the airborne drops, that were scattered by wind and poor planning; and the port surprise attack, that missed the whole "surprise" thing and was repelled. Those were major lessons in preparation for the D-Day landings.
Load More Replies..."American troops on board a landing craft heading for the beaches at Oran in Algeria during Operation 'Torch', November 1942." The cropping and bad post-coloring of the photo makes the guys looks much younger than they are. There were some case of kids as young as 14 joining the army, but usually they were not deployed and sent back home until at least 17. There were a few cases in the Allied army of people lying about age and being deployed before they were found out, but are very few and well known.
This photograph, taken around 1885 to 1886, showcases Ella Harper. Harper suffered from a highly uncommon medical condition called congenital genu recurvatum, which caused her knees to bend in the opposite direction. As a result, she found it more comfortable to move on all fours. In 1886, Harper joined a circus as a performer. She earned a reported $200 per week, which is equivalent to over $6,500 in today's currency. A bio card distributed to circus spectators included the following information about her: "I am called the camel girl because my knees turn backward. I can walk best on my hands and feet as you see me in the picture. I have traveled considerably in the show business for the past four years and now, this is 1886 and I intend to quit the show business and go to school and fit myself for another occupation.
A young woman who survived the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, August 1945.
Better to be in an armchair than a straight jacket.
Load More Replies...Samuel L. Jackson, John Travolta, Harvey Keitel, and Quentin Tarantino on the set of ‘Pulp Fiction, 1993.
Watched Pulp Fiction again just the other night on one of the movie channels.
People fighting to get on a plane in Nha Trang, April 1, 1975, during the US withdrawal from South Vietnam.
imagine being so desperate that you hand over your kids for safety without you 😭😭😭
heartbreaking, the children who are held out at arm's length so that they can be taken on board
Alberto Cristini, 1997
A group of Havana schoolboys in 1937. The boy with the lollipop is Fidel Castro.
Princess Yvonne And Prince Alexander of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn, Germany, enjoy some mid-day activities in 1955. Follow @historic for more!
It's a staged photo taken by the kid's mother, Princess Marianne, while on holiday on the family's yacht. She was an accomplished photographer and was known to take "funny" photos of her family and friends.
Joseph Frank Keaton (October 4, 1895 – February 1, 1966), known professionally as Buster Keaton, was an American actor, comedian, film director, producer, screenwriter, and stunt performer.
Night fishing, Hawaii - 1948 - Photographer unknown
The Grotesque aka gargoyle of Notre Dame overlooking Paris, 1910
It is a grotesque, not a gargoyle. Grotesque is a purely decorative feature whereas the gargoyle directs water away from the building.
It's my fifth grade science teacher! (She hid the horns under her wimple.)
Vietnamese babies who lost their parents during the Vietnam War were airlifted to the United States for adoption, 1975.
Four living legends.
Top L-R: Clint Eastwood, Jack Nicholson, Bottom L-R: Christopher Walken, Bill Murray
The photographer is Jill Greenberg, https://www.jillgreenberg.com/work2, her use of light is incredible!
Yeah, really. If Bill Murray ever debated a chair, he woud know how funny he was being.
Load More Replies...Every one of them has some shady detail (SHarrassment for Bill, Walken with the Natalie Wood, racism from Clint). That doesn't mean that they aren't considered legends.
Load More Replies...Salvador Dali walking his anteater through Paris, 1969.
I love how they are all looking like ??? 😂 but seriously though, how happy is the anteater to be a pet?
It's entirely possible that the anteater is walking Salvador Dali. Hello, Dali!
Eddie Van Halen & David Lee Roth outside McDonalds in 1978
It is really too bad that apparently somewhere along the way McDonald's lost the concept of the "Speedee Service System".
Halloween 1925.
A young girl enjoying a smoke, 1914.
This is so pathetic. Bet she is not even 4. I want to jump into the picture, grab the cigar and give her a lollipop instead.
I think even in 1914 a sense of humour, or the absurd, wasn't unheard of?
Load More Replies...For the first time in many years, the smog in L.A. has cleared. Los Angeles is currently in their longest stretch of "good air" since 1995.
still now i believe, i was just there in june
Load More Replies...Decades of ruthless air emissions regulation and enforcement has greatly reduced smog. In the 70s and 80s we had red flag days all the time. By the 90s we usually only had them because of fires. Southern California is a series of giant mountain valleys and smog gets trapped in the valleys. Mexico City and Beijing have similar geographic features and are battling terrible air quality.
In 1964, Ringo Starr snapped a photo of some high school students who had skipped class to see the Beatles during their first trip to the United States. The group had no idea the photo even existed until Ringo published his book of photos and asked the group to come forward. Nearly 50 years later, the group reunited and recreated the photo.
Kobe, age 11, plays in a fundraiser while living in Italy. - Rest in Peace to The Black Mamba. Prayers to his family and friends as well as everyone else who was lost in a tragic helicopter accident today.
Donald Trump with his children Eric and Ivanka & Jeffrey Epstein at the Harley-Davidson Café in New York City back in October 1993.
Trump is a f*****g disgusting pervert who fantasizes about banging his own daughter.
This emotional video of the September 11th attacks including actual audio/video recordings reminds us of what we all experienced as a country.
You know, there are a lot of these posts about 9/11. People have to put things in perspective. Far more terrible things happened to way more people in recent history but Americans in general can't let go of this one. Its almost as if they don't care about what happens in the rest of the world...and that's coming from someone who both lives here and was in Tower 2 that morning.
Well worry not - for every post about it, there are commenters advocating that they get over it. I think that anything that causes you pain is no one else's to diminish by comparing it to what they feel is worse, rendering your pain about the less terrible thing contemptible. But maybe I'm in the minority on that, at least among internet commenters. If suppose those who are truly principled about it expect only contempt for their pain if there exists greater suffering and never express their pain over death or illness or trauma, because there is almost always something worse and if they were to express any pain, they would surely be accused of not caring about the far more terrible things happening to others.
Load More Replies...Anne Frank and 7 other people hid in a 450 sq.ft. attic for 761 days, quietly trying to remain undiscovered in order to stay alive. You'll probably be fine in your house...with your wine, your Grubhub and your Netflix. Feel grateful yet?
Jeez, because people like Anne and her family and friends suffered through a nightmare (only her father survived) doesn't mean that we can just be snarky a-holes to everyone, because "everyone has it oh so easy, let's beat them down a bit". OP really needs to read Anne's diary, she was kind, thoughtful and super smart until the last page and that at such a young age 😢
My grandpa entered his home for quarantine in 2020. He left in 2021 in an ambulance, never to return. Suffering isn't a competition, and it's ok to be sad about time lost.
Wow, Rokas Laurinavičius "Writer" BoredPanda staff, you didn't even bother updating the dates on this 4 year old article. Shameful.
Or maybe he was just being truthful about it being a "re-run"... Anyway, some of the pictures are very powerful and the history behind them should not be forgotten
Load More Replies...Two photos need to mentioned... from the 26/11 Mumbai Attacks. The Taj Hotel one and that of Kasab being caught on camera... iconic.
Bored Panda seems to be recycling a number of older articles lately. And running short of new content. Maybe there's a staff shortage?
[checks watch] And good afternoon to you Sophie
Load More Replies...Wow. The amount of effort that went into this post was . . . negligible.
Wow, Rokas Laurinavičius "Writer" BoredPanda staff, you didn't even bother updating the dates on this 4 year old article. Shameful.
Or maybe he was just being truthful about it being a "re-run"... Anyway, some of the pictures are very powerful and the history behind them should not be forgotten
Load More Replies...Two photos need to mentioned... from the 26/11 Mumbai Attacks. The Taj Hotel one and that of Kasab being caught on camera... iconic.
Bored Panda seems to be recycling a number of older articles lately. And running short of new content. Maybe there's a staff shortage?
[checks watch] And good afternoon to you Sophie
Load More Replies...Wow. The amount of effort that went into this post was . . . negligible.
